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ZIONIST INFLUENCERS               THE PEOPLE AND THE LAND

















                               OUR SERIES ON LEADERS WHO HAVE SHAPED ZIONISM
                          CONTINUES WITH SOME OF ZIONISM’S EARLIEST INFLUENCERS
                  Rabbi  Yitzchak HaKohen



         ben Moshe (Ishtori) HaParchi







            abbi Yitzchak HaKohen ben       him had toiled to clarify the halachic   the customs of its society (such the tra-
            Moshe HaParchi was born         borders of Israel and identify its his-  ditions of the Jews of Israel and their
      Rin the early 1200s to a line of      torical sites, but the vast majority of   halachic weights and measures). He
       distinguished Rabbis and Sages. His   them had never even set foot in the   also discussed the mitzvot hateluyot
       birthplace is unknown – some say he   Holy Land. They had only the text itself   baAretz and the borders of Israel, cal-
       was born in Provence, France, others   to rely on. Rabbi HaParchi set out to   culated the shemittah and yovel and
       say in Florenzia, Spain. (Hence his sur-  understand the Land of Israel through   listed 180 ancient towns and sites of the
       name – Florenzia comes from the root   intimate and direct contact. Even Bin-  Tanach he had identified on his trips.
       for “flower” in Spanish, correspond-  yamin of Tudela, who had travelled to   His work has become an invaluable
       ing to the Hebrew perach), and still   Israel and recorded his findings before   source of knowledge and information
       others claim that Florence, Italy, was   Rabbi Ishtori, had only travelled on the   for modern scholarship and research,
       his birthplace.                      standard path through Israel, relying on   and is testimony to the depth of knowl-
                                            what others told him about the identity   edge in Mishna, Tosefta, Talmud and
       More commonly known by his  pen      of various locations. Rabbi HaParchi   Midrash he had absorbed in his younger
       name, Ishtori, he was a scholar, physi-  wanted to see every inch of Israel for   years.
       cian, geographer, researcher, translator   himself. When determining the iden-
       and traveller, and possessed an incredi-  tity of a certain location, he took into   Whenever Rabbi Ishtori would arrive at
       ble memory as well as being well versed   account the topography, geography   a city or town in Israel, he would rejoice.
       in Latin and Arabic works of philoso-  and archeology, and compared it with   He loved every inch of the Land, as is
       phy and astronomy. He studied under   descriptions of the Tanach and rabbinic   clear from his writings. He wrote about
       the renowned Sages Rabbi Ya’akov Ibn   texts.                             his hope that the settlement would
       Tibbon and Rabbeinu Asher ben Yechiel                                     flourish and grow, and that he saw the
       (the Rosh).                          During his tours and travels, HaPar-  suffering of French Jews as a sign of the
                                            chi felt it was his obligation to write a   coming of the Redemption.
       In 1306, when the Jews were expelled   book recording his findings. He wrote
       from France, Rabbi Ishtori decided to   the first Hebrew book on the geogra-  After he finished writing his book,
       move with his family to Israel, stopping   phy of Israel, the Kaftor VaFerach (the   Rabbi Ishtori took it to a Yerushalmi
       in Cairo along the way. Upon arriving   terms used to describe the menorah in   Rabbi to receive an approbation. He
       in Israel, one of the first things he did   Shemot 37:17), in 1322. It was later pub-  then settled in Beit Shean, where he
       was dedicate himself to studying the   lished in Venice in 1549. He published   worked as a physician until his passing
       laws and boundaries of Har HaBayit,   the book under the pseudonym Ishtori   in 1355.
       to understand how close he could go to   HaParchi; some say Ishtori may be a   Though he lived well before the modern
       the place of the Beit HaMikdash while   combination of the Hebrew words ish   Zionist movement, Rabbi Ishtori was a
       in a state of tumah.                 tori, touring man.                   Zionist in the true sense of the word; his

       Rabbi HaParchi spent seven long years   In his book, Rabbi Ishtori described the   legacy of concrete love of the Land has
       touring the Land. Torah scholars before   flora and fauna of Israel and recorded   left a lasting impact on Jewish history n



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