A problem for Israel's farmers: The seven-year hitch 

For decades, Israelis have exploited a theological loophole to continue farming 
in years when the Talmud forbids it. Now a rabbinical ruling is making 
agriculture very difficult indeed.

By Donald Macintyre 
Published: 21 September 2007
Independent

Moshe Amar pauses for a moment before beginning the guided tour of his 
greenhouses at Moshav Sharsheret and sums up his side of a dispute that is 
increasingly dividing rabbinate from state, Zionist from non-Zionist, 
ultra-orthodox from national religious Jews. "In our Torah it says you should 
live religiously," he says. "But religion needs to find a solution for you, and 
not to make life difficult as the Orthodox are trying to do. Religion asks us 
to fulfil the law of Halacha, but also to live a normal life."

If anyone has fulfilled the old Zionist dream of making the desert bloom it is 
Mr Amar, who is one of the biggest vegetable producers in southern Israel. He 
has a thriving business here in the heart of the northern Negev growing 37 
acres of prime tomatoes, 13 of sweet red and purple peppers, along with the 
flowers, vegetable plants and more than 20 species of herbs in his widely 
sought-after wholesale nursery. His international reputation is such that he 
has worked as a consultant to farmers as far afield as India and Turkey.

Yet this year Mr Amar, himself a kippa-wearing religious Jew, faces the loss of 
40 per cent of his business - worth some £1m - because for all his painstaking 
efforts his produce is not regarded as kosher enough to satisfy the 
hardest-line sectors of Israel's burgeoning ultra-Orthodox market. For the 
Jewish year which started at Rosh Hashana last week is the shmita, the biblical 
seventh year in which farmers are required in strict religious law not to work 
their land.

With good reason, Mr Amar thought that the strict, and costly, precautions that 
he and many other Israeli farmers had taken during the last shmita, in 2000-1, 
would allow him to continue to sell his produce to the ultra-Orthodox. Many of 
his wholesale plants are mounted on trays 120cm (4ft) above the ground and so 
far from growing in the earth of Israel are bedded in artificial compounds 
imported from the US and Finland as Biolan and Verniculite to ensure that when 
vegetables start to sprout, no one can say they were grown on Israeli land.

More importantly, Mr Amar thought he had acted in accordance with the letter of 
religious law, by arranging - through the Chief Rabbinate of Israel - for the 
nominal "sale" of his land for the year for something like 50p an acre to an 
Arab, i.e., a non-Jew, and employing 200 non-Jews (Thai and Bedouin Arabs) to 
work it to ensure there is no Jewish hand in the growing and picking. This may 
sound like literal-minded sophistry. But in fact it has a long and honourable 
tradition behind it - so much so that Mr Amar, like most Israeli farmers, has 
his own certificate to prove it from the Chief Rabbinate itself.

This confirms unambiguously that "the lands of Moshe Amar from Sharsheret were 
sold to a goy [gentile] from the day of Rosh Hashana. Because of that the 
products the above person grows will be without fears of breaking the shmita." 
And that certificate is in line with a policy adopted by the Jewish religious 
authorities here since well before the foundation of the state of Israel. Yet 
unfortunately, this seventh year it is not enough to guarantee Mr Amar the 
market he can usually count on - because of another ruling made by the same 
Chief Rabbinate.

For the Rabbinate has also decided that local chief rabbis of individual cities 
need not, if they choose, be bound by the certificate issued to the producers. 
Instead they can interpret the scriptures literally and rule that the only 
biblically authentic way to preserve the shmita is to order supermarkets, 
greengrocers, hotels and restaurants to buy foreign - i.e., totally non-Jewish 
produce - inflicting serious damage on the market for Israeli agriculture.

Which is just what - in a number of important cases - local rabbis have done. 
"In places like Bnei Brak they don't allow me to sell one fruit or vegetable," 
Mr Amar complains, citing one famous ultra-Orthodox stronghold on the outskirts 
of Tel Aviv. As he points out, to satisfy even a small minority of customers 
who require this ultra-strict interpretation of the shmita, stores and 
restaurants in the relevant neighbourhoods need to ensure all their produce 
conforms to the local rabbi's ruling. "For the sake of 3 to 4 per cent of 
people who want to keep the shmita in this way, they are ordering 30 to 40 per 
cent from abroad," he says.

At the root of the dispute, which has now gone to the Israeli courts and has 
sparked a delicate but unmistakable power struggle between the Ministry of 
Agriculture and the Chief Rabbi of Israel, are verses 1-5 in chapter 25 of the 
Book of Leviticus, which say (to quote the King James version of Bible): "And 
the Lord spake unto Moses in Mount Sinai, saying, Speak unto the children of 
Israel, and say unto them, When ye come into the land which I give you, then 
shall the land keep a sabbath unto the Lord. Six years thou shalt sow thy 
field, and six years thou shalt prune thy vineyard, and gather in the fruit 
thereof; But in the seventh year shall be a sabbath of rest unto the land, a 
sabbath for the Lord: thou shalt neither sow thy field, nor prune thy vineyard. 
That which growth of its own accord of thy harvest thou shalt not reap, neither 
gather the grapes of thy vine undressed: for it is a year of rest unto the 
land."

