Jerusalem, Israel - Oct. 26, 2016 - The Israeli Rabbinical Organization Tzohar was founded twenty years ago by Rabbi David Stav, Rabbi Yuval Cherlow, Rabbi Rafi Feuerstein, and Rabbi Tzachi Lehman. 

Tzohar has enabled over 100,000 people to marry halakhically. 8,500 kallahs have received pre-marriage instruction from 400 Tzohar female volunteers. 23,500 individuals have had their Jewish identities confirmed through Tzohar's Shorashim program, which searches from government offices to old cemeteries seeking vital information on family history. Tzohar lists 693 volunteer rabbis, located throughout Israel, who assist with various life cycle events and holiday programs. Their mission is focused on strengthening Jewish identify and continuity, often with unaffiliated Israelis.

On Tuesday morning, Yakov Gaon, Tzohar Executive Vice-president, stood on the plaza near Montefiore Windmill. He introduced the special tour which began in the Yemin Moshe area to the invited guests, a tour which would highlight ethics, social, religious and Arab concerns, and emphasize "character." 

Rabbi Cherlow told how Mishkenot Sha'ananim was the first Jewish neighborhood built outside the Old City Walls, and was located on the border during the years 1948-1967. As a young child, he remembered his visits to Mishkenot Sha'ananim. Only the poorest of the poor lived there next to No-Man's Land and Jordanian-controlled east Jerusalem. The residents were so poor "they planted their own vegetables, since they could not afford to buy food."  Then, in the early 1970s, Jerusalem Mayor Teddy Kollek evacuated the poor people to turn the area into the prestigious area it is today. Ethical question number one, was it "built on blood" or could it be considered a nes in fulfillment of the words of the navi?

The next stop was the King David Hotel, and the story of its bombing in 1948. How many lives were lost? What really happened and the exact sequence of events are questioned today. But, while there are "50 books on what to do concerning putting a frozen schnitzel on a plata on Shabbat, there is not one about an ethical code for Israel Defense Force." The fact that ethical questions and decisions have to be made in a split-second concerns Rabbi Stav and there must be clear guidelines. 

The next stop on the walking tour was near the reform center on King David Street. "Jewish continuity and the identify of Jewish society" are major concerns and the conversion issues must be addressed. Then the group continued on to Mamilla Mall where Rabbi Feuerstein remarked that the Arab, Haredi, Modern Orthodox and secular communities are the "four tribes President Rivlin speaks of, they not only do not meet, but have separate newspapers and news and do not know each other any more." We must look for Jewish values and "touch the minds and hearts," said Feurerstein, about the secular Israelis who do not know the basics of Judaism.

In the following video, Rabbi Feuerstein sat near Jaffa Gate and told the group of his desire for Jerusalem to be open to all Jews.

 

Then the group walked through Teddy Park and past Yemin Moshe to the Montefiore Restaurant, and the last stop on the ethical and social journey, to hear one of the most fascinating stories of modern times.

Rabbi Sharon Shalom came from Ethiopia as a child, alone. He was told his parents died and was placed in a youth village. His education began with learning to turn on the faucet with running water. However, he recounts that no one at first thought to also teach him how to turn it off. After such basics, he went on to get semicha and a doctorate degree. Two years after he was told his parents died while waiting in Sudan, he was told they were in Israel and very much alive. Shalom's success as a community rav in Kiryat Gat in an Ashkenazi congregation, his sense of humor as he retold the stories of his life, and his experiences as a Tzohar volunteer impressed the audience waiting for lunch. 

Efraim Halevy who was the ninth head of Mossad and served at the time of the Ethiopian aliyah, was the last speaker of the day. "We did not know who were the Jews, we did not ask for documents," said Halevy of the Ethiopians waiting in Sudan to fulfill their dream of returning to Zion. "Tzohar bridges the gap between Judaism of the past and the days to come" Halevy added.

The ethical and social questions raised during the tour present the Tzohar Rabbinical Council with many issues on which to deliberate. Major halakhic issues face Israeli society, as Halevy concluded, "something must be done, we have no other option then success, or Jews will be a minority in Israel."