Kach and Kahane Chai

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Image:Kach.svg
The logo of the Kach party.

Kach (כ"ך - kakh, acronym of כהנא לכנסת Kahana LaKneset "Kahane to the Knesset", alluding to the Irgun motto rak kakh: "only thus") was a far-right political party in Israel founded by Rabbi Meir Kahane. After his assassination in 1990, it split into two movements, Kach and Kahane Chai (Kahana Hai: "Kahane Lives"). The US State Department,[1] Israeli Government, Canadian government [1], and European Union[2] all consider these groups as terrorist organizations. This article deals with all of these groups.

Contents

[edit] Split of Kach

Following Kahane's assassination in 1990 by El Sayyid Nosair, the movement split into two groups with similar ideologies and somewhat overlapping membership: Kach (meaning 'Take') and Kahane Chai. Kach was originally led by Rabbi Avraham Toledano and later by Baruch Marzel out of Hebron. Kahane Chai was led by Meir's son Binyamin Ze'ev Kahane out of Kfar Tapuach until he and his wife were murdered in a random ambush by Palestinians in 2000. Both groups were outlawed by Israel in 1994 under anti-terrorism laws following statements in support of Baruch Goldstein's (himself a Kach supporter)[2] massacre of 29 Palestinians at the Cave of the Patriarchs. Many of their leaders spent time in Israeli jail under administrative detention, particularly Noam Federman, who spent more than 6 months in lockup without being indicted. Presumably, most of Kach's electorate moved to other parties such as Rehavam Zeevi's Moledet.

Following the stopping of Kach and Kahane Chai the movements officially disbanded. The leadership of the former Kahane Chai formed an advocacy group known as The Kahane Movement. The group's activities consist mainly of maintaining the "Official Kahane Website". The Kahane Movement is listed on the United States' list of terrorist organizations as an alias for "Kach" though the group denies this.

The New Kach Movement existed during the period 20012003. It maintained websites posting Kahanist political commentary and held meetings with informal members. The organization was headed by Israeli-born student Efraim Hershkovits, who lived in Montreal, Canada. It had chapters worldwide as well as a youth movement, Noar Meir. Upon returning to live in Israel in 2003, Hershkovits disbanded the movement to avoid harassment by the Israeli government, advising its former members to support the Kahane Movement. After the organization had disbanded, its name was added to the United States' list of terrorist organizations as an alias for "Kach". Hershkovits was arrested on August 7, 2005 and placed in administrative detention for three months by Israeli authorities.

[edit] Court admission that State Department's evidence of some violent acts attributed to Kach includes conflicting information

The Department of State's summary of the 2003 administrative record (KAH03-33), states that

"Kach activists in the early 1990s claimed responsibility for several shooting attacks against Palestinians in the West Bank."

In 2004, the Secretary of State concluded in a de novo review of the designation of Kach and Kahane Chai as Foreign Terrorist Organizations, that

"the record included conflicting information on many of the bombings previously attributed to Kahane Chai,"(p.5)

specifically, the 2002 planting of a powerful truck bomb next to a girls' school in Arab East Jerusalem.

In 2006, the US Court of Appeals concluded that

"the evidence suggests Kach was involved in the underlying crime." (p.9)[3]

[edit] Kach's effect today

The United States Department of State designates the group as a terrorist organization [4] and says that it has engaged in terrorist activity by

  • using explosives or fire arms with intent to endanger the safety of individuals or cause substantial damage to property
  • threatening and conspiring to carry out assassinations
  • soliciting funds and members for a terrorist organization

The State Department also says that the group is suspected of involvement in a number of low-level attacks since the start of the Second Intifada in 2000.

