The first chief rabbi of the Edah, Rabbi
Yosef Chaim Sonnenfeld, often referred to the Zionists as "evil men and ruffians" and claimed that "Hell had entered the Land of Israel with Herzl." The spokesman for the Edah at the time, Dr.
Jacob Israël de Haan, endeavored to form an alliance with the Arab nationalist leadership and hoped to reach an agreement that would allow unrestricted Jewish settlement in Arab lands in return for the relinquishment of Jewish political aspirations. In June 1924, de Haan was assassinated by the
Haganah after having conveyed his proposals to
King Hussein and his sons,
Faisal and
Abdullah. The anti-Zionist ideological stance of the Edah HaChareidis is explicated in the book
Vayoel Moshe, written by its former President and Chief Rabbi,
Joel Teitelbaum, which is regarded as the standard, and by which all issues relating to the modern State of
Israel are generally determined. For example, the community forbids voting in the elections for the
Knesset, and forbids accepting any funding from the Israeli government (such as subsidies for schools and unemployment benefits), and also does not accept
Israeli citizenship through the
Law of Return. According to Ynetnews, "It [the Edah] has declared an ideological war against the 'heretic Zionist government'." The Rabbinical Court of the Edah HaChareidis has endorsed the anti-zionist organization Torah Jews The Edah HaChareidis mourns the establishment of Israel on
the fifth of Iyar each year, claiming that the establishment of a Jewish state before the coming of the Messiah is a sin and heresy. Some even fast on this day and recite prayers for fast days. In 2006, during a campaign against the participation of
Haredim in the Israeli parliamentary elections, the Edah accused the Zionists of having played a role in
the Holocaust. In March 2008, an article in the Edah's newspaper
HaEdah blasted the "first Hasidic police officer" and the newspapers who had praised him, and called for him to be thrown out of the Haredi world. It referred to him as presenting his children to
Molech. Addressing him personally, it said: "
and even if you are great in your own eyes, you are worth nothing and an embarrassment to us"; and: "
We will continue our continuous war, the days of which are the same as the days of the existence of the Zionist entity, against them and against everything you represent." Earlier in 2008, Rabbi Binyomin Rabinowitz, a Member of the Court, was quoted as saying:
"If religious Jews would not co-operate with the Zionists, [the state] would have long been annulled, and the Messiah would have come, and entire delay of the redemption is [attributable to] this matter." On 7 November 2006, the Edah said it was considering placing the
Pulsa denura curse on the organizers of the
Pride parade scheduled to march in Jerusalem on 10 November 2006.
Army Radio interviewed Rabbi Shmuel Papenheim, who announced, "The Rabbinical Court has held a special session and discussed placing a 'pulsa denura' on those who have had a hand in organizing the march." Papenheim, editor of
HaEdah, added that the rabbis were also considering placing the curse "against the policemen who beat Haredi Jews". ==Influence==