Praying for the
Welfare of the State of Israel
While following a
tradition of praying for the government, this prayer has some significant
differences.
By Rabbi Ed Snitkoff
A prayer for the welfare of the national government and its
leaders has been part of the Jewish liturgy from ancient days. This tradition
can be traced in practice to the daily sacrifices made in honor of Caesar at
the end of the Second Temple period over 2,000 years ago.
The importance of praying for the welfare of the ruling body
was established by the prophet Jeremiah after the first exile from Jerusalem,
in 586 B.C.E. He tells the exiled Jews, "Seek the welfare of the city
where I have caused you to be exiled, and pray to God on its behalf, for in its
prosperity you shall prosper" (Jeremiah 29:7).
By instructing the Jews to pray for Babylonia, Jeremiah is
teaching them to recognize that in exile they were physically, economically,
and politically dependent upon Babylonia and the good will of its rulers. The
situation of powerlessness and dependence demanded that God be implored to
direct the leaders of the country to rule the Jewish population in a just and
merciful way.
The first siddur [prayerbook] including a prayer for
the government is from the 14th century, and the practice is described there as
an "established custom." Hundreds of different prayers for various
governments under which Jews have lived (and live) exist today, and are
valuable windows to these Jewish communities.
This background is important to understand the thinking of
the authors of the Prayer for the Welfare of the State of Israel.
Composing the Prayer
On the Fifth of Iyar--May 15--1948, the Jewish people became
sovereign rulers in the Land of Israel. This new situation posed many
challenges to the Jewish people, a people that had lived most of its history
under the direct control of others. Confronting and understanding the meaning
of sovereignty and independence created a high level of political, cultural,
and religious creativity during the early years of the state.
For the first time since antiquity, Jewish religious leaders
had the opportunity to compose a prayer for the Jewish leaders of a Jewish
state. Should the prayer express the ideology, hopes, and aspirations of the
Zionist movement? Or, should it be a prayer for the leaders of Israel (treating
them like any other political leaders of any country), without taking into
account the profound meaning of Israel to many Jews?
Here is the translation of the prayer:
"Our Father Who art in Heaven, Protector and
Redeemer of Israel, bless Thou the State of Israel which marks the dawn of our
deliverance. Shield it beneath the wings of Thy love. Spread over it Thy
canopy of peace; send Thy light and Thy truth to its leaders, officers, and
counselors, and direct them with Thy good counsel.
"O God, strengthen the defenders of our Holy Land; grant them salvation
and crown them with victory. Establish peace in the land, and everlasting joy
for its inhabitants.
"Remember our brethren, the whole house of Israel, in all the lands of
their dispersion. Speedily let them walk upright to Zion, the city, to
Jerusalem Thy dwelling-place, as it is written in the Torah of Thy servant
Moses: 'Even if you are dispersed in the uttermost parts of the world, from
there the Lord your God will gather and fetch you. The Lord your God will bring
you into the land which your fathers possessed, and you shall possess it.'
"Unite our heart to love and
revere Thy Name, and to observe all the precepts of Thy Torah. Shine forth in
Thy glorious majesty over all the inhabitants of Thy world. Let everything that
breathes proclaim: The Lord God of Israel is King; His majesty rules over
all." Amen.
This is much more than a prayer for the government. It is a
proclamation of belief that:
1)
the establishment of the State of Israel is a divine event and
that this event is the fulfillment of God's promise to the Jewish people and
part of the divine plan to redeem the world;
2)
the maintaining of the state and its defense is a matter for
God's intervention;
3)
God will bring all Jews to live in Israel from the Diaspora.
The ideology that is the basis of the prayer is expressed
best by Rabbi Yehudah Amital, a former government minister and leading
religious leader in Israel. He writes that Zionism is "…the Lord's vehicle
for preparing Israel for its redemption. The habitation of the Land of Israel
by a group of its children, transforming wastelands into gardens, and the
establishment of independence within its borders, are stages in the process of
redemption…and even though they are accompanied by suffering and tribulation,
the strides are certain and the course is clear…"
The authorship of the prayer is unclear. Some say it was
written by Chief Rabbis Yitzhak Herzog and Ben Zion Uziel with the assistance
of other rabbis. Others suggest that the prayer was revised by the rabbis after
suggestions made by Nobel Laureate Shmuel Yosef Agnon, one of the pioneers of
modern Hebrew literature. Still others are convinced that Agnon wrote the
prayer himself and that it was later adopted by the Chief Rabbinate.
Community Acceptance
A prayer for the State of Israel is recited in synagogues of
most religious streams in Israel and the Diaspora (outside of the
ultra-Orthodox communities). In Israel, most use the text of the Chief
Rabbinate, although there are congregations that use their own versions and
variations. In the Diaspora, there is even less conformity, and while many
communities use the text of the Chief Rabbinate, many utilize other prayers.
There are many reasons why all congregations haven't adopted
the Chief Rabbinates prayer.
Most of the arguments surrounding the prayer concern the
Messianic role of the state. The first
line of the prayer pleads, "Bless Thou the State of Israel which marks
the dawn of our deliverance."The belief that the Jewish state
is the first step in redemption is seen by Rabbi Amital as "certain"
and "clear," but the fact is that not everyone is certain and clear
on this point.
For most haredim (ultra-Orthodox), no matter where
they live, redemption will not be brought by the establishment of a secular
state, but by the observance of Torah. Although the vast majority in this
community are deeply connected to the state and are proud of it in many ways,
they do not see the state in Messianic terms.
They are not alone. The notion that Israel is the "dawn
of our deliverance" sits uncomfortably with many Jews of all streams of
Judaism. Some say that while we may hope and pray that Israel is the "dawn
of our deliverance," it is pretentious to proclaim that this is a known
and proven fact.
Others hold that Messianic beliefs in God's impending
intervention in history are fine for the realm of the spirit, but have no place
in the affairs of a sovereign state. They point to many examples in Jewish
history when Messianic ideas caught the imagination of the people and led to
disaster, such as the war against the Romans that ended in the destruction of
Jerusalem.
There are other problematic passages in the prayer. Jews in
the Diaspora, who are quite comfortable in their homes, may not relate to a
prayer that pleads with God to speedily return them to Israel. Such an idea may
be acceptable in a spiritual, theoretical sense, but when tied to a prayer for
the sovereign Jewish state, it may be difficult to accept.
Others find the triumphant nature of the prayer problematic.
In my own congregation in Israel, there is a constant debate over the words
that ask God to grant the defenders of the land with "victory." Why
do we need to ask for military victory in addition to peace, as if war is an
inevitable, permanent part of living in Israel?
These tensions have led many religious leaders to re-write
the prayer in a way that expresses love and devotion to the State of Israel,
without the Messianic overtones and with less of the triumphant spirit of the original.
The Prayer for the Welfare of the State of Israel is the
product of one of the great creative avenues within Judaism: the crafting of
religious poetry and liturgy that expresses our basic desires and beliefs. Over
the centuries some of this literature has touched the community deeply and has
made its way into the liturgy. Whether or not the Prayer for the Welfare of the
State of Israel (in its present form) will be universally adopted is still an
open question. In any case, this prayer is an eloquent and moving religious
expression of the Zionist dream.
Ed Snitkoff is Coordinator of the North American Regional
Office of the Education Department of the Jewish Agency for Israel. He served
as a congregational rabbi in the U.S. before moving to Israel in 1992. He is a
licensed Israeli tour guide, and lives in Jerusalem.