The US Treasury Department's Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence[5] provides the following description of Kach and Kahane Chai:

Stated goal is to restore the biblical state of Israel. Kach (founded by radical Israeli- American rabbi Meir Kahane) and its offshoot Kahane Chai, which means “Kahane Lives,” (founded by Meir Kahane’s son Binyamin following his father’s assassination in the United States) were declared terrorist organizations in March 1994 by the Israeli Cabinet under the 1948 Terrorism Law. This followed the groups’ statements in support of Dr. Baruch Goldstein’s attack in February 1994 on the al-Ibrahimi Mosque— Goldstein was affiliated with Kach—and their verbal attacks on the Israeli Government. Palestinian gunmen killed Binyamin Kahane and his wife in a drive-by shooting in December 2000 in the West Bank. The group has organized protests against the Israeli Government. Kach has harassed and threatened Arabs, Palestinians, and Israeli Government officials, and has vowed revenge for the deaths of Binyamin Kahane and his wife. These organizations are suspected of involvement in a number of low-level attacks since the start of the al-Aqsa intifadah. In April 2002, Israeli police arrested a former Kach spokesman in connection with an attempt to leave an explosive-packed trailer outside a Palestinian girls’ school and hospital in East Jerusalem. However, reports vary on Kach’s involvement with this plot. The planned July 20, 2005 Israeli withdrawal of settlers from the Gaza and parts of the West Bank has heightened concerns that ultranationalists may perpetrate attacks against Palestinians or attempt to assassinate Israeli leaders.[6]

In the 2003 elections former Kach leader Baruch Marzel ran as number two on the Herut – The National Movement party list. The party narrowly missed obtaining a seat. In 2004 he founded the Jewish National Front, which gained 24,824 votes in the 2006 elections - about 0.7% of the populace, and about 40% of the minimal number of votes required for entry to the Knesset.

[edit] Names listed as active with Kach/Kahane Chai in the Department of State administrative record

Note: in most but not all cases, the citation is simply to the first mention of a given name within the record. In a few instances, citations are provided to names already mentioned due to the significance of the mention(s).

KAH03-1 – Patterns of Global Terrorism 2002, US Department of State, April 2003, pp. 55-56, 111-112

Rabbi Meir Kahane (founder of Kach)

Binyamin Kahane (founder of Kach offshoot Kahane Chai)

Dr. Baruch Goldstein (affiliated with Kach, carried out February 1994 attack on the al-Ibrahimi Mosque)

KAH03-2 – “Terrorism/Kahane Chai (Kach)” Center for Defense Information, October 1, 2002

Yigal Amir (assassin of Prime Minister Yitshak Rabin in 1995, member of Eyal a.k.a. the Jewish Fighting Organization, linked to Kach and Kahane Chai)

Baruch Marzel (head of Kach after the 1990 assassination of Meir Kahane)

Uri Amir (leader of kahanist youth group Noar Meir) convicted by Israeli court for sedition after distributing flyers endorsing the murder of Arabs, praising Rabin’s assassination, and encouraging people to donate to the “Baruch Goldstein Fund.”

KAH03-7 –“Make Donations!” and other materials from the internet at http:www.kahane.org, accessed Feb. 25, 2003

Lenny Goldberg, editorial director of “Darka Shel Torah” and HaMeir publications, touring the US

David Ha’ivri, contact for Lenny Goldberg

F. Sidman, weekly columnist

KAH03-8 – “Terrorism: Sympathizers of Kahane Chai and Kach Rebuild WWW Presence, Call for Assassination of Yasir Arafat,” Foreign Broadcast Information Service Memorandum, 2002

Michael Guzofsky, billing contact for kahane.org

Efraim Hershkovits, administrative contact for newkach.org, and sponsor of the Montreal chapter of the New Kach – Jewish Defense Force.

