On November 24, 2006, at the age of 92, a man named Stanley Goldfoot passed away. He is remembered by family and friends for his love for and devotion to Israel and the Jewish people.
A Letter to the World from Jerusalem 1969
by Eliezer ben Yisrael ( Stanley Goldfoot)
I am not a creature from another planet, as you seem to believe. I am a Jerusalemite, like yourselves, a man of flesh and blood. I am a citizen of my city, an integral part of my people.
I have a few things to get off my chest. Because I am not a diplomat, I do not have to mince words. I do not have to please you or even persuade you. I owe you nothing.
You did not build this city, you did not live in it, you did not defend it when they came to destroy it. And we will be damned if we will let you take it away.
There was a Jerusalem before there was a New York. When Berlin, Moscow, London, and Paris were miasmal forest and swamp, there was a thriving Jewish community here. It gave something to the world which you nations have rejected ever since you established yourselves – a humane moral code.
Here the prophets walked, their words flashing like forked lightning. Here a people who wanted nothing more than to be left alone, fought off waves of heathen would-be conquerors, bled and died on the battlements, hurled themselves into the flames of their burning Temple rather than surrender, and, when finally overwhelmed by sheer numbers and led away into captivity, swore that before they forgot Jerusalem, they would see their tongues cleave to their palates, their right arms wither. (see psalms 137)
For two pain-filled millennia, while we were your unwelcome guests, we prayed daily to return to this city.
Three times a day we petitioned the Almighty: “Gather us from the four corners of the world, bring us upright to our land, return in mercy to Jerusalem, Thy city, and swell in it as Thou promised.”
On every Yom Kippur and Passover, we fervently voiced the hope that next year would find us in Jerusalem.
Your inquisitions, pogroms, expulsions, the ghettos into which you jammed us, your forced baptisms, your quota systems, your genteel anti-Semitism, and the final unspeakable horror, the holocaust (and worse, your terrifying disinterest in it) – all these have not broken us. They may have sapped what little moral strength you still possessed, but they forged us into steel.
Do you think that you can break us now after all we have been through?
Do you really believe that after Dachau and Auschwitz we are frightened by your threats of blockades and sanctions?
We have been to Hell and back – a Hell of your making. What more could you possibly have in your arsenal that could scare us?
I have watched this city bombarded twice by nations calling themselves civilized. In 1948, while you looked on apathetically, I saw women and children blown to smithereens, after we agreed to your request to internationalize the city. It was a deadly combination that did the job – British officers, Arab gunners, and American-made cannon.
And then the savage sacking of the Old City – the wilful slaughter, the wanton destruction of every synagogue and religious school, the desecration of Jewish cemeteries, the sale by a ghoulish government of tombstones for building materials, for poultry runs, army camps, even latrines.
And you never said a word.
You never breathed the slightest protest when the Jordanians shut off the holiest of our places, the Western Wall, in violation of the pledges they had made after the war – a war they waged, incidentally, against the decision of the UN.
Not a murmur came from you whenever the legionnaires in their spiked helmets casually opened fire upon our citizens from behind the walls. Your hearts bled when Berlin came under siege. You rushed your airlift “to save the gallant Berliners”. But you did not send one ounce of food when Jews starved in besieged Jerusalem. You thundered against the wall which the East Germans ran through the middle of the German capital – but not one peep out of you about that other wall, the one that tore through the heart of Jerusalem.
And when that same thing happened 20 years later, and the Arabs unleashed a savage, unprovoked bombardment of the Holy City again, did any of you do anything?
The only time you came to life was when the city was at last re-united. Then you wrung your hands and spoke loftily of “justice” and the need for the “Christian” quality of turning the other cheek.
The truth – and you know it deep inside your gut – is that you would prefer the city to be destroyed rather than have it governed by Jews. No matter how diplomatically you phrase it, the age-old prejudices seep out of every word.
If our return to the city has tied your theology in knots, perhaps you had better re-examine your catechisms.
After what we have been through, we are not passively going to accommodate ourselves to the twisted idea that we are to suffer eternal homelessness until we accept your saviour.
For the first time since the year 70, there is now complete religious freedom for all in Jerusalem .
For the first time since the Romans put a torch to the Temple, everyone has equal rights (you prefer to have some more equal than others.)
We loathe the sword – but it was you who forced us to take it up.
We crave peace, but we are not going back to the peace of 1948 as you would like us to.
We are home. It has a lovely sound for a nation you have willed to wander over the face of the globe. We are not leaving.
We are redeeming the pledge made by our forefathers:
Jerusalem is being rebuilt.
“Next year” and the year after, and after, and after, until the end of time – “in Jerusalem “!
Stanley Goldfoot,
Founder Editor
The Times of Israel
Stanley Goldfoot was born in Johannesburg, South Africa. Subsequent to his hearing a speech about the Zionist vision by Ze’ev Jabotinsky, he headed for Palestine where, at the age of 18, he joined a HaShomer HaTzair kibbutz.
After the rebirth of the Jewish State of Israel his main goal, which he eventually realized, was to establish a Zionist English newspaper, “The Times of Israel .”
In the first issue of “The Times of Israel “, Stanley Goldfoot wrote his famous controversial “Letter to the World from Jerusalem”, which caused quite a stir. The article is still relevant and, in his memory, I am sharing it with you.
@ SHmuel HaLevi 2:
“….wash out the trash embedded in there now.”
Hah I like the way you put it! lol! But yes, it’s true unfortunately, however, we’d have to help change also all the world’s governments because they are all corrupted, polluted and cursed to no end!!! Going only to where money and power takes them regardless with whom they become bedfellows!!! I.e.: See all around Europe, Latin America, North America and more, sleeping with the savages, the cutthroats. Sigh…
@ Ted Belman:
“…its bellicose nature” you say??? The article is indeed beautiful and beautifully rendered by Goldfoot RIP, but…I would’ve liked MORE bellicosity as common sense and acceptance by Jews over the millennia hasn’t gotten us out of the BIG LIE the world has put us… :o(
For me, he may have known himself as Sidney Goldfoot, by more memory and consciousness regards him as Eliezer ben Yisrael. When it was published in 1969, I read and re-read his amazing challenge to the entire world, non-Jewish as well as Jewish, that Yerusalaiyim shall forever remain Jewish and the eternal capital of the Jewish nation and the Jewish state.
The work of Eliezer ben Yisrael It was one of the influences that impelled me toward the hardcore Zionism of Jabotinsky and other great men of our nation, and that influenced me to take up graduate studies at one of Israel’s great universities, and to seek residence near the Rechavia neighborhood wherein resided the great Dr Yisrael Eldad who, along with Rav Meir Kahane many years later, taught me about authentic Judaism and the struggle of the Jewish nation.
May the spirit of these great men live on in forever as the Jewish nation rebuilds itself.
Arnold Harris
Mount Horeb WI
@ Ted Belman:
Ii agree I always felt uplifted when I read it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gTW59USStlk
Its as fresh as it was when it was written in 1969.
The world has never come to terms with the fact the Jews rule Jerusalem.
Indeed, the age-old prejudice against Israel remains with us still.
Always worth reading since it will always be true.
Precisely.
Why has it not been proclaimed and acted upon in practice by the MAPAI-MAPAM, (T. Kollek a principal on that and a British collaborator), and pseudo “right wing” governments?
Because unJews cannot hold water when it comes to BEING JEWISH in Eretz Israel.
They betray as a way of life.
Solution?
Complete government system change and with it wash out the trash embedded in there now.
If that is not done by the people, the renegades Peresites will destroy the Jews and our Heritage.
A friend wrote: