Froman’s message
By JPOST EDITORIAL
03/06/2013 00:48
Rabbi Menachem Froman harbored a deep love for humanity that motivated him to pursue peace against all odds.
Rabbi Menahem Froman Photo: Marc Israel Sellem
Rabbi Menachem Froman, a unique and colorful figure with many
internal contradictions, who passed away Monday after a long battle with cancer,
was a man who could not be neatly categorized. Was he a right-wing settler who
found himself identified with the Left, or was he a leftist who lived among the
religious Right? Froman was a relentless champion of peace between Israelis and
Palestinians, advocating political autonomy for Palestinians. He also defended
the rights of Jewish settlers and rejected attempts to make the West Bank
judenrein. He was eulogized by heads of both Peace Now and the Council of Jewish
Communities in Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip.
While he might have
misread the underlying causes of the conflict and was no friend of secular
liberalism, Froman, who dedicated much of his time to teaching Torah to the
non-religious, harbored a deep love for humanity that motivated him to pursue
peace against all odds – whether by demonstrating against “price tag” attacks by
settlers against Arabs or by protecting the rights of Jews to return to their
historic homeland.
Froman was swept away by Israel’s miraculous victory
in the Six Day War and the sudden expansion of the Jewish state to include sites
resonant with Jewish history such as Hebron, Shiloh and Tekoa – where religious
and secular lived in harmony and where he raised his 10 children. Perhaps it was
his background as an Israeli brought up in a secular household who embraced
religion as an adult that lent to his unconventional and independent-minded
approach as a rabbi and as a spiritual leader. Undoubtedly, Froman was a deeply
spiritual man who believed that religious faith could be used as a bridge to
overcome cultural, national, territorial and political barriers. Despite all
their differences, devout Jews and Muslims’ shared belief in a spiritual
dimension that recognized God as the ultimate source of morality could serve as
a basis for peaceful co-existence, Froman argued relentlessly as early as the
1991 Madrid Conference. It was the secular aspect of Zionism as a national
movement that religious Muslims viewed as a threat, he said. Ironically, Froman
saw Hamas’s rise to power in the 2006 Palestinian elections as an opportunity
for peace, since Hamas’s leadership, unlike Fatah’s, was more clearly motivated
by religious faith. Froman stubbornly adhered to his convictions though he
failed repeatedly in his efforts to bring about concrete results – such as the
release of kidnapped soldiers Nachshon Wachsman and Gilad Schalit – through
interfaith dialogue with Hamas.
Froman, undeterred by those who mocked
him or called him a traitor, on occasion blamed “secular Zionism” for being an
obstacle to peace. In an interview in 2006 after Hamas won the Palestinian
election, Froman told The Jerusalem Post that many of his Muslim interlocutors
such as senior Hamas official Mahmoud Zahar or Sheikh Ahmed Yassin – the
spiritual leader of Hamas who spearheaded a yearslong suicide bombing campaign
that killed scores of innocent Israelis – believed “that America sent the
secular Zionists to this land to destroy the Islamic tradition, to humiliate the
Muslims, to show how we’re successful and they’re primitive, that we’ve created
this great economy and they live in the woods.”
Except on the extreme
Left, there were few in Israel willing to accept Froman’s diagnosis that it was
secular Zionism that provoked religiously motivated terrorist organizations like
Hamas. Except on the religious Right, few were convinced that faith-based
dialogue between devout Muslims and Jews could solve territorial and political
disputes. But many rightly respected Froman for the risks he took to follow
through with his convictions – including meetings in Gaza with Yassin – and his
boundless optimism that peace through dialogue was attainable. Anyone who met
Froman could not help but be captivated by the rabbi’s eccentric appearance –
his scraggly long white beard, wild hair and ever-ready smile.
He was
said to prefer white clothes as a symbol of his desire to spread light and
positive energies. Increasing goodness in the world was, said Froman, the best
way of combating the forces of darkness. “Peace is the goal of our life,” he
said.
May his memory be a blessing.