KAH03-9 – “Kach leader Federman, along with son of Hebron settlement founder arrested as Jewish terror suspects,” an unclassified cable from U.S. Consulate Jerusalem, May 15, 2002

Menashe Levinger, a Gush Etzion resident and son of Moshe, founder of the Gush Emunim Movement, arrested along with

Noam Federman, a leader of Kach and resident of Hebron in connection with the attempted bombing of a girls’ school in East Jerusalem

KAH03-12 – “Israel: Jewish Terror Cell Members Confess Plans to Attack Arab Targets,” Foreign Broadcast Information Service Report, May 16, 2002

Shlomo Dvir (Zelliger) and Yarden Morag, both from the settlement of Bat Ayin, confess to planting “powerful” bomb between Mokassed Hospital and an elementary school in the Mount of Olives.

KAH03-14 – “Israeli Shin Bet Fails to Catch Jewish Terror Cells, Denies Targeting Kakh Group,” Foreign Broadcast Information Service report, July 12, 2002

Tzuriel Amiur, resident of the settlement of Givat Adei-Ad, indicted in the Mokassed Hospital bombing attempt

KAH03-17 – “Israel: Extreme Right to Launch Anti-Sharon Campaign, Huge Demo Planned for 4 Jun,” Foreign Broadcast Information Service report, May 28, 2003

Itamar Ben-Gvir, Kach member, attended meeting deciding to hoist placards stating “Sharon is a Traitor” and hand out pictures of Sharon clad in a keffiyeh.

Ben Levin, Kfar Tapuach settlement resident, stated “Sharon is a traitor.”

KAH03-26 “Israel: Article Profiles Kakh Activist, Knesset Election Candidate Barukh Marzel,” Foreign Broadcast Information Service report, Jan. 3, 2003

Baruch Marzel, “Marzel had acquired a police record of some 40 files before he was 30: his record includes disturbances in the Cave of the Patriarchs, assault (which earned him a 12-month suspended prison sentence), staging a riot in Al-Duhayshah (a three-month suspended sentence and a NIS 400 fine), vandalizing Arab vehicles in Hebron, assaulting an Israeli TV crew (six months in jail, three months suspended, NIS 3,000 fine), assaulting an Arab (four months suspended imprisonment and a fine), assaulting a police officer, assaulting [political activist] Uri Avneri, causing damage to the municipality building in Ashqelon after the town square had been renamed in memory of Muhammad V, and more… It was, and still is, claimed that Marzel is at the head of the Kakh terror organization according to people in the State Attorney’s office…”

KAH03-35 Copy of letters sent by the Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism to Kahane Chai counsels etc.

Michael R. Guzofsky, Jacob Guzofsky, Richard Zim, Eric Greenberg, Fern Sidman, recipients of September 3, 2003 letter from William P. Pope, Acting Coordinator for Counter-Terrorism, Department of State, claiming “We believe you might represent Kahane Chai (also known as Kach and other aliases) in the United States.”

[edit] Violence associated with Kahanists

Kahanist graffiti seen in Hebron, sprayed on a Palestinian home.  The words to the top right say "Kahane Chai". The fist inside the Star of David is the party logo. Below is the acronym for "Kahane Chai" which is also the Hebrew word for strength.
Kahanist graffiti seen in Hebron, sprayed on a Palestinian home. The words to the top right say "Kahane Chai". The fist inside the Star of David is the party logo. Below is the acronym for "Kahane Chai" which is also the Hebrew word for strength.

According to Council on Foreign Relations [7] Kach and Kahane Chai have been associated with these terrorist acts:

  • In February 1994 Baruch Goldstein, a Kach supporter, opened fire on Palestinian worshippers inside the Abraham Mosque in Hebron, killing twenty-nine people and wounding many others.
  • In the 1980s The Makhteret, a militant group with links to Kach, staged several attacks against Palestinian officials who were claimed to have spearheaded various terrorist attacks against Israelis.
  • Israeli authorities have foiled Makhteret's plans to blow up the al-Aqsa Mosque.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

  1. ^ state.gov: US list of foreign terrorist organizations from 11 October 2005
  2. ^ europa.eu EU list of terrorist organisations, 29 May 2006