Have Questions or Comments?
Leave us some feedback and we'll reply back!

    Your Name (required)

    Your Email (required)

    Phone Number)

    In Reference to

    Your Message


    THE KOHEN SOLDIER

    Kohanim are the
    descendants of Aharon,
    the priests of our
    people. In past eras,
    a kohen had a special
    role in the nation. Even
    today, a kohen retains
    certain privileges and
    obligations, such as being
    called first to the Torah and not allowed to
    enter cemeteries. The question arose during
    World War I how far these privileges and
    obligations extend.
    I. Four Arguments On Each Side
    In March 1916, R. Joseph H. Hertz, Chief
    Rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations
    and the British Empire, was asked by the
    British government whether kohanim should
    be given religious exemptions from the
    military draft. He replied in the negative,
    which started a massive debate over the
    matter. The Leeds Beth Din publicly objected
    to the Chief Rabbi’s ruling for two reasons:
    1) A kohen is forbidden to become impure
    from dead bodies. Soldiers in battle are
    exposed to dead bodies.
    2) A kohen who kills someone is no longer
    allowed to bless the congregation, to duchen.
    A young Rav Yitzchak Herzog, who was
    approximately 27 at the time and serving in
    his first pulpit in Belfast, publicly disagreed

    with the Chief Rabbi on this issue. Rav
    Herzog added an argument from Rambam.
    3) Rambam (Mishneh Torah, Hilchos
    Shemitah 13:12) explicitly states that the
    tribe of Levi, including kohanim, do not serve
    in the army: “They do not wage war like the
    remainder of the Jewish people.”
    Chief Rabbi Hertz replied to his critics in a

    public letter which contained four counter-
    arguments:

    A) A kohen can become impure for a meis
    mitzvah, a dead body with no one to bury it.
    If he can become impure for that, then he can
    become impure in war, presumably to save
    lives.
    B) The Chashmonaim were kohanim and
    fought in battle against the Syrian Greeks.
    C) The Talmud Yerushalmi (Nazir 7:1) says
    that R. Chiya was a kohen and would become
    impure to honor the king. Serving in the
    king’s army is similar.
    D) The kohen mashu’ach milchamah, the
    priest who spoke to the troops before war,
    sent home those who had recently built a
    house, planted a vineyard or betrothed a
    woman (Deut. 20:5-7). There is no mention
    of sending back a kohen, implying that there
    was no such military exemption.
    II. Responding to the Arguments
    Against

    1) The first argument from the prohibition
    against becoming impure is surprising.
    Rav Menasheh Adler (Mareh Kohen third
    rescension, vol. 2, no. 147), a prolific rabbi
    in England at the time who often commented
    on his contemporary controversies, agreed in
    principle with the Chief Rabbi. He responds
    to this argument that all Jews are forbidden
    to kill and yet in a war we are expected to
    kill our enemies. If a kohen is allowed to kill,
    certainly he is allowed to become impure.
    Perhaps even more cogent is Rav Meir
    Arik’s response (published in Mareh Kohen,
    ibid., no. 149) that today warfare is largely
    through shooting rather than hand-to-hand
    combat. There is no certainty that a soldier
    will ever touch a dead body. Therefore, there
    is no prohibition on a kohen to be a soldier
    because he likely will not become impure by
    touching a corpse. As it turned out, the trench
    warfare of World War I made contact with a
    dead body quite likely.
    2) It is true that a kohen who murders, even
    by accident, is no longer allowed to duchen
    (Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim 128:35).
    However, R. Chizkiyah de Silva (Peri
    Chadash, ad loc.) says that this does not apply
    to a kohen who is forced to kill someone
    (quoted approvingly in Mishnah Berurah,
    ad loc., no. 128). While he does not quote
    the Peri Chadash, Chief Rabbi Hertz makes
    the same argument — that this law does not
    apply to a soldier. Decades later, Rav Moshe
    Feinstein (Iggeros Moshe, Yoreh De’ah,
    vol. 2 no. 158) rules likewise. Rav Ovadiah
    Yosef (Yechaveh Da’as 2:14) adds that
    Israeli soldiers perform a mitzvah by killing
    the enemy in a defensive war, which makes
    them even less subject to this rule.
    In the summer of 1948, during Israel’s
    Independence War, Rav Ben Tziyon Meir
    Chai Uziel, the Sephardic Chief Rabbi of
    Israel, published an article in the journal
    Ha-Posek (5708, no. 1,084) arguing that
    kohanim are obligated to join the army. In
    response to the Rambam mentioned above,
    quoted decades earlier by a young rabbi
    who became Rav Uziel’s co-chief rabbi in
    Israel, Rav Uziel explains:
    3) Rambam only says that the tribe of Levi
    does not wage war to conquer its tribal land,
    like the other tribes had to do when they
    settled the land of Israel. Because Levi does
    not have a tribal portion, its members do
    not go out to war like the rest of the Jewish
    people. Rambam is not saying that Levites
    are exempt from waging war in general.
    III. Responding to the Arguments In
    Favor
    A) Rav Menasheh Adler (ibid., no. 147,
    sec. 3) agreed with Chief Rabbi Hertz in
    principle but not with his specific proofs.
    He argues out that the law that a kohen can
    become impure for a meis mitzvah does not
    teach us anything about going out to war.
    This proof lacks a sound logical basis.
    B) Rav Adler (ibid.) explains that
    the Chashmonaim were generals, not

