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  • #2143487
    rightwriter
    Participant

    How much stronger would we be as a people and country if there were at least basic laws in Israel for Shabbos and Kosher? I mean of course you cant force people to become frum, but at least if the country was based on a religious core such as busses not running on Shabbos, stores closed on Shabbos, and no non kosher foods to be sold or restaurants serving non kosher? The Muslims do it in their lands and much worse laws than hat, so why cant we. Is it a possibility? I would say the palestinian problem would go away real quick if the land was purified and respected. We openly see the Tzaros and they are clearly from the disgrace that the founders had in mind when hey established the country.

    #2143599
    akuperma
    Participant

    IF Israel were frum by our standards, it would lose about half of its population, including most of the personnel in the most important military units, and most of the “StartUP Nation” type industries. You would lose the massive secular tourism industry, and would lose most support from Jews outside of Israel (most of whom are very secular, very rich and well connected politically).

    If you are Chareidi-enough to accept a much lower standard of living, and willing to make the necessary concessions to live under Muslim rule-getting rid of the hilonim is a great idea. IF you prefer that Israel be a westernized modern country with a strong military, you probably don’t want to go gung-ho in desecularizing Eretz Yisrael.

    #2143643
    1
    Participant

    You could see what the old yishuv was like. Not too much development and slight disagreement with authority driving people away.

    #2143682
    SQUARE_ROOT
    Participant

    My four decades of experience with secular Jews taught me this lesson:

    Nothing is more futile than attempting to influence secular Jews in the direction of mitzvah observance. It is a total waste of time, 99.95% of the time.

    Charedim refusing to serve in the Israeli Army has made the Charedim the most hated people in Israel โ€“ even more hated than the Arabs!

    Add to that the many scandals involving Charedim, that make Charedim even more hated.

    Add to that the high percentage of Charedim in Israel who do not pay taxes because they do not work, this makes Charedim even more hated.

    Charedim cannot influence secular Jews to mitzvah observance, because Charedim are the most hated people in Israel.

    Instead of trying to improve secular Jews, Charedim should try to improve themselves.

    #2143701
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Wow…. that’s extremely hateful.

    I guess the hundreds of thousands of people attending kiruv seminars from rabbis who are charedi just are the 1%.

    You’re projecting your own hatred of charedim on secular Jews. Many have animosity towards charedim, but most don’t.

    Also, let the army become a place where jews can be frum safely and then see if charedim are so against serving in it. It’s like making a national banquet with treif and then castigating those eho don’t attend.

    Maybe fix yourself before telling the Torah world to fix itself?

    #2143736
    commonsaychel
    Participant

    News flash, Chillul shabbos is the same in EY, USA, Kenya and New Zeeland
    Trife is the same worldwide.
    We are in golus in BP, Efrat, Chevon or Miami, we don’t own the land, at least not yet

    #2143837
    ujm
    Participant

    “I mean of course you cant force people to become frum”

    Yes you can force people to become frum. Indeed, we’re obligated to force people to become frum.

    Perhaps what you meant to write is that since the Goyim and the Frei control the governments and make the laws they use those tools to stop us from forcing people to become frum, as we’re required to do. But, certainly, under proper circumstances we can and should force people to become frum.

    #2143849
    jdb
    Participant

    Israel is a democracy, which is great because we Jews are not uniform, nor do we see eye to eye. This means that there is room for different people to live differently. We are obligated to encourage shabbas, kashrus observance etc. But this is not a theocracy, and we cannot and will not force anyone to follow hallacha.

    Unlike the US, there is a universal minimum standard of kashrus, geirus, etc, which is enshrined in law. This allows those who want to maintain a hallachik standard to do so, and those who want a higher standard can add to this common standard as desired.

    The ahavas yisrael among nearly all Israelis is very hard to appreciate if you don’t see it for yourself. When you stop trying to “change” people, and focus on loving them, you will see unbelievable people driven by neshamos yearning for a better world. And these salt of the earth people, our brothers and sisters, and by and large maaminim. It’s amazing.

    Let’s focus on what is right, and built toward the tomorrow we want to see.

    #2143875
    Yabia Omer
    Participant

    Unfortunately many, not all, Chareidim have made Yiddishkeit very ugly. The brand of Yiddishkeit they espouse is very extreme, overzealous etc. Why would a secular person be inspired by that?

