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“Go to the land that I will show you.”
Without those words, Zionism becomes a hollow echo, vulnerable to mockery from both our enemies and our so-called allies.
Rav Shlomo brings us into the heart of shalom—not as a diplomatic slogan, but as the expression of divine shleimut (wholeness). Peace, in Torah, begins with G-d's word and ends with G-d’s will. Anything less is just marketing.
We explore how the nations of the world, even when they show “love,” act out of interest or fear—not recognition of truth. Rav Shlomo warns: if we abandon the foundation of our return—Hashem’s command—we lose not only international respect but our soulfulness.
Rav Shlomo invites us to a new vision of peace. One that begins in the heart, is grounded in Torah, and knows that every inch of Eretz Yisrael is holy, because He gave it to us. Anything else isn’t peace. It’s confusion dressed up in slogans.
“Go to the land that I will show you.”
Without those words, Zionism becomes a hollow echo, vulnerable to mockery from both our enemies and our so-called allies.
Rav Shlomo brings us into the heart of shalom—not as a diplomatic slogan, but as the expression of divine shleimut (wholeness). Peace, in Torah, begins with G-d's word and ends with G-d’s will. Anything less is just marketing.
We explore how the nations of the world, even when they show “love,” act out of interest or fear—not recognition of truth. Rav Shlomo warns: if we abandon the foundation of our return—Hashem’s command—we lose not only international respect but our soulfulness.
Rav Shlomo invites us to a new vision of peace. One that begins in the heart, is grounded in Torah, and knows that every inch of Eretz Yisrael is holy, because He gave it to us. Anything else isn’t peace. It’s confusion dressed up in slogans.