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Yoel Bin-Nun (: יואל בן נון; born May 9, 1946 ; 8 Iyar 5766 ) is an religious Zionist and one of the founders of Yeshivat Har Etzion, , and the settlements of and . He is a scholar of , and a lecturer and expert on the .


Biography
Bin-Nun was born in 1946 in to Yechiel Bin-Nun (Fischer) and Shoshana Bin-Nun (Rosa First),מחברת "The Tawananna in the Hittite kingdom" (הוצאת וינטר, 1975). גרסה מקוונת באתר גוגל ספרים educators and researchers in and the . His brother, Elchanan Bin-Nun, is the rabbi of Shiloh and the past head of a in . Bin-Nun studied at the yeshiva and, later, the , where he was close to Zvi Yehuda Kook.
(2025). 9780062274823, Harper. .
He received his Ph.D. from Hebrew University.

He fought in the and was part of Israel's 55th Paratroopers Brigade that liberated Old City Jerusalem. He is one of the main characters featured in Yossi Klein HaLevi's Like Dreamers: The Story of the Israeli Paratroopers who Reunited Jerusalem and Divided A Nation. Following the war, he and turned to Rabbi and together they established Yeshivat Har Etzion in . Even then, at the age of 23, Bin-Nun taught at the . At the same time, he taught at the Field School.

He also fought in the Yom Kippur War, his brigade being the one who crossed the , changing the tide of the war. After the war, Bin-Nun was one of the founders of (which he would later break away from) as well as the settlements of and . The founding meeting took place in 1974 at his home in . For many years he was a member of the Gush secretariat. In 1976, he and his wife moved from to . They eventually moved back to , where they currently reside.

In 1985 he established an all-girls high-school in and headed it for about ten years. In 1986, he helped establish for training Jewish Studies teachers, especially in Bible instruction. In 1986, he co-founded Megadim, the Torah journal for , with the team of Bible studies at the Teachers' Training Institute in Har Etzion (now: Yaakov Herzog College). Rabbi Bin-Nun published many articles in the journal and elsewhere. He also taught training courses for instructors of the Society for the Protection of Nature. Between 2000 and 2006 he served as of Yeshivat HaKibbutz HaDati (Ein Tzurim).

He and emphasized the importance of studying the in . Bin-Nun emphasized a deep understanding of and its connection to the Land of Israel. His teaching and activities at Yeshivat Har Etzion, at and more contributed to the "Tanach (study) revolution" in Israel, especially in the Dati-Leumi public. He led a generation of religious Zionists back to the study of Tanach as a way to understand contemporary Israel. (See further re this approach under Yeshivat Har Etzion § Educational and religious philosophy.)

In 1996 he and established the Midreshet Yaud, within the framework of the Amit network, for the training of teachers in the national service for teaching in secular schools. In 2008 his doctoral dissertation was approved at the Hebrew University on the subject of "the dual source of inspiration and authority in the teaching of Rabbi Kook." In 2018 he was awarded the Rav Zvi Yehudah HaKohen Torah Creation Prize (: פרס היצירה התורנית ע"ש הרצי"ה). In October 2019, Tishrei 5780, he was awarded the .

As of 2015, Bin-Nun has a daily column as part of . He also has a website containing many of his .


Philosophy
A significant part of Bin-Nun's thinking revolves around and its study. Following , he strives to draw contemporary meanings from the Bible and to explain the text according to its simple meaning (Pshat). He was one of the prominent voices in the "" ("Tanach at Eye Level") debate, in which he criticized the approach of the rabbis of the .
(2025). 9789655261455, Koren Publishers Jerusalem. .
Bin-Nun believed that it is important to see the nuances, complexity and even faults of the heroes of the and as having a humanity that is not fundamentally different from those learning the text. According to him, only in this way can value and moral meaning truly be drawn from the stories of the Avot (patriarchs).

Bin-Nun also deals with the of , focusing on the principled controversy between the of and , as well as an original interpretation of Rav Kook's teachings.

Similarly to his Rabbi, Rav Zvi Yehuda Kook, and Kook's father, Rav Abraham Isaac Kook, Bin-Nun strongly promotes the value of Achdut Yisrael, unity among the Jewish people. Bin-Nun believes that only through Achdut will the Jewish people thrive and that the Geulah (redemption) itself is a process that is a function of the Ahavat Chinam and Achdut in Am Yisrael.


Political activity
Bin-Nun was one of the drafters of the , which seeks to create a common denominator between the various segments in the Jewish public.

Bin-Nun was very close with Prime Minister , corresponding with him frequently. Bin-Nun became much more well known after Rabin's assassination in November 1995, when he attacked the atmosphere in the Dati-Leumi public before the assassination, saying that he had information about who ruled that fell under "Din Rodef" (an active murderer) thereby legitimizing his murder (see: Assassination of Yitzhak Rabin). He did not provide details or evidence and his remarks were perceived by many in the religious Zionist public as illegitimate. At this point, he broke with the settlement movement and moved from back to .

In Nissan 5772 (2002) he wrote at the point, on the occasion of the twentieth anniversary of the evacuation of (translated from Hebrew):

"... There was no chance in front of a national government. We had to reach an agreement between Jews and Jews. Between the right-wing parties and the public behind them and the Jewish left. The unity that was created as a result would change the picture ... We are clearly in a similar situation today. A right-wing leader stands as Prime Minister today, and he is the one who may lead us to the same trouble ... What we had to do then, we must do today: sit down for negotiations between Jews. An agreement between the settlers of , in all their political shades, and between the Jewish left ... There was no unity, and we did not gain the liberation of the land. In the Bin-Nun did a lot of interviewing during the period surrounding the disengagement plan. About a month after the demolition of the permanent buildings in Amona, in a newspaper called HaTzopheh he published a scathing article titled "The New Satmar Community" in which he attacked the conduct of the religious Zionist community during and after the disengagement. He wrote that the approach of the sharp and violent resistance was only damaging, and emphasized that although democracy allows for "civil disobedience" it is precisely the that forbids it. He signed his article with the line:

"Our flag is blue-and-white without any orange. Blue-and-white has its root in holiness, in the . Orange is the law of the Gentiles. I am not orange, nor stripe, nor stain and speck. Only blue-and-white and the unity of Israel."

On March 5, 2006, about three weeks before the elections to the 17th Knesset, Bin-Nun announced his support for the party, saying that "it seems, in the coming years all significant decisions will be made there. To save as much of the settlement movement as possible it must be there." He argued that the constant struggle of the settlement leaders over "everything" often caused them to be left with nothing. However, he refrained from calling on people to vote for the party.

On the events of the in , he wrote: "If the Jewish Hebron does not connect all the people of Israel to it, it may be destroyed. The key is in the hands of the people of Hebron themselves. If they act like , they will connect the people of Israel to them. If they act like , in violent bullying, they will even succeed here and there, the people of Israel will vomit them, and God will turn a blind eye to them, Chas v'Shalom. The promise of God hidden in is eternal, and precisely because of this it can be preserved for a worthy generation. There is no special promise for this generation, or for another specific generation."

In the run-up to the elections to the Eighteenth Knesset, he announced his support for the Jewish Home Party.

In his opinion, the Makom Hamikdash on the should be off-limits to people of all religions, until the people of Israel reach the level required for the construction of the Temple.


Notable students


Published works
  • Isaiah: Prophet of Righteousness and Justice (2019)
  • Zachor Veshamor
  • Ani Kohelet

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