    #2143913
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Yo, that’s weird, because have you seen how many baalei teshuva become charedi?

    #2143920

    You may want to take a closer look at the chareidim that brought them there

    disclaimer: not to be taken as a haskama for YO’s anti chareidi bigotry

    #2143922
    Yabia Omer
    Participant

    There are many rabbonim and tzadikim in the past few decades who have said that if there’s any issues with religion in EY such as chilul shabbos etc, it’s ONLY because of the frum memebers of society.

    #2143977
    ujm
    Participant

    YO (Ye?), Name which “many rabbonim and tzadikim” you’re referring to, big shot. We both know that you won’t be able to name even one mainstream rabbi, since it is non-existent, let alone “many rabbonim and tzadikim”.

    #2143976
    Yserbius123
    Participant

    During the times of the Bais HaMikdash, we were on a much much higher madreiga and there was a halachic rule over the land. Yet it still didn’t stop hundreds of thousands from being open avaryanim in some of the most disgusting ways possible. This resulted in the worst punishment in history of having our Bayis destroyed and exiled to galus.

    Who are we to think that a “Jewish Israel” would some how not suffer the same fate?

    #2143997
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    I think that there’s a great tension between two issues, both of which are berumo shel olam. On the one hand, as long as the state identifies itself as Jewish, it is a massive, heretofore unparaleled chilul Hashem, that a Jewish country is not run according to Halacha, which means that there are two options: enforce Halacha on a national level, which rabbi yoshe ber soloveitchik predicated his support for the state thereon, or let the state cease to be called Jewish, and just become a nation of its citizens, with equal rights, etc…like America.

    If it were to become halachik, the enforcement will incur protests and frum jews might be killed by secularists. That doesnt mean necessarily that it shouldnt be done, but it is an important factor.

    We might not be obligated in restricting the sinfulness of others as we are today, but as long as a “Jewish” state purports to exist, it would be so obligated.

    In the second option, the fallout is that frei jews in israel will lose the small amount of kiyum hamitzvos that the state facilitates; the rabbanut would be basically dissolved, kashrus would disappear, shabbos would be like sunday, government might not be able to fund yeshivos, too.

    Gerus would be like it is in america; autonomous rabbinic organizations and batei din who work together with shared standards, but not state-run.

    I’m not sure which is better.

    #2144031
    n0mesorah
    Participant

    A strong country is one that unites to a common goal. An enforced standard makes a country appear. If anything, it makes it more vulnerable.

    #2144033
    n0mesorah
    Participant

    “Yes you can force people to become frum.”

    Most liberal statement of all time.

    #2144035
    n0mesorah
    Participant

    “During the times of the Bais Hamidash ….. there was (a) halachic rule over the land…”

    Possible. I would be very thankful if someone can provide a real source either way.

    #2144037
    n0mesorah
    Participant

    “….. identifies itself as Jewish…..”

    Are you insinuating that being Jewish can be achieved by mere self-identification? If not, what’s the problem?

    #2144056
    Yabia Omer
    Participant

    You cannot force people to be frum. You can inspire them, you can show them the beautiful stuff of Yiddishkeit, but you cannot coerce. Or, you can just accept that Yidden come in different levels. The only time that it can be a Halachic state is when we will have a Sanhedrin. But let’s suppose we do have a Halachic state, then whose psakim do we follow? Who decides what is allowed and what is not?

    #2144086
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Bais din forced people to keep halacha well after the churban. We force ad shetaytzei nafsho to be mekayam a deoraysoh and punish with makaa mardus for a derabonon violation, makos for a laav.

    Of course halacha was enforced. Something that you thought was pashut in your youth which you discovered was false (like avrohom wearing a streimel) must have made you question everything, to the point of absurdity.

    #2144101
    ujm
    Participant

    The Halacha is very clear and explicit. If someone isn’t frum, Beis Din is obligated to beat him senseless, if necessary, until he becomes frum.

    #2144110
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant
    #2144115

    A couple questions:

    1) Does the Torah give a Beis Din have the authority to punish people for private behavior, meaning not b’farhesia?

    2) Does the Torah require a beis din to investigate and pass judgment *all* suspected violations of the Torah within its authority (rather than having discretion to enforce where it seems likely to have good results)?

    If the answer to either of these questions is “no”, then it would be incorrect to state that the Torah requires a beis din to force people to be frum.

