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January 26, 2006
Hebron:
Land of the Hebrews
by Eugene Narrett, Ph.D.
From the days before the birth of Jacob, the
days when Israel, -- the patriarch, the people, and
the nation were only a promise, Hebron has been
foundational to the faith, honor, glory, and memory
of the Jewish people. It remains so today, as we
are reminded by the struggle of the Jews of Hebron
against their expulsion from this most ancient city
(as they were in 1929, 1936, and 1948, by the
British-led, equipped and trained "Arab Legion");
reminded too, by the thrilling discussion of
the city in the Torah commentaries of the Ramban
(Rav {teacher or master} Moshe ben Nachman, also
called Nachmanides, c. 1193 - 1268 CE).
Hebron's magnificence, the power and faith which
emanate from it are fittingly considered
through the Ramban's work for the latter is a
symposium that spans millennia, a banquet
of praise and explication that convenes
Moshe with the Talmudists, Onkelos (a Roman convert
to Judaism, 1st century CE, who wrote what still is
considered a definitive interpretive translation of
the Five Books of Moses from Hebrew into
Aramaic), R' Avraham Ibn Ezra [9th
century], Rashi [Rav Shlomo Yitzchaki,
scholar and vintner at Soissons, 1040 -1105]
and the Rambam (Maimonides, 1135 - 1204), to whom
Ramban refers reverently as "haRav," the
teacher. The scope of the assembled erudition is
such that Rav Ya'akov ben Ha Rosh (Rav Jacob
the Baal Ha Turim, CE 1269 - 1343) began
his brilliant commentary by quoting Psalms to
suggest the magnitude of Ramban's work: "And
behold, I have seen the sea, great and of broad
measure, -- the Torah expositions of Ramban, of
blessed memory..." adding that all he can aspire to
is to "restore my soul" by "strolling the banks" by
this sea, plucking fruits of wisdom "from the
abundant trees" of the discussion Ramban
assembled.
Those who love ethical, theological, historical,
and philosophical discussion and exegesis should
study these works for supreme examples of symposia
that continue to energize western civilization and
which, among other benefits, elaborated the
essential rules of textual analysis.
The convening of such an assembly is an act that
recognizes, honors and realizes history and an act
of faith, and a distinctive consciousness that
distinguishes Judaism to this day: the educational,
instructive value of its holy texts and how
discussing them enables action based on these
qualities. These qualities are nowhere more
true than in Hebron which, it seems must be made
Judenrein to prepare the way for the New World
Order, its god, the state, and its practice,
forgetting and coercive consumerism.
Commenting on the verses in Torah portion
Vayeishev (Genesis 37 - 42) when, after
interpreting his dream, Joseph requests that the
Chamberlain of Cupbearers "mention me to
Pharaoh," adding, "for I was kidnapped from
the land of the Hebrews..." (Genesis
40:15), Ramban identifies the
geographical reference and then adduces sources
showing that the land of the Hebrews,
Hebron, derived from the patriarchs'
distinctive cultural and moral qualities
acknowledged and respected by peoples all
around.
"The explanation of 'from the land of the
Hebrews,'" Ramban writes, "is from the land of
Hebron where Abraham, Isaac and Jacob lived. For
Abraham, who was the start of the family lineage
was called, 'Abram the Hebrew' [Genesis
14:3] because he came 'from the other side'
[m'eiver] of the
[Euphrates] River." Not only was Abraham
renowned for his teaching of the One Creator and
Judge of all there is, the teacher, that is, of
life's purpose, justice, and dignity, but for his
loyalty to kin, courage, and trust in G-d (as in
the war of the five kings [Gen. 14], the
covenant of the parts [Gen. 15], the
covenant of circumcision [Gen. 17], etc).
Thus, Ramban continues, "he was renowned among the
nations for [G-d's promise] 'I will make
your name great' [Gen 12:2] was fulfilled
for him. This is why all his descendants were
called Hebrews. And they perpetuated this name for
themselves to distinguish themselves and not mingle
with the Canaanites." Though few, the Hebrews were
held in great esteem and the area in and around
Hebron was called by their name.
Ramban cites Rambam for another reason and
evidence of this status: Hebron was called 'the
land of the Hebrews' "because they were the great
men and nobles of the land." This had been
acknowledged by Ephron the Hittite when
Abraham purchased the Machpela ["double"]
caves and surrounding fields as a perpetual tomb
complex for his family. The Hittite leader said to
Avraham, "you are a prince of G-d in our midst"
(23:15). In this context, Ramban also quotes psalm
105:15, "do not dare to touch my anointed
ones" with reference to G-d's warnings to
Pharaoh, Avimelech the Philistine, and later, to
Laban, on behalf of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob in
whose merit and by whose efforts the Jewish people
(Ha Ivrim) received the entire Promised Land
as described by G-d to Abraham in "the
covenant of the parts" (Genesis 15:13-18) and its
sequelae.
