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Rabbinical Leaders
Rav Ben-Zion Meir Hai Uziel
1880-1953
As his name 'son of Zion' or 'Ben-Zion states', Rabbi Uziel was born in Jerusalem
in 1880, the newest member of a very prestigious Sephardi family. His father,
Joseph Raphael, was the Av Beth-Din of the Sephardi community in Jerusalem.
Following in his father's footsteps, by the age of twenty, Ben-Zion Uziel
was teaching at the Tiferet Yerushalayim Yeshiva and helped found the Machzikei-Torah
Yeshiva for Sephardim.
In 1911, Rabbi Uziel was appointed 'Hacham' of the
Sephardi community in Jaffa and immediately attempted to improve
the community functions, raising the status of the community in the
eyes of the rest of the yishuv. Here he became friendly with Rabbi
A. I. Kook and together they worked for better inter-communal relations
between Ashkenazim and Sephardim. He set up yeshivot, improved the
Beth Din and helped build various community centers.
During World War I he worked tirelessly for the protection
of the rights of the Jews in Eretz Israel. He was exiled to Damascus
along with the rest of the community by the Turkish rulers in 1917,
but was allowed to return before the coming of the British army.
In 1920 he joined the Mizrachi movement and worked on behalf of Mizrachi
and the Sephardi communities in Eretz Yisrael and in the Diaspora
until his death.
Rabbi Uziel's travels took him to many countries
where he sought to persuade the Jews of the area to come to Israel.
However, at the same time, the realities of the moment were his major
concern. While serving as the Rabbi of Salonika, Greece for three
years (a post he accepted temporarily and with the permission of
the Jaffa community) he was able to set up a system of Talmud Torah
and yeshiva institutes. It is said that during his leadership the
community was completely devoted to keeping Shabbat and Kashrut.
Upon returning to Israel he became the Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv and
in 1939, Chief Sephardi Rabbi of Eretz Israel. In this capacity he
represented his community to the British mandatory government.
Rabbi Ben-Zion Meir Hai Uziel was responsible for
founding the Sh'aar Zion Yeshiva and had a hand in the beginning
of the Porat Yosef Yeshivot which now exist in many cities of Eretz
Israel. As a member of the Mizrachi movement he traveled to Iraq
and the United States to generate interest in aliya and financial
support for the yishuv. He also served as a Mizrachi delegate to
the Zionist Congress from 1925-46. He was a prolific writer and two
of his most famous works are : 'Mishpetei Uziel' - Responsa,
and 'Sha'arei Uziel' - Writings.
From His Writings:
The State of Israel and the Ingathering of the Exiles
Listen to me my brethren and sons of my people…for
it is a great and wondrous thing that has been revealed in this generation
for the mighty hand of God towards His chosen people has been revealed,
in that He has gathered our scattered ones and brought them up to
the Land of our forefathers so that we may be a nation resting upon
its own land.
The ingathering of exiles, which has taken place
during the past few years, is the seed from which will flower the
complete redemption. The appointed time will then arrive and the
Creator of the world who has His chosen people and Holy Land, will
cause the spirit of wisdom and strength to rest with us. In the hearts
of all our brave pioneers may they receive the crown of victory and
may He give us this land which was sworn to our forefathers.
Remember this, know and believe that it is the hand
of God that performs this in order to fulfill the words of His holy
prophets and for the eternal peace of the Jewish nation and for the
peace of the whole world. He has caused peace to be dependent upon
Israel and their adherence to the Torah and commandments, for by
their hand, the Holy One of Israel will be sanctified and will redeem
and teach the nations to know the oneness of God. This belief will
bring upon its wings peace and truth within our fold and a just peace
between all the nations and man shall neither fear nor destroy his
fellow man, neither will government nor nations destroy one another
for they will all know Him. The land will be filled with the knowledge
of God as the waters of the sea.
I end with this blessing:
"May the Lord our God remain with us as He did with
our fathers and may He neither abandon nor forsake us, and may
our hearts
yearn for Him to walk in all His paths, to follow His commandments
so that we may be blessed with goodness for all our days."
The Redemption of Israel
We all desire that the ingathering of the exiles
should take place from all areas where they have been scattered;
and that our holy language will be upon our lips and upon the lips
of our children, in building the Land and its flowering through the
hands and work of Israel; and we will all strive to see the flag
of freedom and redemption waving in glory and strength upon the walls
of Jerusalem. But we cannot agree with those who view the buying
of land as a final objective. Such purchases serve as the first step
in clothing of the soul of life and the Torah of the nation and for
this we must strive…
Those who say that the laws of our Torah have become
useless, antiquated relics and its values have outlived their purpose
are gravely mistaken. For we know with clear and true knowledge that
the laws of God are truth and each day they are as new as the day
they were given at Mount Sinai, and all human enlightenment until
our present day has not succeeded in revealing and reaching the level
of moral justice in society as well as in the family, nor the same
level of righteousness of the Torah of Israel, whose ways are ways
of pleasantness and all her paths are peace.
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