    #2144131
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    It is not the Beis Din that punished people in EY but the shotrim, the police who took them to the Beis Din to force them to follow the Torah.

    #2144137
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    aseh, if two aidim come and say that ish ploni ate a kazayis chazir in his bedroom, he is liable for makos. The only differences between public and private relate to kanoim pogim bo, and the status of a mechalel shabbos in public, which has the din of a goy.

    Beis din has essentially unlimited authority, as they can punish in horaas shaah even when halacha doesnt require it, to teach a lesson.

    #2144152

    Avira, your description is theoretic. Batei din were not blind to social conditions: They stopped death penalties when murders increased so that there was no more deterrent; During BM2, there were Persian, Greeks, Romans, Hashmonai Kings; Tzdukim; Zealots, etc who had their own powers, not always in line w/ Batei dinim. There were Jews in Alexandria who lived by their own rules, I believe…

    #2144155
    rightwriter
    Participant

    again not forcing everyone to be frum, the idea was to not have stores open and transportation running on Shabbos, as well as no non-kosher food allowed to be sold in stores or served in restaurants. The liberals there who love cheeseburgers and shrimp and chazir can get it when they travel outside Israel.

    #2144169
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Aaq, source?

    Tannaim like rebbe tarfon held lehalacha not to execute people. It wasn’t a social issue, that’s haskalah zechariah frankel baloney. Learn sugyos, like rav Hirsch said, from the Torahs own perspective. Drop the academics. Learn meforshim, and you’ll have an idea of how torah works.

    Alexandria – huh? Own rules? Hefkerus? Source again, and if some jews go against the Torah it doesn’t mean that it’s ok.

    #2144178

    Avira,
    a good question, I would need to look around; this is a general impression from various mentions in Gemora; Shabbat 15 talks about death penalty ending when sanhedrin left BM, Pnei Yeohusha discusses increase in murderers, prob others also. It may be that secular powers limit beis din, pls review the meforshim there, I’ll try also, bli neder. Re: Alexandria, see Philo

    I am sorry to say I am more ignoramus than apikores, I did not learn Frankel. Maybe I his gilgul? I am not sure what I said, but a C-rabbi once asked me “do you believe that halakha changed”. I answered, puzzled “yes”. So, he almost hugged me (that was precovid) and said “so you agree with us”? I answered, with even more puzzled expression on my face: “no”. That was the end of his warmth. Shortest conversation evah.

    #2144179

    RW, you should go visit Israel with a fresh look. Rather than looking for violators, you might find a lot of places with kosher food only, a lot of people stopping working Friday afternoon and experiencing Shabbat way earlier than many in galut. Same as Rashbi noticing a Jew running with two bouquets in honor of shamor and zachor.

    #2144217
    leah2330
    Participant

    Nothing more interesting than listening to golus jews in cushie americhka discussing what is going on in our holy land.. a gift from HKBH, remember Him?? Try to read the birkat hamazon once with kavana.. So many amazing Israelis becoming shomrei Shabbat.. ye thats nothing according to some.. a total waste of time??Nothing is more futile then to tell golus jews, so totally disconnected from a true Jewish life that they are missing out on EVERYTHING. Every step you take in EY is a mitzvah. Anyway, HKBH should melt your heart of stone!!! Shabbat Shalom from Eretz Yisrael, Israel, the holy land, the land of milk and honey, a land that Hshems eye is always on, the physical and spiritual center of the universe. Enjoy feeling special and different from goim and fooling yourself. Yes, I am being sarcastic.. because ain koach od to see this incredible hypocricy and dishonesty with self..

    #2144254
    Yabia Omer
    Participant

    Good point Leah

    #2144258
    rightwriter
    Participant

    Aleaysask, that’s not the discussion here. Of course there are so many who observe. I’m not trying to look at those who do not. I just feel that as a nation we would be stronger if these basic laws were a little more strict. Not advocating for laws to be implemented In ones home. As it stands most areas do not operate public transportation on Shabbos so the idea isn’t that out of reach. I mean Muslim countries have much worse laws. But they respect their beliefs by implementing them. Only Jews need to be different? I’m just putting out the idea that it would be much more respectful to ourselves to have basic Shabbos and especially kashrus laws. Why can’t there be a law that no chazir can be sold or seafood and basar vechalav? If many have accepted that busses don’t operate on Shabbos and neither do flights, then why would this be such an issue?

    #2144287
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Leah… Ever hear of a strawman?

