IN ONE of the most famous poems written in the wake of the Six Day War, Haim Hefer wrote the following words: “How does it happen that paratroopers cry? How does it happen that they touch a wall with such great emotion? How does it happen that from the tears comes singing? Perhaps it is because these 18 year olds, born before the State came to be, are carrying 2,000 years on their backs.”
Almost 50 years after the unification of Jerusalem, we can ask how it is that the Western Wall continues to be a major issue for Jews in Israel and the Diaspora, even as Israeli society deals with far more important matters.
With Haim Hefer’s poem in mind, we can say that the Jewish leaders from Israel and around the world, who stood with Torah scrolls at the entrance to the Kotel recently, along with hundreds of activists (mostly women), were carrying a long history of struggle for the character of the State of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state and for the nature of its relationship with non-Orthodox streams of Judaism.
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