Wednesday 11 September 2024

A visit to the Knesset

 Last week a group of 35 intrepid Hanassi members spent the best part of five hours on a fascinating and most informative visit to the Knesset Building, the current home of Israel's parliamentary democracy. Aided by the superlative skills of tour guide Joel Rabinovitz, we toured the sights, studied the dramatic Chagall artwork (a sample of which appears on the right), sat in the debating chamber and experienced the cold intimacy of the committee rooms -- the place where the real decisions are made and deals struck in order that the country's fissiparous political groupings can achieve any sort of consensus that might be turned into an actual law.

Our guide gave us an account of the Knesset that embraced its historical, political, legislative and technological functions. My impression was of a building that was very much bigger on the inside than it appeared to be from the outside, and that it was designed in such a way as to enable the many people who work there to have enough space for comfort and confidentiality while being sufficiently compact that no-one would be too remote as to be imaccessible. Whatever criticisms and grievances may be directed to Israeli governments past, present and no doubt future, they are not the fault of the building that houses them! 

One thing that struck me was the parallel between the Knesset's state-of-the-art technology for monitoring the activities of MKs and an old mishnaic prescription for the avoidance of sin. When MKs are in the debating chamber they sit, stand and speak before a battery of cameras. Their every word is recorded and stored in the Knesset's computer system and stenographers write it all down for posterity so that it may be printed out and read at leisure.  This echoes Avot 2:1 where Rabbi Yehudah HaNasi urges us to remember that, even though we are not MKs ourselves, whatever we do is seen, heard and recorded by an authority even higher than the Knesset.

I should mention two other important features of the Hanassi tour. The first, chronologically if not in terms of its significance, was our opportunity to sample the many and varied delights of the Knesset canteen, where an excellent and tasty lunch may be picked up at a most modest cost. 

The second, which concluded our visit, was an opportunity to engage in a question-and-answer session with one of the MKs, a lively young man by the name of Ohad Tal. (pictured, left, with Rabbi Kenigsberg). We tried our best to ask him his opinions on some inevitably sensitive and topical subjects, though sometimes the temptation to give him our thoughts instead was well-nigh irresistible. 

 It only remains to thank the Women's League for organising this event, with special mentions for Shirley March and Avelyn Hass.

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