Meir Simcha opposed the non-religious
Zionist groups, but expressed his approval of
Religious Zionism. After the
Balfour Declaration, he was of the opinion that the
Three Oaths were no longer in effect. He was present at the founding meetings of
Agudath Yisrael in the German town of
Bad Homburg, but could not attend the first large conference in
Katowice due to poor health. He had several clashes with some of his contemporaries, including
Yisrael Meir Kagan (the Chafetz Chaim) on political issues and questions of Jewish law. It is harder to determine his exact stance in philosophical matters, although much can be gleaned from his
Meshech Chochma. His main contribution to
Jewish philosophy was to be posthumous. His student
Menachem Mendel Zaks published
Meshech Chochma, which contains novellae on the
Torah, but very often branches off into questions of Jewish philosophy. Meir Simcha is often quoted as having predicted
the Holocaust in a statement in this work: "They think that Berlin is Jerusalem ... from there will come the storm winds that will uproot them". ==Personal life and death==