The effectively uniting Jewish method the world needs right now

Zsolt Hermann
2 min readNov 4, 2020

Question from the Internet:

“Can a cooperative community model like Kibbutz or Moshav be implemented in other countries outside Israel? Why?”

It could be implemented, but the results will be lukewarm. Even in Israel they didn’t bring about the hoped for national unity, mutual responsibility and even within themselves they are more like business ventures rather then seeds of true, family-like unity between people.

Israel has another “bonding” example, the army, which brings together the youth in an unprecedented way. Still after the army service is over, the unity, bonding slowly but surely disappears.

We can see how fragmented, torn, infighting, self-destructive the Israeli society is today!

Simple external actions, arrangements are not enough to unite people in a true, sustainable manner. We can see how any ideology, societal system Humanity tried through history failed at the end.

The problem is the inherently egocentric, individualistic, self-serving, exploitative nature we are all born with. Thus without recognizing this self-destructive program in us and directly correcting, upgrading, complementing it with Nature’s life-giving, selfless, altruistic qualities we can’t achieve unity, place, fairness and a sustainable, peaceful, equal society.

Thus the Israeli “invention”, method the world needs is more substantial than kibbutzim, moshavim.

We all need to learn how to build true unity, mutual guarantee, Nature-like unconditional service of the whole above and against our original nature without suppressing, erasing is. This is the method the original Israeli Nation was built upon which method even Jews “lost” over 2000 years ago due to the inherent, baseless hatred between them.

Now modern Jews would need to rediscover their lost method and rebuild Israeli society based on it, to make it a “light unto others”, showing the crucially necessary positive example for a world in terrible crisis.

https://youtu.be/dinuSuvYxcs

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Zsolt Hermann

I am a Hungarian-born Orthopedic surgeon presently living in New Zealand, with a profound interest in how mutually integrated living systems work.