Menachem Froman Explained

Rabbi Menachem Froman
Birth Date:1 June 1945
Birth Place:Galilee, Mandatory Palestine
Death Place:Tekoa, West Bank
Nationality:Israeli
Known For:Interfaith dialogue, including with PLO and Hamas members
Spouse:Hadassah Froman
Children:10

Rabbi Menachem Froman (also spelled Menahem and Fruman; Hebrew: מנחם פרומן‎; 1 June 1945 – 4 March 2013)[1] was an Israeli Orthodox rabbi, and a peacemaker and negotiator with close ties to Palestinian religious leaders. A founding member of Gush Emunim, he served as the chief rabbi of Tekoa in the West Bank. He was well known for promoting and leading interfaith dialogue between Jews, Christians and Muslims, focusing on using religion as a tool and source for recognizing the humanity and dignity of all people.[2] Together with a Palestinian journalist close to Hamas, Rabbi Froman drafted a ceasefire agreement between Israel and the Hamas government in the Gaza Strip, known as the Froman-Amayreh Agreement. The agreement was endorsed by Hamas government, but it did not receive any official response from the Israeli government.[3]

Career

Froman, a former Israeli paratrooper who took part in the 1967 capture of the Western Wall, was a student at the Mercaz haRav and Yeshivat HaKotel yeshivas. He was among the founders of the Gush Emunim settlement movement, and supported the establishment of Jewish settlements in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. He obtained rabbinical ordination from Rabbis Shlomo Goren and Avraham Shapira, and then became the rabbi of Migdal Oz, a settlement in the Gush Etzion area. He was Chief Rabbi of the Knesset. He taught at several yeshivas, including Ateret Cohanim and Machon Meir, and was a lecturer at the Tekoa Yeshiva and Otniel hesder Yeshiva.

Views and ideologies

Interfaith meetings and dialogue

Froman was involved in interfaith dialogue with Palestinians and Muslims, and participated in informal negotiations with many Palestinian leaders as he argued that peacemaking efforts between Israelis and Palestinians must include the religious sectors of both societies. Froman conducted meetings with controversial Palestinian leaders, including with the late PLO Chairman and President of Palestinian National Authority Yasser Arafat, and the Hamas leaders Sheikh Ahmad Yassin and Mahmoud Al-Zahar.[4] [5] Froman had close ties with Palestinian leaders, as evidenced by a letter he sent to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas about his last conversation with Yasser Arafat:

After the election of the Hamas government in the Gaza Strip, Froman stepped up his efforts to organize meetings between Israeli and Palestinian religious leaders. He met and conducted negotiations with current Hamas leader Mahmoud al-Zahar and Hamas's Minister for Jerusalem Affairs, Sheikh Mahmoud Abu Tir, with the goal of drafting a ceasefire agreement that will end the killings in Gaza and the West Bank and lift the blockade imposed by Israel on the Gaza Strip.[6]

Froman–Amayreh Agreement (2008)

In February 2008, Froman reached a proposed agreement with Khaled Amayreh, a journalist close to Hamas, for an Israeli-Hamas ceasefire in the Gaza Strip that would put an immediate end to all Palestinian attacks against Israeli civilians or soldiers, facilitate the release of abducted Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, and end the Israeli siege of the Gaza Strip. Senior Hamas officials have endorsed the agreement proposal. The Israeli government, however, did not respond to this initiative, effectively rejecting it.

Froman drafted the agreement proposal with Amayreh after meeting with him over the course of several months. The paper was finalized and shown to Hamas leaders in Gaza, and Hamas leader-in-exile Khaled Meshal, who approved of it. The proposal was also submitted to the Israeli government but according to Froman, the Israeli government never responded to it. The efforts of Froman and Amayreh to meet with Israeli government officials were rebuffed.

The proposal called for Israel to lift economic sanctions imposed on the Gaza Strip and open all border crossings. The cease-fire agreement included the release of abducted Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, and a gradual release of Palestinian prisoners. The Israel Defense Forces would have ended "all hostile activities toward the Gaza Strip, including targeted killings, the setting of ambushes, aerial bombardments and all penetrations into Gazan territory, in addition to ending the arrest, detention and persecution of Palestinians in the Strip."

The Palestinians would have been obligated "to take all the necessary steps to completely end the attacks against Israel", including stopping "indefinitely all rocket attacks on Israel", assaults "on Israeli civilians and soldiers" and "to impose a cease-fire on all groups, factions, and individuals operating in the Strip."

Along with Amayreh, Froman said that even if the attempt turned out to be a mere academic exercise, its elements could be used by the Jerusalem and Gaza governments. It did not, for example, include the recognition by Hamas of the State of Israel, instead "recognizing that there are Jews living in the Holy Land", according to Froman, thus overcoming an obstacle that has long been a deal-breaker.