    #2144307
    rightwriter
    Participant

    Leah not everyone is super rich in america and living the high life while forgetting their Judaism. For some its just not practical to live in Israel especially financial wise or even mentality wise. Its a whole different system. Besides there are some non Jews who are more respectful to religious Jews and Judaism than secular Jews in Israel who are anti religion. Not everything is all cushy and comfy as you make it seem to be. Maybe if you live in Jerusalem or other religious areas its easy to escape into that bubble, but other areas are not so great to be in.

    #2144386

    Re: beis din in old times. IT is Avoda Zara 8b: there were so many murderers that beis din could not prosecute all, and moved out so that there will be no death penalty
    ืž”ื˜ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื—ื–ื• ื“ื ืคื™ืฉื™ ืœื”ื• ืจื•ืฆื—ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ื™ื›ืœื™ ืœืžื™ื“ืŸ ืืžืจื• ืžื•ื˜ื‘ ื ื’ืœื™
    ืžืžืงื•ื ืœืžืงื•ื ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ืœื ืœื™ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื•

    #2144438
    ujm
    Participant

    You think Beis Din didn’t prosecute murderers if they technically couldn’t issue a death penalty verdict?

    #2144446

    bring your sources and explain what you think

    #2144456
    Cascade
    Participant

    Leah, I have noticed a few times where Israelis refer to Yidden outside of EY as Gulos Jews! Living in EY does not mean you arent a Gulos Jew as Moshiach has not come.. not even in EY!!

    #2144473
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Aaq, there’s a stirah in that gemara to elsewhere where chazal say that if a beis din sees that someone is a danger to the community, they’d put them in a jail cell and let them die without giving them food, since they couldn’t kill them biyadayim

    #2144484

    I love how people (especially ืฆื™ื•ื ื™ื) think theyโ€™re โ€œbetter than youโ€ itโ€™s the primary reason for ืฉื ืืช ื—ื™ื ื and stops them from doing introspection

    ืืœ ืชื“ื™ืŸ ืืช ื—ื‘ื™ืจืšโ€ฆ.

    #2144491

    Avira, yes, I recall that option (in Makos?). I think it is a general statement of an option available to beis din in cases where do not have acceptable witnesses but are sure of the guilt. Nothing to do with the political situation during late BM2, which is what Gemoras in Shabbos and AZ are talking about.

    #2144497

    coffee, Yaakov was afraid that Esav had 2 mitzvos – live in EY and respect for parents. I would not be hutzpadik with, for example, someone who does those 2, and eats kosher, and keeps shabbat, and served in the army, just because he is not wearing the hat you do.

    #2144512
    commonsaychel
    Participant

    @cascade, how very well put, we are in golus everywhere, Bnai Brak, Efrat, Kiryat Sefer, they are golus yidden as well

    #2144624
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    aaq, if a person serves in the army because they believe in kochi ve’otzem yadi, which many people do (of course, we dont know about individual soldiers), it is hardly something to respect.

    edited – enough name calling

     

    #2144623
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    aaq, who mentions yishuv EY regarding eisav? Kibuv av, yes, but I dont remember seeing that anywhere.

    And with good reason. The mitzvah of yishuv EY is more of a hechsher mitzvah to be mekayam mitzvos tluyos baarets, of which, eisav ostensibly kept none. Also, that mitzvah had not been given at all yet, since there was no kibush, only a promise. That was the ta’anah of the shepherds of Lot; the land is already ours, but that was not true (hagam, some say the guf hakarka belonged to avrohom but not the peiros…gets complicated, but even so, “beyitzchak yikarei…” was said, and at the point that yaakov was worried, eisav had already lost the right to EY to yaakov, so I have a very hard time believing someone says that eisav was mekayam yishuv EY, for both reasons I mentioned.

    #2144672
    Lostspark
    Participant

    Rightwriter: do you live in the US or EY?

    #2144673
    Lostspark
    Participant

    If you do live in the US spare us the pontificating, move to EY, join an Anglo community, vote for the Chareidi m and pat yourself and your community members backs for how holy you are for leaving golus.

    The pro Aliyah crowd that remains in the US is hilarious.

    #2144680

    > who mentions yishuv EY

    Bereshis Rabba. Meam Loez quotes it.
    Rav Twersky also quotes Gra on this in the context of Gra failing to reach EY. Would be interesting to see the context if someone can find it.

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