Concealed Brilliance
TO THE EDITORS:
I have received my second copy of Azure here in Minsk and I am delighted with the refreshing and truth-laden content. I have one observation and criticism.
I have received my second copy of Azure here in Minsk and I am delighted with the refreshing and truth-laden content. I have one observation and criticism.
Your papers present the largely forgotten principles that preserve civilization and permit the development of all that we know to be desirable for all people. These are ideas which are desperately needed by the emerging eastern bloc, but they remain largely unknown here. Yet tragically, Azure is such a scholarly and verbose publication that it will rarely be read by those who need this information the most. It will be read only by those who have the interest and language skills to enable them to read the many pages that hide the brilliant and life-changing principles.
I have no suggestions. Maybe someone can advise how these principles can be summarized, or displayed, clearly and simply for those who desperately need to know them. I pass them on verbally to our young people here and they receive them eagerly.
Donald M. Coder
Minsk, Belarus
Minsk, Belarus
At the Risk of Prophecy
TO THE EDITORS:
TO THE EDITORS:
I have just finished reading “Tony Blair and Other Tory Notions” (Editorial, Azure 3, Winter 1998) with excitement and delight: Someone else shares my deep concern about these issues. It is truly a pleasure to find a soul mate and brother-in-spirit.
I came across Azure unexpectedly, and it has stopped me in my tracks and commanded my attention. Yours is a well-written, well-edited and, above all, well-reasoned publication, with a clear and coherent voice. It is more than a journal “for the Jewish Nation,” since its ideas obviously have direct implications for everyone else in free Western societies as well. Azure reminds me of the youthful Commentary when it repeatedly debunked holier-than-thou “liberals.” In doing so, it defined a neo-conservative agenda that eventually triumphed. You are obviously correct in stating that these “conservative ideas… have become the lingua franca of political discourse,” by now adopted even by left-leaning leaders in the West.
Since the destruction of the Temple, prophecy has been given only to fools. Even so, it is safe to assume that the central concerns of Azure will also be victorious in the marketplace of ideas and in polity, and sooner rather than later. For instance, by clearly describing and focusing on the widespread trend toward increasing respect for Jewish tradition (“Dusting Off the Jewish Bookshelf,” Editorial, Azure 4, Summer 1998), Azure has empowered that trend with even more legitimacy, and thus instantly propelled it forward with greater force.
Reuven Bar-Levav
Southfield, Michigan
Southfield, Michigan
Reexamining the Past
TO THE EDITORS:
I recently received two issues of the Hebrew versions of Azure. I read them both from cover to cover and marveled at the articles’ originality and depth. I particularly enjoyed your refreshing “The Jewish State at 100” (Azure 2, Spring 1997), which was as bold as it was insightful. I also enjoyed Hillel Neuer’s instructive article on Aharon Barak (“Aharon Barak’s Revolution,” Azure 3, Winter 1998), whom I know well from our days as classmates at Beit Hakerem High School. As an Israeli-born economics professor trained at The University of Chicago, whose body is here and whose heart is “there,” I applaud Azure and The Shalem Center as a most welcome endeavor for a rigorous reexamination of the past and a dialogue on the future character of the Jewish nation.
I recently received two issues of the Hebrew versions of Azure. I read them both from cover to cover and marveled at the articles’ originality and depth. I particularly enjoyed your refreshing “The Jewish State at 100” (Azure 2, Spring 1997), which was as bold as it was insightful. I also enjoyed Hillel Neuer’s instructive article on Aharon Barak (“Aharon Barak’s Revolution,” Azure 3, Winter 1998), whom I know well from our days as classmates at Beit Hakerem High School. As an Israeli-born economics professor trained at The University of Chicago, whose body is here and whose heart is “there,” I applaud Azure and The Shalem Center as a most welcome endeavor for a rigorous reexamination of the past and a dialogue on the future character of the Jewish nation.
Sol Shalit
Oconomowoc, Wisconsin
Oconomowoc, Wisconsin
Pagan Origins
TO THE EDITORS:
Yoram Hazony’s article, “The Jewish Origins of the Western Disobedience Tradition” (Azure 4, Summer 1998), the first thorough study of this subject that I have come across, thrilled me by confirming my own long-held personal beliefs. The model of the Jewish prophet as “state comptroller” has been an invaluable inspiration toward civil disobedience for mankind. However, Hazony’s projection that paganism naturally supported dictatorial empires, and that Judaism inherently fostered morally crusading prophets, may have been too sharp a distinction from historical and religious perspectives. A closer look at Jewish history reveals many commonalities between paganism and Judaism, and consequently in the development of Jewish political institutions: Over time, Jewry developed the same social diseases that initially outraged Abraham and Moses.
First of all, the Jewish tradition of adopting pagan practices was well established, as documented in the Tora. Like so many Jews in the diaspora, Joseph became a better-than-average Egyptian when he perfected Pharaoh’s bureaucracy at God’s command. Moses, having married into a successful pagan family, got a little help from his father-in-law Jethro, the high priest of Midian, in organizing the inchoate Jewish government and army in the desert (Exodus 18:18). The Jewish tribes lacked permanent, central authority—hence political viability—until the establishment of the Jewish monarchy. When Samuel tried his best to dissuade the nation from anointing a monarch (I Samuel 8:11), the tribal leaders realized (in modern terms) that their team did not stand a chance without a good coach.
David turned out to be one of the greatest kings in history, but he could not help adopting some of the negative influences of the pagan regimes around him: Creating his own army and personal retinue, which included foreign mercenaries, appointing official high priests, and leading a controversial social life. He readily accepted the criticism of prophets, but this did not become a fixed institution amongst the later Israelite kings. Solomon was perhaps the wisest king, but his sense of political expediency compelled him to compromise key divine commandments, which led to the disintegration of the monarchy into rival kingdoms.
The threat of Assyria and Babylonia and the sins of the Jewish nation enraged numerous prophets, but they could not guide the stubborn kingdoms away from behavior that would lead to the destruction of the First and Second Temples. However, the Jewish nation was given a second chance by a pagan, whom many described as the messiah. After conquering Babylonia, Cyrus of Persia not only allowed the Jews of Judea to flourish in their first exile, but financed and militarily supported the resurrection of the Jewish state. This policy of the colossal empire of Persia has been considered a turning point in history: Rather than crush its vassal states and enslave their populations, as was standard practice, it supported their political and religious autonomy. Of course Persia acted out of self-interest, but this still gave the Jews another four centuries in its homeland, before the next exile. Although not nearly as benign in its conquest and administration, Rome, too, might have continued to grant Israel autonomy, if only the zealots had not believed so much in civil disobedience.
Hazony also ignores the fact that Judaism eventually emphasized the collective will of the lawmakers over the divinely enlightened individual. Long after Jewry could no longer maintain official courts to enforce Jewish law, the power of the Beit Din to excommunicate “heretics” constituted the exercise of the collective will over those individuals who disobeyed halachic rulings. Even Maimonides and the founders of Hasidism, among others, who observed halacha but in an innovative way, were violently attacked by the mainstream for compromising God’s law.