Jerusalem, Mr. President, is Israel’s capital

By Rabbi Ben Kamin

Rabbi Ben Kamin
Rabbi Ben Kamin

ENCINITAS, California — The Supreme Court has struck down as unconstitutional a congressional effort that would allow Americans born in Jerusalem to list Israel as their birthplace on passports.  This ruling also upholds the principle that the president alone has the power to recognize foreign nations.

Mr. President, if you would actually recognize America’s best friend in the Middle East, its unyielding ally and advocate, you might recognize that Jerusalem is the capital of Israel.  It has been the capital of the Jewish people for 3000 years.  You may be thinking about passports but you succumb to the propaganda of terror states that underwrite beheadings, sexual bondage, and ethnic genocide.

The “prime minister” of Hamas—a murder syndicate banned from recognition by the United States and the European Union—is campaigning in European capitals against Israel’s practice of making Jerusalem “too Jewish.”   This is the verbal equivalent of Hamas’s launching of 50,000 killer missiles into Israeli towns and villages in the past few years even while the UN discusses Palestinian statehood.

Because Judaism—and Israel—are democratic and free-speech cultures, I declare that there remains an unacceptable inequity, socially, politically, educationally, that exists between Jewish and Muslim residents of the Holy City founded by King David some 3,000 years ago.

Arab denizens and Palestinians generally are too often subjected to wanton road blocks, destruction of homes and olive groves, water rights, and electoral participation that exists beyond their paper citizenship.  Many Israelis are more vocal than American Jews about these deplorable conditions and 80%+ of Israelis have nothing to do with the “settler movement.”

But let’s talk about capital cities:  the systemic abjuration of real social justice for the majority African American population in Washington, DC, confined to substandard  school houses (not without hard-working and meritorious teachers), intermittent public transportation, dangerous neighborhoods, and unparalleled employment does not call into question the inherent and historic status of Washington as the capital of the United States.

One doesn’t hear, in spite of Syria’s genocide of its own citizens, that Damascus is too Syrian.   Nobody has suggested that Pyongyang, the urban playground of the grisly “Brilliant Comrade,” is just too Korean.

Jerusalem, while including—and responsible for—its significant Muslim and Christian minorities was, has been, and will always be the capital, symbol, and liturgical centerpiece of Jewish demography, theology, language, and history.  Its reunification to what it was for centuries during the 1967 war was triggered by Jordanian shelling (after Jordan occupied its holy quarters for 19 years of squalid treatment) and only after Israel contacted Jordanian ministers and offered not to enter combat if Amman stayed out of the massive invasion of Israel underway from Egypt and Syria.

Jerusalem is mentioned 700 times in the Hebrew Scripture; there is not one reference to the city in the Holy Koran.  Jerusalem was never sought as an Arab polity over twenty centuries, even during long intervals of colonial intervention (which afflicted the Jews therein just as much, if not more, than the Muslim and Christian inhabitants).   No other people on the planet chant “Next Year In Jerusalem” as a poetic refrain every year—at the holiday of Passover.

Jerusalem was capital of Israel when Saudi Arabia was just sand; it is as Jewish a capital as Ottawa is Canadian.

Jews face Jerusalem when we pray; Muslims actually have their back towards Jerusalem when facing their sacred pilgrimage city of Mecca.   It’s about time that religious geographers simply face facts and that presidents have guts.

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Rabbi Kamin is an author and freelance writer.  You may comment to him at ben.kamin@sdjewishworld.com, or post your comment on this website provided that the rules below are observed.

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