From The
Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, Oct. 2001,
a eulogy to Dr.
Israel Shahak, by Allen C. Brownfeld:
"After being liberated from the Bergen-Belsen
concentration camp in 1945, Israel Shahak and his mother emigrated to British
Mandate Palestine. He went on to have a distinguished career as a professor of
chemistry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and was repeatedly voted as
the most admired teacher by students.
Following the 1967 war, Shahak became a leading member of
the Israeli League for Human and Civil Rights and was elected chairman in 1970.
He devoted the rest of his life to opposing Israel’s inhumane treatment
inflicted upon its Arab citizens and upon Palestinians in occupied territories.
While American newspapers, both Jewish and general,
completely ignored the death of Israel Shahak, a July 6 obituary in The
Guardian of London by Elfi Pallis notes that, “Shortly after the 1967 six-day
war, he [Shahak] concluded from observation that Israel was not yet a
democracy; it was treating the newly occupied Palestinians with shocking
brutality. For the next three decades, he spent all his spare time on attempts
to change this.
He contributed to various small...papers, but when this
proved to have little impact, he decided to alert journalists, academics and
human rights campaigners abroad. From his small, bare West Jerusalem flat
poured forth reports with titles such as ”˜Torture in Israel,’ and ”˜Collective
Punishment in the West Bank.’ Based exclusively on mainstream Israeli sources,
all were painstakingly translated into English.
Shahak Never Let
Up, He Never Became Blasé!
“World coverage gradually improved, but Shahak never let
up, he never became blasé. Watching him read out a small news item about an
Israeli farmer who had set his dogs on a group of Palestinian children was to
see a man in almost physical distress. Shahak came to believe that these human
rights incidents stemmed from Israel’s religious interpretation of Jewish
history, which led it to ignore centuries of Arab life in the country, and to
disregard non-Jewish rights. Confiscation, every schoolchild was told, was
”˜the redemption of the land’ from those who did not belong there. To Shahak,
this was straightforward racism, damaging both sides.”
Israel Shahak’s vision can perhaps best be found in his
books, Jewish History, Jewish Religion (Pluto Press, 1994) and Jewish
Fundamentalism in Israel (Pluto Press, 1994) written with Norton Mezvinsky.
(See Mezvinsky’s remembrance of Israel Shahak in the
Aug./Sept. issue of the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, p. 11.)
In Jewish History, Jewish Religion, Shahak points out
that while Islamic fundamentalism is vilified in the West, Jewish
fundamentalism goes largely ignored. He argues that classical Judaism is used
to justify Israeli policies which he views as xenophobic and similar in nature
to the anti- Semitism suffered by Jews in other times and places. Nowhere can
this be seen more clearly, in his view, than in Jewish attitudes to the non-
Jewish peoples of Israel and the Middle East.
Shahak draws on the Talmud and rabbinical laws, and
points to the fact that today’s extremism finds its sources in classical texts
which, if they are not properly understood, will lead to religious warfare,
harmful to men and women of all religious beliefs.
This book, Shahak wrote, “is, in a way, a continuation of
my political activities as an Israeli Jew. Those activities began in 1965-66
with a protest which caused a considerable scandal at that time: I had
personally witnessed an ultra-religious Jew refuse to allow his phone to be
used on the Sabbath in order to call an ambulance for a non-Jew, who happened
to have collapsed in his Jerusalem neighborhood. Instead of simply publishing
the incident in the press, I asked for a meeting with the members of the
Rabbinical Court of Jerusalem, which is composed of rabbis nominated by the
State of Israel. I asked them whether such behavior was consistent with their
interpretation of the Jewish religion.
They answered that the Jew in question had behaved
correctly, indeed piously, and backed their statement by referring to a passage
in an authoritative compendium of Talmudic laws, written in this country. I
reported the incident in the main Hebrew daily, Ha’aretz, whose publication of
the story caused a media scandal.”
The Talmudic
World View
In the end, Shahak reported, “Neither the Israeli, nor
the diaspora rabbinical authorities ever reversed their ruling that Jews should
not
violate the Sabbath in order to save the life of a
Gentile. . ."
[End of
Excerpt]
JD: When the
Christ of God came to this Earth, nearly 2,000 years ago,
He encountered
the same inhumane vitriol from the ungodly religious
hypocrites of His
day, who tried to stone Him for healing the sick on the
Sabbath. So, we
see that, although Israel Shahak may have considered
himself an
atheist, he was truly one of God's chosen people, a man who
truly deserved
the name "Isra-El," prince-of-God, for he acted with the
same love as did
God's anointed One, nearly 2,000 years before him, who
consequently
condemned those religious leaders as being "whited
sepulchres"
or nicely painted tombs, "full of spiders and dead men's bones."
Israel Shahak has
left this fleeting existence of ours, yet I believe that
he will be
honored by God with glorious, joyful, and everlasting life, "in a
new Heaven and a
new Earth wherein *righteousness* shall dwell," to
quote the Apostle
Peter. To paraphrase the Lord Jesus, Christ of God, in
one of His
parables:
He who says I
will follow God, but does not, is not blessed with the Spirit
of God, but he
who says I will not follow God (an outward atheist), yet
does the work of
God . . . that person is surely blessed with God's Spirit
deep in his
heart, despite his unawareness. And after exiting this fleeting
existence, that
pseudo-atheist will be rewarded with eternal joy.
Notice this
declaration from Paul, the great Jewish apostle to the Lord
Jesus Christ, in
Romans 2:14:
"For when
Gentiles [heathen, atheists], who do not have the law,
by nature, do
what the law requires, they are a law unto themselves,
even though
they do not have the law [The Torah taught to them]."
In closing,
whether or not you know our Creator/Saviour, The Great
Lawgiver, I
believe that you too are a child chosen by God. You too are
Isra-El a
prince-of-God, for you "hunger and thirst for righteouswness,"
and He says,
therefore, "You are blessed" with the Spirit of God deep
inside your
heart, and your existence will be everlastingly joyful.
1 comment:
If God Almighty and his Son are NOT to work on the Sabbath, the day of rest, then you can make sure that your blessing or your prayers being answered on Saturday, before the Resurrection, and Sunday, after the Resurrection, will NOT happen as He complies with His Own Rules, so the day of Worship is more of a con job.
Your Faith in Him protecting you will ALWAYS be answered!
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