The Friends of Israel Today
May 7, 2016 | #1619—Israeli Independence Day
Interview—Elliot JagerElliot Jager is a Jerusalem-based journalist and author of The Pater: My Father, My Judaism, My Childlessness. Available for purchase at Amazon.
Currently, a senior editor at The Jerusalem Report, he is a former editorial page editor at The Jerusalem Post.
Chris welcomes Elliot Jager into the studio to talk about Israel’s Independence.
You can read more of Elliot’s writing on his blog and follow him on Twitter.
Short Segment—Israeli Declaration of IndependenceThe state of Israel declared its independence on Friday, May 14, 1948. There were many serious issues and forces at work trying to prevent the Jewish state from being formed, but there was one unexpected stumbling block that you would have probably never expected. Chris explains why the phrase “Rock of Israel” had the potential to bring the whole process of independence to a halt.
Full Version of the Israeli Declaration of Independence
From Wikipedia:
The Land of Israel was the birthplace of the Jewish people. Here their spiritual, religious and political identity was shaped. Here they first attained to statehood, created cultural values of national and universal significance and gave to the world the eternal Book of Books.
After being forcibly exiled from their land, the people kept faith with it throughout their Dispersion and never ceased to pray and hope for their return to it and for the restoration in it of their political freedom.
Impelled by this historic and traditional attachment, Jews strove in every successive generation to re-establish themselves in their ancient homeland. In recent decades they returned in their masses. Pioneers, ma’pilim [(Hebrew) – immigrants coming to Eretz-Israel in defiance of restrictive legislation] and defenders, they made deserts bloom, revived the Hebrew language, built villages and towns, and created a thriving community controlling its own economy and culture, loving peace but knowing how to defend itself, bringing the blessings of progress to all the country’s inhabitants, and aspiring towards independent nationhood.
In the year 5657 (1897), at the summons of the spiritual father of the Jewish State, Theodore Herzl, the First Zionist Congress convened and proclaimed the right of the Jewish people to national rebirth in its own country.
This right was recognized in the Balfour Declaration of the 2nd November, 1917, and re-affirmed in the Mandate of the League of Nations which, in particular, gave international sanction to the historic connection between the Jewish people and Eretz-Israel and to the right of the Jewish people to rebuild its National Home.
The catastrophe which recently befell the Jewish people – the massacre of millions of Jews in Europe – was another clear demonstration of the urgency of solving the problem of its homelessness by re-establishing in Eretz-Israel the Jewish State, which would open the gates of the homeland wide to every Jew and confer upon the Jewish people the status of a fully privileged member of the comity of nations.
Survivors of the Nazi holocaust in Europe, as well as Jews from other parts of the world, continued to migrate to Eretz-Israel, undaunted by difficulties, restrictions and dangers, and never ceased to assert their right to a life of dignity, freedom and honest toil in their national homeland.
In the Second World War, the Jewish community of this country contributed its full share to the struggle of the freedom- and peace-loving nat...