"This time Kahane. Because he is one of
us! Give him the power to take care of them at last!" Winning 1984 Kach election
campaign poster from
The Contest of Symbols: The Sociology of Election Campaigns through
Israeli Ephemera
by Hanna Herzog, 1987, p. 35.
published by
The American Jewish Committee Patterns of Predjudice, Volume
19, Numbers 3 and 4, 1985 and as a booklet
1. Origins and
Development
Introduction
MOST ISRAELIS WERE SHOCKED AND SURPRISED when
they learned on July 24th, 1984 that
Kach, the right-wing political party of
Rabbi
Meir Kahane, had won a seat in the Knesset. With nearly 26,000 votes, Kahane
achieved his aim of entering Israel's parliament. This gave him a public forum
and parliamentary immunity from police "harassment." Soon after his election,
Kahane made it clear that he had no intention of becoming an ordinary
parliamentarian. Devoted to his original plan of driving the Arabs out of the
Land of Israel, Kahane said that a coalition government incapable of maintaining
the integrity of the Jewish nation would not gain his parliamentary support, nor
would he abandon his planned illicit confrontations with Arabs in their own
villages.
A day after the election, Kahane and his supporters held
a victory parade to the Western Wall in old Jerusalem. Passing intentionally
through the Arab section of the old city, Kahane's excited followers smashed
through the market, overturning vegetable stalls, hitting bystanders, punching
the air with clenched fists and telling the frightened Arabs that the end of
their stay in the Land of Israel was near.
Since no such extreme party had ever previously won
representation in the Knesset, there was great public disquiet. Public anxiety
was aggravated when it was learned that support for Kahane among young people
was proportionally much higher than in the population at large. Kahane secured
more than 2.5 per cent of the army vote and occasional polls in high schools and
yeshivot have demonstrated significant approval of his views. This gave rise
to the feeling that Kahane did not only present a problem, but that a new
phenomenon had arisen, a "Kahane syndrome": a genuine social and cultural need
to maintain an openly aggressive anti-Arab posture combined with the threat of
street hooliganism.
The purpose of this article is to present a profile of
Kach and its leader, Rabbi Meir Kahane. The main thesis is that Kach is a
quasi-fascist movement, the first of its kind in the history of Israel, and that
it has acquired this character during a long process of politicization. From a
minority self-defence movement in the United States, it has evolved into an
aggressive and racist movement in Israel, claiming to speak in the name of the
majority.
American origins
Kach's origins go back to 1968, when Meir Kahane, an
unknown young rabbi from New York, together with a small group of Orthodox Jews,
established the Jewish Defense League (JDL) as a self-ordained, vigilante
movement aimed at defending Jewish neighbourhoods in New York City. It was
"concerned with the explicitly particularistic issues of 'crime in the streets,'
'black anti-Semitism,' 'liberal do-nothing city government' and 'changing
neighbourhoods.'"
1
Kahane was greatly helped by the official institutions
of American Jewry. Later, they all dissociated themselves totally from the
vigilante activities of the JDL 2 but by
doing so, they played right into Kahane's hands. The young JDL members, like
many other young Americans of the time, needed to revolt against an
establishment. It was not only the Blacks who were now their targets, but the
Jewish "establishment" as well. Kahane, well acquainted with the Jewish cultural
milieu, was familiar with all the sensitive chords of Jewish anxiety of the
time. He spoke of manifest and latent antisemitism, and awakened the repressed
memories of the Holocaust.3 Having
chosen the Jewish establishment as his prime target, he reminded his audience of
the complacency of American Jewish leaders about the concentration camps. "Never
again" became the attractive slogan of the movement.
In 1969, the issue of Soviet Jewry became a major
subject for the JDL. Russian diplomats were attacked and demonstrations were
continually held in front of and inside the offices of Russian agencies.4
To his enthusiastic supporters, Kahane, confident of his importance and
influence, launched a new gospel of self-transformation: "The American Jew from
now on will become a new person, proud of his origins, capable of defending
himself and fully devoted to the cause of his brothers allover the world."
5 A Jewish universalistic message of
mutual responsibility was formulated and publicized, and with it came action.