Importance of religion in the peace process

Froman lamented the early 21st century violence in Israel and the Palestinian territories, and laid partial blame for the failure of the Oslo Accords on the tendency of Israeli and Palestinian secular negotiators to ignore and marginalize religion and religious leaders in the peace process:

Jerusalem – a shared capital

Froman supported making Jerusalem (the capital of Israel, also claimed by the Palestinians as their capital) the religious capital of all three monotheistic faiths. In November 1999, he participated in a conference with dozens of international religious leaders, including the Dalai Lama.[7] In his 2005 letter to Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Froman cited examples from Jewish tradition of the importance of sharing Jerusalem between all 3 religions and turning it into a city of peace:

Coexistence under Palestinian sovereignty

Froman opposed the forced eviction of Jewish settlers from their homes in the settlements in the West Bank, and advocated that the State of Israel withdraw from the West Bank and Gaza, yet leave the settlements and Israeli/Jewish residents in place under Palestinian sovereignty.[8] He claimed that, if Israel withdraws from Tekoa and most residents leave, he will nonetheless stay because of his love of the Land of Israel:

He was a strong opponent of Israel's unilateral disengagement from Gaza. In August 2005, prior to the implementation of the disengagement plan, he moved with his family to Ganei Tal in Gush Katif in order to show support for the residents being evicted.[9]

Froman supported the Palestinian Authority's efforts to attain statehood recognition at the United Nations on 20 September 2011, and said that the establishment of the Palestinian state will benefit the peace process and Israel.[10]

Personal life

Froman was born in 1945 in Galilee, Mandate Palestine. He was married to educator and artist Hadassah Froman,[11] and the couple had 10 children.[12]

Upon being diagnosed with colorectal cancer in 2010, Froman declared that he would add "Hai Shalom" (living peace) to his last name and re-dedicate his life to peace and coexistence between Jews and Arabs in Israel. Despite treatment by both conventional and natural means, he died on the evening of 4 March 2013, at the age of 67.[13] His funeral in Tekoa on 5 March 2013, lasting 4 hours, was filled with music and poetry, and was attended by thousands of people of all political and religious ideologies.[14]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rabbi Menachem Froman, West Bank religious leader and peacemaker, dies . Jerusalem Telegraphic Agency . 2013-03-06 . 4 March 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130422134953/http://www.jta.org/news/article/2013/03/04/3121096/rabbi-menachem-froman-religious-west-bank-leader-dies-of-cancer . 22 April 2013 . Note: Birth date is 1 Jan – 4 Mar 1945 based on 1) year known as 1945, 2) age known to be 68, 3) date of death known to be 4 Mar 2013.
  2. News: Derfner . Larry . Always look at the bright side . The Jerusalem Post . 2006-02-02.
  3. News: Ettinger . Yair . W. Bank rabbi, Palestinian reporter present PM, Hamas draft truce . Haaretz . 2008-02-04 . 2008-05-21.
  4. Web site: Sheikh Yassin, Rabbi Menachem Froman to meet. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20070930205848/http://www.arabicnews.com/ansub/Daily/Day/971009/1997100911.html. 30 September 2007. (www.arabicnews.com, 9 October 1997)
  5. News: Rabbi Menachem Froman of West Bank Settlement Tekoa Dies at 68. 2013-03-04. Haaretz. 2019-12-24. en.
  6. Web site: Rabbi Menachem Froman | Jerusalem PeaceMakers . 2011-11-20 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111126112712/http://jerusalempeacemakers.org/peacemakers/rabbi-menachem-froman/ . 26 November 2011 .
  7. Web site: Religious leaders meet in Israel, urge peace., by Elaine Ruth Fletcher (World Tibet Network News , 28 November 1999)
  8. Web site: Next in line . 8 August 2007 . 6 August 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070806233136/http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=12986 . dead ., by Meron Rapoport (Haaretz, 30 March 2006)
  9. Web site: Ganei Tal / For Rabbi Froman, God was 'in the computer.' But is he in Ganei Tal?., by Yoav Stern (Haaretz, August 2005)
  10. News: Rabbi Froman meets Abbas, pledges support for UN bid . The Jerusalem Post . 31 August 2011.
  11. News: Pupils who write their own ten commandments . The Jerusalem Post . 30 September 1997 . Ariyeh Dean Cohen . 2 September 2011 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120331150448/http://tekoa.org.il/excellent_schools.htm . 31 March 2012 .
  12. News: From an Israeli Settlement, a Rabbi's Unorthodox Plan for Peace . Isabel. Kershner . The New York Times . 5 December 2008 . 2 September 2011.
  13. News: Kobi Nahshoni . Itamar Fleishman . Moran Azulay . amp . Right, Left mourn Rabbi Froman's death . Ynet . 2013-03-06 . 5 March 2013.
  14. Web site: Ettinger . Yair . Memorializing Rabbi Froman – not with a funeral, but a cultural-spiritual happening . Haaretz . 2013-03-06 . 5 March 2013.