Earlier, Ramban had considered Talmudic
sources** that further identify Hebron with "the
land of the Hebrews," with Abraham, Isaac, Jacob
and his descendants. Discussing the verse in which
Jacob sends Joseph to his brothers, "mei'emek
Chevron," from the "depth" or "valley of Hebron"
which actually a series of great hills with
high plateaus between them. Ramban notes, "our
sages have a homiletical interpretation for this,
i.e. to fulfill the deep counsel [amukah, from
emek] to the 'pleasant friend' who is
buried in Hebron." The "deep counsel" was the
message to Abraham from G-d that his offspring
would "be aliens in a land not their own" before
they are freed from exile and return with great
wealth and majesty, primed to inherit the fullness
of the land (ibid). Ramban further cites the
midrash (textual annotation on the verse) that
Chevron is derived from chaver, "friend," in
reference and honor to Abraham whom G-d termed, His
friend.
The immediacy of these verses and Ramban's
symposia - commentary stems further from the
fact that Jacob imparted this amukah to his
beloved Joseph in the land of the Hebrews, drawing
on the merits and example of faith and courage
of Abraham as he sent him to his brothers near
Shechem (today it's called "Nablus," an Arabic
corruption of the Greek "Neapolis" built on the
site of the ancient Jewish city. Jacob sent Joseph
on this mission though he knew of the fraternal
friction occasioned by Joseph's provocative dreams.
But Jacob also sensed (for he "kept the matter in
mind" regarding the import of the dreams, Gen. 37)
that all the conflicts were to initiate the
lifleitah gedolah, "the mighty deliverance" as
Joseph assured his brothers after they were
re-united in love and harmony. "It is as clear as
day..."
Joseph's tomb adjacent to Shechem was ravaged by
Arabs at the start of the "Oslo War: in October
2000. The small Jewish settlement and study house
(yeshiva) there also were destroyed. The world
powers are planning a similar fate for the much
larger and august complex at Hebron. It will
become, no doubt, a sort of Disneyland. Perhaps
Clinton-Rodham intend to put out the official word
that they too will be resting there
In any case, the merits that suffuse "Hebron,
the land of the Hebrews" are a vital
example of the enduring vitality and
commitment to history and memory of all the Jewish
people. For just as Abraham's trust and faith were
counted as "righteousness" by G-d, and just as the
covenant G-d made with him was extended to Isaac
(Genesis 21) and Jacob (ibid. 26, 27, 28, 35) who
eagerly grasped Abraham's legacy despite the
hardships it required, so too do these qualities of
wisdom show the path to and connection between
memory, honor and glory in our days when the powers
would commit us to forgetting and the mystique of
the big lies of Newspeak.
At this season of Hanukka just passing, its
light still present, Hebron is the touchstone for
the light that shines in the darkness of captivity,
of physical, spiritual and ideological bondage. It
is the light of faith and the actions it enables
that bring the ability to resist foreign influences
wherever they arrive to pluck out the heart of the
nation. Tyrants always will strike at Hebron and
Jerusalem for these places are the most
foundational Tziyun (memorial and monument,
cf. Zion) of the stature, dignity, honor and roots
of the Jewish people.
Notes:
* Source for Ramban is the Mesorah addition of
"Ramban - Nacmhanides Commentary on the Torah,
Bereishis, parts I & II (Brooklyn, 2005). Also
see The Baal Ha Turim Chumash, Volume I, Genesis,
Mesorah (Brooklyn, 1999).
** The Talmud refers to a large collection of
commentaries on passages in the Hebrew Scriptures
that began to be assembled in the 3rd century BCE
and were elaborated with super commentaries and
written out by the 2nd century CE. They were
definitively redacted in two versions, The
Jerusalem Talmud (c350 CE, after which such work
became impossible in the land of Israel due to
Roman -- Byzantine persecution; and, in more
polished and detailed form in the large,
semi-autonomous Jewish community in Mesopotamia
(the "Babylonian" Talmud) by 500 CE.
The history of the ancient (beginning from time
of Solomon till about CE 1200) and large,
semi-autonomous Jewish community in Mesopotamia may
be studied in works like those of Dr. Erich
Isaac.
*** An interesting historical note on Joseph is
that there is to this day a massive (aboutr 120
miles long) irrigation canal, more like a river
called "Bahr Yousef" that parallels and irrigates
Egypt west of the Nile. It was directed into a
large depression creating a fresh water 'sea' oasis
called Lake Qarun in the El Fayoum area about 60
miles southwest of Cairo.
Narrett
Archive
Dr. Eugene Narrett is a writer
and teacher in Massachusetts and is the author of
Gathered
Against Jerusalem: Essays on a False
Peace (Dec. 2000).
His book, Israel Awakened: A Chronicle of the
Oslo War (2001), is currently available at
www.1stbooks.com/bookview/7421.
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