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Our Past in Present Tense

Why Do We Ignore The Second Jewish State?

  Part 1: The Historical Facts

We have the highest regard for King David, who established the United Kingdom of Israel 3,000 years ago, and we joyfully celebrate the birth of the modern State of Israel. But very few of us pay attention to the existence of another Jewish state that lasted for a century, between 164 and 63 BCE. Even on Chanukah, when we recall the heroism of the Maccabees, we concentrate on the miracle of a little cruse of oil — and ignore the impressive results of our ancestors’ uprising against their oppressors. Amazingly, the two Books of the Maccabees, which contain a full description of those events, were rejected by our spiritual leaders — and were saved by the Church. Subsequent generations of rabbis, who so carefully commemorated every tragedy that befell us in the course of our long history, decided to hide from us one of the greatest victories in our past that led to our people’s renewed independence. Instead, they made us believe that only miracles enabled us to survive.

In order to understand our rabbis’ approach to the Maccabean uprising and to the subsequent independent Jewish state, we need to get acquainted with the historical facts — which will be contained in the next few paragraphs. Only then will we be able to comprehend the reasons behind the rabbis’ decision to purge the revival of a Jewish kingdom, under the rule of the Hasmonean dynasty, from our tradition — a decision that I intend to discuss in the second part of this article. I realize, of course, that history is not everyone’s cup of tea. But our past is an integral part of our present, as the annual celebration of Passover amply illustrates. Theodor Herzl, the founder of modern Zionism, wrote in his diary that while in his youth, a religious studies teacher chastised him for not being able to recall the Exodus; a couple of decades later he was chastised by some influential Jews for remembering the Exodus too well. So, please bear with me as I summarize some data from the distant past because it may shed light on our present as well.

It all began with Alexander the Great’s occupation of the Middle East, including the tiny province of Judea, c. 333 BCE. After his untimely death, when his generals divided his empire among themselves, Judea was first under the rule of the Ptolemaids of Egypt, and then in 201 BCE, it was taken over by the Seleucids of Syria. By that time the Romans appeared on the horizon; they soon defeated the Syrians and imposed a heavy financial burden on their kingdom. In desperation, the Syrian rulers confiscated the treasures that were kept in the various temples under their domain — including the one in Jerusalem. A few decades later, Antiochus IV (175-164 BCE), also known as Epiphanes (“god manifest”), went one step beyond outright robbery and, in order to unify the various ethnic groups in Syria, accelerated the Hellenization process in their midst. He paid particular attention to Judea because it was a buffer province with Egypt, with whom the Syrians fought in those days. Thus the new king turned Jerusalem into a typical Greek polis (“city”), with Greek political and cultural institutions, and he appointed and deposed Jewish High Priests at will.

Antiochus IV took an even more extreme action in 167 BCE: contrary to the age-old tolerance of Middle Eastern rulers toward all religions, he forbade the observance of Jewish religious rites, first in Judea and then in a few other provinces in his kingdom, desecrated the Jerusalem Temple, and rededicated it to Olympic Zeus. All this is well known from rabbinic literature. What we are not told is that Antiochus’s actions were fully supported by many upper-class Jewish Hellenizers, including Menelaus, who was appointed High Priest four years earlier. Therefore, the Maccabees’ (“hammers”) subsequent revolt was not only against the Syrian oppressors but also against those upper-class Jews who embraced the Greek culture and collaborated with Antiochus IV.

As it turned out, the prevalent political conditions were in the Maccabees’ favor. Following Antiochus IV’s death in 164 BCE, open warfare erupted among claimants to his throne, and Rome, as well as Egypt, became interested in weakening Syria’s power. Consequently, Judah the Maccabee’s followers managed to regain Jerusalem and to rededicate the Temple to the one and only God, in December (Kislev) 164 BCE. In recognition of the rebels’ success, the Roman Senate ratified a treaty with them in 161 BCE, and thereby gave de facto recognition of Judea’s independence. While the warfare with the Syrians continued, with varied results, even they began to recognize the Jews’ growing power and in 142 BCE they exempted Judea from paying tribute to their treasury, thereby granting full independence to that country. As a result, after an interruption of 440 years, a Jewish State came into being, to which historians refer as the Second Commonwealth.

Two years later, a Great Assembly was convened in Jerusalem, and it confirmed Simon the Maccabee, a member of the Hasmonean family, as ethnarch (or ruler), High Priest and supreme commander of Judea. They also declared these offices hereditary “until a true prophet shall arise” (I Macc. 14:27 ff). Thus, the Hasmonean dynasty continued to rule until 63 BCE, when the Roman general Pompey got rid of two brothers who vied for the throne of their mother, Queen Salome Alexandra, and turned Judea into a Roman province for centuries.

What did the Hasmoneans accomplish in the course of their reign? Their first and foremost achievement was the expansion of the few Jewish settlements that existed in the first half of the second century BCE into a sizeable territory that included most of present day Israel, the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, and the entire Western part of the Kingdom of Jordan. Moreover, the bulk of the pagan population of the land became an integral part of the Jewish nation. As a result, even after the Hasmonean dynasty’s demise, Judea remained a country with a Jewish majority. Moreover, the new kingdom’s population enjoyed considerable prosperity. While agriculture remained the mainstay of the economy, trades flourished, crafts developed, and international commerce played a major role.

But territorial growth required extended military campaigns and a sizeable standing army with many foreign mercenaries. And as much as the Hasmonean rulers were eager to enlarge Judea, they were greatly influenced by the Hellenistic culture that prevailed throughout the Middle East in those days. Thus, in addition to their Hebrew names, they assumed Greek ones, too, and life in their palace was full of intrigues as in all the neighboring royal courts.

However, the most serious problem, as far as later generations were concerned, was rooted in the conflicts among the various religious currents among the Jews. Instead of allowing freedom of religious expression, some Hasmonean rulers persecuted the Pharisees, who became the founders of Rabbinic Judaism. No wonder that later rabbis wanted nothing to do with the Hasmonean dynasty and emphasized the miracle of Chanukah, rather than the Maccabees’ victories that led to a mainly secular, rather than to a religiously oriented State.

Dr. Yehuda Shabatay received rabbinical training in Budapest, a master of jurisprudence degree from the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and his doctorate in Hebrew literature from the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in New York. He was engaged in Jewish educational administration over most of his career and now teaches Jewish studies and history at Palomar College and San Diego State University.