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The Jewish Chronicle

Our right to Israel could not be more powerful

January 18, 2008 15:29

By

Lord Jonathan Sacks

7 min read

We must challenge the falsehood that Israel has no right to exist.

My great-grand-father, Rabbi Arye Leib Frumkin, went to Israel in 1871; his father had settled there 20 years earlier. His first act was to begin writing his History of the Sages in Jerusalem, chronicling the Jewish presence there since Nachmanides arrived in 1265.

In 1881 pogroms broke out in more than 100 towns in Russia. That was when he realised that aliyah was no longer a pilgrimage of the few but an urgent necessity for the many. He became a pioneer, moving to one of the first agricultural settlements in the new yishuv. The early settlers had caught malaria and left. Rabbi Frumkin led the return and built the first house there. The name they gave the town epitomises their dreams. Using a phrase from the book of Hosea, they called it Petach Tikvah, "the Gateway of Hope". Today it is the sixth-largest city in Israel.

The Jewish connection with Israel did not begin with Zionism, a word coined in the 1890s. It goes back 4,000 years to the first recorded syllables of Jewish time, God's command to Abraham: "Leave your land, your birthplace and your father's house and go to the land that I will show you" (Exodus 12:1). Seven times God promised Abraham the land, and repeated that promise to Isaac and Jacob. If any nation on earth has a right to any land - a right based on history, attachment, long association - then the Jewish people has a right to Israel.