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By

Daniel Reisel

Opinion

Love involves challenges too

June 6, 2011 09:06
2 min read

I love Israel with all my heart and soul. My family's connection to Israel goes back to my great-grandfather's grandfather Mordechai Zvi, who, together with his wife Rachel, travelled from the depths of the diaspora to Ottoman Palestine. Rachel and Mordechai Zvi were part of the first aliyah of the 1880s and among the founders of Rishon LeZion. In 1889, they helped to establish the country's first Hebrew school. One of its young teachers was Eliezer Ben-Yehuda, the father of modern Hebrew.

When I was 18, I went to Israel to learn the Hebrew of Eliezer Ben-Yehuda. But, more than learning Hebrew, I wanted to be a Hebrew. I enlisted in the army and served in the Nahal brigade for 14 months. My grandma, whose family was cut down in the Holocaust, hugged me tight and said simply: "Israel - that's us". Finally, I felt I had come home.

It is thus with a deep sense of identification, a feeling that our fates are wrapped up together, that I - and many others - worry about Israel today. The task of Rachel and Mordechai's generation was to drain the swamps and create the conditions for building a Jewish homeland. The challenge for our generation is to safeguard the character of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state.

With the founding of Yachad, the new pro-Israel, pro-peace organisation in the UK, we seek to meet this challenge. We believe the way to advance Israel's security is to forge a courageous peace agreement with the Palestinians and to support a flourishing democracy for all of Israel's citizens. We believe that the two-state solution and an end to the occupation offers the best guarantee for Israel's future and long-term peace for the region.