
Biblical King David's Kingdom at the time of his death
'Greater Israel' (also 'Complete Land of Israel', , ''Eretz Yisrael Hashlemah''
[1][2]) is a term that denotes Biblical boundaries of the
Land of Israel.
Though the borders of Greater Israel are not clearly defined, many devout Jews (and Christians alike) draw such definition from Biblical sources, namely the book of
Genesis, which describes God's covenant with
Abraham:
:''On that day, God made a covenant with Abram, saying: "To your descendants I have given this land, from the river of Egypt as far as the great river the Euphrates. The land of the Kenites, Kenizites, Kadmonites; the Chitties, Perizites, Refaim; the Emorites, Canaanites, Gigashites and Yevusites."'' - Genesis 15:18-21
In the above context, Greater Israel would comprise, roughly, all of modern-day
Israel as well as the
West Bank,
Gaza Strip,
Golan Heights,
Jordan, and
Lebanon, much of
Syria,
Iraq, and
Kuwait, as well as parts of
Saudi Arabia,
Egypt, and
Turkey.
Present-day usages

Three divergent geopolitical and diplomatic conceptions of Greater Israel:
In present-day discourse, the exact definition of Greater Israel is open to interpretation. According to
Daniel Pipes there are three main usages of the term
:
# According to some right-wing Israeli views, the term refers to a
state of Israel (
Hebrew: ''Medinat Yisra'el'') established on the whole western geographical
region of Palestine (known in Hebrew as ''Eretz Yisra'el'', distinct from the
political entity ''Medinat Yisra'el''), situated between the
Mediterranean Sea to the
Jordan River, annexing both the
West Bank and
Gaza Strip.
# According to some far-right Jewish
Mandate (pre-modern State of Israel) groups, such as
Betar and
Irgun Zvai-Leumi that ceased to exist as political movements, it refers to the pre-
1923 mandatory Palestine, i.e. both the historical region of Palestine and what was later
Transjordan.
# According to some Arab nationalists, Greater Israel refers to an extremist
Zionist conspiracy to stretch the borders of the state of
Israel from the
Nile to the
Euphrates according to the kingdom of David in the above mentioned verse from the Bible.
The term is not used in this sense in mainstream Israeli discourse, and nowadays no prominent Zionist or Israeli intellectual or political figure openly advocates pursuing such borders.
However, the term of "Greater Israel" in Israeli politics today refers at least to parts of the
West Bank, the
Golan Heights and the
Gaza Strip.
The idea that "Greater Israel" includes parts of Egypt is based on the term "
River of Egypt" (נהר מצרים ''nehar mitsrayim'') used to determine the south-west border of "
The Promised Land". Some interpretations see this term as a flowery reference to
The Nile (otherwise called in the Hebrew Bible ''Yeor'' יאור). However others suggest that this is merely a synonym of the term "
Brook of Egypt" (נחל מצרים ''nachal mitsrayim'') as appears in the
book of Joshua and according to which lies near the city of
Gaza ("...Gaza with her towns and her villages unto the river of Egypt" Joshua 15:47,
KJV translates "river" rather than "brook"). Therefore it is likely but not proven that the term refers to the river known today as
Wadi El-Arish in north-east
Sinai.
See also
★
Irredentism
★
Kahanism
★
Assyrian independence
★
Greater Syria
★
Greater Lebanon
★
Greater Serbia
★
Großdeutschland
★
10 Agorot controversy
★
Levant
★
Phoenicianism
References
1. Jerusalem Dispatch: Stripped, Yossi Klein Halevi, The New Republic, August 26 2005
2. "Imperial Israel: The Nile-to-Euphrates Calumny", by Daniel Pipes (accessed 12 October, 2005)
External links
★ ''For The Land and The Lord: The Range of Disagreement within Jewish Fundamentalism'', by
Ian Lustick,
chapter V and
chapter VII (accessed
12 October, 2005)