But the idea that this sacred text should not fundamentally disrupt Israeli 
agriculture, is hardly new. The Rabbi Abraham Kook, the Latvian-born eminent 
biblical scholar and hugely influential first chief Rabbi of British mandate 
Palestine, did indeed believe, working as a rabbi in Lithuania at the end of 
the 19th century, in the absolutist interpretation of Moses' exhortation to the 
children of Israel.

It was after coming to Palestine as the Rabbi of Jaffa in 1904 that he began to 
change his mind. As a Zionist, he began to share the Jewish farmers' arguments 
that they could not sustain the cultivation of a hostile, desert terrain if 
they had to down tools every seven years, and that some way of permitting them 
to continue would need to be found. He hit upon pretty well the stratagem in 
force today. "Although it pains us, we must follow this course of action," he 
decreed. "We have no choice. We must use this narrow loophole and rely on the 
arrangement afforded by the permit."

One reason why Mr Amar and his fellow farmers are facing much greater problems 
this year than they did seven years ago is no doubt the growing assertiveness 
of a numerically fast-growing ultra-Orthodox population. But other overtones of 
conflict are the old tensions between Zionist - including religious Zionist 
Jews - and an ultra-Orthodox population many of who are essentially non-Zionist 
in their outlook. For classic Israeli Zionists the rush to observe the shmita 
by importing large quantities of foreign produce is positively unpatriotic; for 
many of the ultra-Orthodox, to do so is a matter of placing religion where they 
believe it should be - above the state.

One man who believes strongly in the right of local religious authorities - and 
individual citizens-to observe the shmita as they see it is Rabbi Arvram 
Ravitz, a Knesset member in United Torah Judaism, supported by many Ashkenazy 
(European origin) ultra-Orthodox Jews, and with original roots as an 
anti-Zionist party. For Rabbi Ravitz, the original "beautiful" idea of the 
shmita - that farmers who cannot lose a single day's work, who rise - as Mr 
Amar does every day - at 5am should be able to take a holiday, study year or 
even use it to diversify into another occupation. "I changed my job by becoming 
a politician," he chuckles. "Maybe one day I will change back again."

Rabbi Ravitz says he has been disturbed at reports that the Attorney General, 
Menachem Mazuz, may be considering intervening to order local rabbis to 
withdraw orders for importation of non-Jewish produce as an unacceptable 
interference in a sphere of essentially private behaviour. "It's a big 
mistake," he says. "It reminds me of the days of Russian Communism when the 
state gave instructions to the rabbis how to behave." The sale of farming goods 
is an "open market", he points out, adding that he believes neither the state 
nor farmers have the "right to say you have to change your mind because I am 
losing my business".

Rabbi Ravitz also casts doubt on the modern relevance of the long-standing idea 
of agriculture "as an ideological way to express Zionism" when it is a 
prodigious consumer of scarce resources, including water, when it is often 
possible to buy produce from abroad more cheaply, and when there is a case for 
Israel instead emphasising "more sophisticated industries" at which it already 
excels.

In direct opposition to this, a Zionist rabbi, Benjamin Lau, the nephew of a 
former chief rabbi in Israel, wrote in Ha'aretz this week in strong defence of 
using the loophole, something he pointed out Orthodox leaders of Sephardic Jews 
- those from Arab countries - had been more flexible about than their Ashkenazy 
counterparts. "We must declare in the nation's schools, youth movements, 
synagogues and in every other possible forum that each purchase of non-Jewish 
agricultural produce unravels another thread in Zionism's flag."

Mr Amar, for one, agrees that the insistence by the ultra-Orthodox on foreign, 
or Palestinian, produce in the shmita, which he acknowledges has always gone 
on, though not at the levels threatened this year, has unacceptable 
consequences for Israeli agriculture. In past shmitas, Palestinian greenhouses 
in Gaza, whose border is a few kilometres from this moshav where his company, 
Tiv Shtil, operates, has been a steady supplier of agricultural produce to the 
Jewish ultra-Orthodox market. Even this, says Mr Amar, had the effect of 
"empowering our enemies... and weakening [Israeli] farmers". This shmita, in 
what is a disaster for the already collapsing Gaza economy, the total closure 
of the Karni cargo crossing since Hamas's bloody take-over in June, ensures 
that no agricultural produce will make it from Gaza to the West Bank, let alone 
Israel.

Mr Amar, of a group of farmers who have challenged the local rulings in the 
courts and who recently met the Agriculture Minister, Shalom Simchon, says they 
would accept a compromise allowing a 10 per cent quota of imports for the 
shmita rather than the open-ended level Israel currently faces. Believing he is 
every bit as religious as the next man, he says that in Ma'agalif the 
neighbouring moshav where he actually lives, there is a kollel - or religious 
Jewish college. "Every week I give them vegetables for free and the Orthodox 
there don't seem to have a problem with the products." 

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