Rabbi David Stav, the chairman of the Tzohar rabbinical organization, spoke to Israel National News - Arutz Sheva about the widespread protests against the government's planned judicial reforms and the heated discourse and divisions in the country over the issue.
"Rabbis are not politicians and they are not experts in this, so they should not bother with these details. But I ask myself, when a Torah-observant and mitzvot-observant Jew does not shave during this period (The Three Weeks), is careful not to listen to music, and couples are forbidden to marry, what goes through his head," Rabbi Stav asked.
"All the mourning customs, according to Maimonides, are supposed to remind us of what happened at the time of the destruction of the Temple," he noted. "We talk about unity and do the opposite, we talk about the need to rebuild the nation and do the opposite. So what should we do? Just today in the Daf Yomi we read about Rabbi Zechariah ben Abkilus (who is blamed in the Talmud for the destruction of the Second Temple), and I think about the silence of the rabbis, and of course, I am one of them. It doesn't matter who is right and who is wrong, because even during the Second Temple period no one asked who was wrong and who was right."
"I want to call for a different discourse. A discourse that calls for love and not hostility and hatred. If we speak a language of hatred, submission, a language of' we have defeated you and we will show you,' if this is how anyone thinks the country will be built, I think they are wrong," he said.... Read More: Arutz-7