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Rabbinical Leaders
Rav Jacob Reines
1839-1915
Born
in Karolin, Belorussia (White Russia) Isaac Jacob Reines, not unlike
the famous religious Zionists who preceded him, received a traditional
yeshiva education. His ability to immediately grasp and memorize
information was renowned among the religious communities while he
was still very young. By the time he was eighteen, he had been ordained
by some of the most famous and well-respected rabbis of the time.
After ordination in 1867, he was appointed Rabbi of Shavkyana, Lithunia,
where he spent less than two years. He then moved to Sventsyany (a
district of Vilna) to serve as Rabbi and Av Beit Din (head of Jewish
court).
It was in Sventsyany that Rabbi Reines set up a
revolutionary yeshiva in which secular subjects were taught along
with normal yeshiva curriculum. He desired to narrow the gap between
the students in yeshiva and the enlightened Jews, so that a yeshiva
graduate would be able to understand and deal with the world about
him. However, among the religious and more established members of
the community, there was great opposition because they viewed the
inclusion of secular subjects as a desecration of the Holy, and as
a result the yeshiva was forced to close after a short time. Yet,
Reines never abandoned the idea and was destined to see its fruition
many years later.
In 1883 he went to Lida where he served as Rabbi
and Av Bet Din and by 1905 his established reputation gave him the
ability to set up without opposition the yeshiva that he wanted under
the name of Torah and Madah ('Torah and Science'). During its ten
year existence the yeshiva enjoyed a well earned reputation and hundreds
of students graduated from it.
Rabbi Reines died in 1915 and his name has been
memoialized in many areas in Eretz Yisrael. Neve Yaakov, a suburb
of Jerusalem established in 1924, rebuilt after the Six Day War of
1967, is named after him. The first moshav of HaPoel HaMizrachi,
Sede Yaakov, established in 1923, is also named in his honor, as
are many streets in the various cities of Israel.
Activities in Regard to Eretz Yisrael
During his youth, Reines began to take an interest
in Eretz Yisrael and when he heard of Rabbi Kalischer and his ideas,
Reines agreed with them. At that time he wrote to Kalischer, outlining
in detail a plan which he had developed for reclaiming and rebuilding
the land. In 1887, Reines met with Rabbi Mohilver and presented to
him a detailed plan for activities to be instituted by the religious
members of the Hibbat Zion movement. Reines hoped to establish a
system of schools in Eretz Israel which would turn the land into
the center of Torah learning in the Jewish world. However Mohilever
did not accept the plan as he thought it was not yet a practical
possibility.
Two years after the establishment of the World
Zionist Organization, Reines began to actively work on its behalf.
Beginning with the Third Zionist Congress of 1899, he attended almost
all meetings and congresses of the world body. In 1901, at the Fifth
Zionist Congress, when the National Federation (or Democratic Federation)
attempted to have all education placed under the auspices of the
World Zionist Organization he fought strongly against the idea.
Under his guidance and influence, the First Congress
of the Religious Zionists was called in Vilna in 1902. It was here
that the name Mizrachi, a conglomeration of the words Mercaz Ruchani
('Spiritual Center') was chosen. Indeed, the Mizrachi party envisioned
itself as the spiritual center of the Zionist organization and desired
to make Eretz Israel the spiritual center of Judaism. They borrowed
the name Mizrachi in order to show the relationship between the new
political party and the Mizrachi segment of Hibbat Zion, which Rabbi
Mohilver established in 1893. Their purpose was twofold: On one hand,
they desired to heighten the awareness among religious Jews towards
the possibility of aliya and on the other hand, they desired to influence
the non-religious Zionists by creating an atmosphere of tolerance
and equality between the two factions.
During the first year of Mizrachi, 210 groups were
established in Russia, Poland and Lithuania, aside from the Mizrachi
groups in other countries of the Diaspora. In the general gathering
of Zionists in Minsk in 1902, 160 members of the newly formed Mizrachi
party attended the congress. At the Fifth Zionist Congress, Reines
fought strongly to keep the Zionist movement from splitting and,
because of this, voted for the Uganda Resolution. After the Tenth
Zionist Congress of 1911, when education fell under the wing of the
W.Z.O., the Mizrachi movement split when many of its members demanded
that the party leave the auspices of the W.Z.O. However, through
the personal intervention and efforts of Rabbi Reines, the Mizrachi
party remained within the organization and only the Frankfurt branch
broke away. Rabbi Reines remained head of Mizrachi until his death.
Rabbi Reines’ importance rests not only with the
fact that he established Mizrachi – the Religious Zionist Movement – but
also in that many of his ideas which were written in various publications,
became the cornerstone to the Mizrachi movement and have become realities.
From His Writings:
The Religion of Our People
For a unique people with its unique religion can
only be fulfilled at the time when it was in its own land or, at
the very least, a hope that it can return to the land.
Nationalistic Expression
The belief that Israel will return to its own land
originates with the inherent relationship between Israel and the
land and with the promise that the Holy One Blessed Be He will give
the land to His children. Such a belief instills a strong feeling
of belonging between Israel and the land.
Each and every Jew should consult his heart and
recall all that has passed and occurred to our fathers in this land
and how they sacrificed their lives and their blood was spilled like
water upon it; can such things not light his soul like burning coals
and his heart with fire?
One should always desire to spread his tent in
the Holy Land and through this he will see Eden and gain satisfaction
to no end. However, the individual whose heart is far removed from
such desires – this is a sign that his relationship to the Land has
been severed and all love for the land no longer exists within the
heart.
The Commandment to Settle Eretz Yisrael
The commandment of settling Eretz Yisrael, which
is one of the commandments of God which cannot be measured in value,
has been the subject of hundreds of statements made by our sages
in regard to the elevated holiness of the Land and it is as well
a commandment in which our intellectual and emotional beings find
fulfillment. Furthermore, in regard to the intellect and the emotion,
there is probably no other commandment of such worth; for it is commanded
in regard to the general population for the good of the individual,
and to benefit and improve the condition of the masses as it is beneficial
for each individual. For this reason, the commandment to settle in
the land is far greater than all the other commandments as it affects
all actions between man and his fellow man – to improve the personal
lives of each individual.
In regard to the commandment of settling the land,
it emanates from the desire to improve upon the condition of the
entire nation and the rebuilding of a complete and total nation.
Buying Land in Eretz Israel
The very settling of the Land of Israel is a great
commandment, and according to Nachmanides it is a positive Biblical
commandment, and according to the view of Maimonides, while not a
positive Biblical commandment, it is a positive commandment based
upon Masoret and handed down from generation to generation. Therefore,
buying land in Eretz Yisrael, according to Nachmanides, is a positive
Biblical commandment and according to Maimonides is a positive Rabbinic
commandment. According to all the sages, the act of buying land is
one of great merit and all those who do so participate in a holy
endeavor.
Better the Land than Exile
It is written: …And lie down in the wilderness,
sela. Upon this verse our Rabbis comment: "It is better to sleep
in the deserts of Eretz Israel than in the palaces of the Diaspora." Such
a concept should exist deep within the heart of every Jew and all
the pleasures of this world as well as the residences that one owns
in the Diaspora should not be treasured even during a time of peace
and contentment. For the peace of Israel in the exile is not one
which contains any measure of permanence for every hour we may be
forced to leave and wander. Even at a time when the sky is clear
and the winds of the world are at their calmest – even at such a
moment – one must remember that the situation can change, the sun
will be darkened and great strong winds of change can come unexpectedly…
Settling the Land – a Life Sign for the Nation
It is incumbent upon all Jews to actively show
their love for the Holy Land and to work to settle the Holy Land,
for this is one of the wondrous signs which bears testimony to the
love which is in our hearts and which we express for the Holy Land.
In merit of this pure and sanctified love we may hope to see the
redemption. But all the time that we dont work towards building the
Yishuv, it is a sign that we are lacking the very fundamentals of
life. For just as the beating of the heart is a sure sign of life
and, once it stops the blood turns cold and activity ceases, so is
the work in regard to settling Eretz Israel, the heartbeat of the
body of the Jewish nation, and the heart is awake for Zion and filled
with love for the land of our forefathers. The lack of such activity
and work for Eretz Israel causes the blood to turn cold and the heartbeat
to cease and all powers of spiritual longing to die.
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