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Judaism

What the rabbis think about war and peace

Why the rabbis downplayed celebration of the Maccabees’ military exploits at Chanucah

December 6, 2012 15:07
Modern Maccabee: Stanley Medicks (kneeling front), one of the British volunteers who fought in Israel’s War of Independence in 1948 (AP)

By

Rabbi Reuben Livingstone

3 min read

By the time the Talmud codified the festival of Chanucah as we know it, the significant military dimension of the Maccabean triumph had become an embarrassment. The revised and suitably sanitised version of the events focuses almost entirely on the miracle of the oil, which symbolises, in far more benign fashion, Israel’s miraculous survival against the odds — and with it the enduring reliability of God’s covenant.

In the second-century rebel Jewish army of Bar Kochba, new recruits were expected to prove their fidelity and courage by severing one of their fingertips. The rabbis of the time strongly disapproved of this Roman martial practice, considering it fundamentally anti-Jewish in character.

Notwithstanding this apparent rabbinic repugnance, it is fair to say that, while the Torah does not glamorise violence, it is allowed as a pragmatic means to a necessary end. Biblical Judaism plainly recognises both “a time of war and a time of peace” (Ecclesiastes 3:8). What requires clarification is how the sages themselves resolved the conflicting values of war and peace.

Any such discussion ought to begin with the premium placed on avoiding conflict. According to numerous rabbinic sources, peace is Judaism’s highest aspiration. Indeed, the Talmud asserts that the entire Torah is based on the value of shalom. The Midrash explains that the obligation to seek peace is of a much higher order than ritual observances because most of the Torah’s commandments are conditional upon specific contexts, while the imperative of peace is universal and overarching, as the verse declares, “Search for peace and pursue it” (Psalms 34:15).