    infantrymen. They were not fighting at the
    front but rather planning and leading. If so,
    they cannot serve as a precedent for kohanim
    serving in infantry. This response assumes
    that the Hasmonean generals led from
    the back and not from the front, engaging
    directly with enemy soldiers. Rav Adler does
    not provide any evidence for that assumption.
    C) Rav Adler (ibid., sec. 4) points out that
    the Gemara (Berachos 19b) says that those
    who became impure in honor of the king only
    did so on a rabbinic level. When it comes to
    soldiers, we are discussing a biblical level of
    impurity and therefore there is no proof.
    D) Rav Adler (ibid., sec. 2) points out that the
    kohen mashu’ach milchamah only addressed
    the soldiers who had gathered for battle.
    If kohanim are exempt from serving in the
    army, they would not even gather for battle.
    That would be why the kohen mashu’ach
    milchamah does not instruct the kohanim to
    return home.
    IV. Other Arguments
    E) Rav Uziel (ibid.) points out that the
    Gemara (Kiddushin 21b) asks whether a
    kohen may take a yefas to’ar, a captive bride.
    A yefas to’ar is only taken in battle. Doesn’t
    this question indicate that a kohen serves in
    the army? (One could respond that kohanim
    served administrative functions in the army
    but then why were they allowed to take a
    captive bride?)
    F) Rav Uziel further quotes the Gemara
    (Sotah 42b) which says that someone who
    betrothed a woman who is prohibited to him
    does not return from battle. The Gemara’s
    examples include a kohen who betroths a
    divorcee. Clearly, a kohen would go to war.
    Otherwise, why is there any discussion of
    when he can and cannot return from war?
    Rav Uziel (ibid.) concludes that kohanim are
    obligated to fight in the army. Rav Gedaliah
    Felder, in the second volume of his Yesodei
    Yeshurun (p. 52), published in 1957, seems to
    agree with Rav Uziel. Rav Eliezer Yehudah
    Waldenburg, in the second volume of his
    Hilchos Medinah (3:3), published in 1953,
    argues that kohanim are not halachically
    obligated to go to war like other Jews.
    However, they may join the army if they wish.
    In the end, it seems that Chief Rabbi Hertz’s
    view won the day. Rav Herzog served as the
    Chief Rabbi of Israel when it became a state.
    He did not attempt to implement a military
    exemption of kohanim, not even a kohen
    option to remain in administrative functions.
    Perhaps he changed his mind or maybe he
    believed that Israel’s defensive wars are
    different than serving in the army of a foreign
    country that does not face existential military
    challenges.