Rabbi Eliezer Sadan (Rav Eli Sadan) – His Hands Remained Steady

I would be almost sympathetic with normative appeals to “political theology” were it not for the fact that the leading activists actually at work on the ground are reactionary. For anyone interested in the intellectual center of gravity in contemporary rightwing Religious Zionism in Israel, here’s Alan Brill on Rabbi Eli Sadan and a review of Sadan’s His Hands Remained Steady (Hebrew).

About zjb

Zachary Braiterman is Professor of Religion in the Department of Religion at Syracuse University. His specialization is modern Jewish thought and philosophical aesthetics. http://religion.syr.edu
This entry was posted in uncategorized and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink.

2 Responses to Rabbi Eliezer Sadan (Rav Eli Sadan) – His Hands Remained Steady

  1. Berel Dov Lerner says:

    R. Sadan has some strange ideas, but if you want to use him as a window into the thinking of Religious Zionists you would do well to ask not what he writes, but rather what do students take away with them from participation in the programs he has pioneered. It is my impression that what sticks is a strong commitment to the Jewish People via participation in Israeli state and society. His sanctification of the state offers a kind of fundamentalist grounding for respecting the political process, respecting de facto political pluralism, and respecting the decisions of a democratically elected government. Thus, the old joke has settlers boasting about how difficult it would be to evacuate them in the context of territorial compromise. One guy says: they would have to send a whole company of soldiers to make us leave! The next says: they would have to send a whole battalion to make us leave! Then the guy from Eli (R.Sadan’s settlement) says: They would have to send a fax to make us leave! (sounds better in Hebrew). It’s also a bit disingenuous to mention R. Sadan’s connection with R. Tau without mentioning the great ideological drift that has taken place across the years. Rav Tau has become HarDaL: a Hareidi Zionist who wants nothing to do with academics etc., and as far as I know currently supports the Shas party. The programs associated with R. Sadan are very happy to see their graduates study in universities and join professions which can be of service to Israeli society.

Leave a Reply to Berel Dov LernerCancel reply