Although most JDL activities until 1969 included symbolic violence
permitted by the law, the League was soon involved in actual violence and
illegal acts. Following an attack on an antisemitic radio station, JDL members
began to be imprisoned. In january 1970, they disrupted a concert of the Moscow
Philharmonic Orchestra in Brooklyn, and in June almost thirty members were
arrested when they invaded the Soviet trading company Amtorg. Many violent
anti-Russian activities followed.6
The commencement of activities in
Israel
On 12 September 1971, Meir Kahane arrived in Israel and
announced that he had come to stay. The reason for his arrival is still not at
all clear.7 He and his supporters have
always maintained that this was a logical and necessary step in the realization
of his nationalistic ideology. Indeed, by 1971 Kahane had published Never
Again, a book in which he talked about a future Holocaust for Diaspora
Jews on the one hand, and a future redemption in Israel on the other. But other,
less favourable interpretations maintain that by 1971 Kahane had come to a dead
end: in the spirit of detente the American administration was by then determined
to rein in extreme anti-Soviet activity and the FBI made it clear to Kahane that
it had sufficent evidence to send him to prison.8
Just prior to his departure from the US, he was given a suspended sentence of
five years' imprisonment with five years' probation.9
Unready to face the consequent decline of his movement, he decided to leave his
followers and emigrate to Israel, seemingly on ideological grounds. Upon his
arrival in Israel, where he was warmly welcomed by the media, Kahane stated that
he had no intention of becoming involved in national politics or of running for
the Knesset but only of devoting himself to education. He wanted to found his
own
kirya (an educational center) and was also interested in establishing a
kibbutz. Future JDL members would come to Israel for a leadership training
course and Jerusalem was to become the international centre for the JDL. Kahane
also stated his wish to replace the "internationalist" orientation of young
Israelis with a healthy nationalism.
Meir Kahane was not, however, destined to pursue a
career in education. Rather, the Israeli public was soon to find out that the
JDL, an extremist American group whose activities it had originally heard of in
the press, was now fully operative in Jerusalem. Surrounded by a handful of
young American supporters who had followed him to Israel, and by a smaller group
of young Russian emigés, Kahane came out on to the streets. In addition
to demonstrations against the Soviet Union, Kahane exploited two new issues:
Christian missionary activities in Israel and the Black American sect which had
settled in Dimona.10 Though Jews reject
the Christian Mission in principle, and consider it to be a manifestation of
religious hostility, no serious trouble had ever been generated over this issue.
However, moved mainly by his drive for publicity, Kahane was determined to evict
the Mission from the country and to do it noisily. In a similar spirit, Kahane
and his followers aggressively demonstrated against the small Black sect which
had settled in the southern development town of Dimona in the early 1970s and
which claimed to be genuinely Jewish, though it certainly was not. Small and
highly isolated, it went unnoticed until Kahane drew attention to it in order to
make headlines.
Less than a year after his arrival in Israel, Kahane had
focused on what then became his prime target — the Arabs. It should be mentioned
that Kahane had agitated against Arab delegations in the United States and
against supporters of PLO terrorism long before his arrival in Israel. It was
therefore to be expected that, once in Israel, Kahane would again act upon this
issue. In the early 1970s, however, the Arab question was considered a high
state matter. Very few Jews settled in Judea and Samaria, and the military
regime under Defence Minister Moshe Dayan kept the occupied territories under
tight control. Meir Kahane, a practically unknown rabbi who had never served in
the army, could not speak with any credibility on Arab affairs, with their
serious security implications, and, indeed, Kahane at first did not initiate any
provocative action on this issue. It seems that it was only Kahane's sense, in
1972, that the Arab problem was the issue that could keep him alive politically
which caused him to turn his attention to it definitively.
In August 1972, JDL leaflets were dropped allover
Hebron. The astonished Arab residents learned that Meir Kahane was summoning
their mayor, Muhamad Ali Jaabari, to a public show-trial for his part in the
massacre of 1929 in which the ancient Jewish community was eliminated and more
than sixty of its members were killed. The military authorities were fully aware
that this was a very sensitive issue, given that Israel was being carefully
watched for its treatment of the inhabitants of the occupied areas. Despite the
strict orders to prevent his provocative visit, circulated to all military units
in the area, on August 27, at exactly the announced time of the public trial,
Kahane, escorted by two of his followers, appeared in front of the mayor's
office in Hebron. Kahane was stopped and sent back to Jerusalem, but the shock
waves created in the city by his visit were deeply felt. Of course, no public
show-trial has ever been held in Hebron or in any other of the numerous Arab
towns and villages Kahane has visited over the years. There have always been
police or military units on hand to stop him from provoking confrontation with
the local residents. But ever since Hebron, Kahane's reputation for expertise in
provocation and headline-hunting, has been well-deserved. Recognizing full well
the great impact of these tactics on the Arab population of Judea and Samaria,
as well as on Israeli Arabs, Kahane has proved resourceful and imaginative. His
message has always been the same: "the Arabs do not belong here; they must
leave." In this spirit, in 1972 Kahane initiated an organized operation to
encourage the Arabs to emigrate.11
Promising full compensation for property, he has developed his theme that only
massive Arab evacuation will solve Israel's problems:12
just as two individuals cannot sit on the same chair, so it is impossible for
the two nations, Israeli and Palestinian, to co-exist in the Land of Israel.
While specializing in symbolic action, Kahane did not
abstain from involvement in planning acts of violence against Arabs. In 1972,
following the terrorist massacre of the Israeli athletes at the Olympic games in
Munich, Kahane initiated an ill-fated attempt at sabotaging the Libyan consulate
in Rome. For that purpose, he secured the support of Amichai Paglin, a former
chief of operations of the Irgun underground during the period of the British
mandate. The whole operation was exposed at Ben Gurion air-port when a small
container full of arms and explosives was discovered. Though not arrested in
connection with the affair, Kahane, from that time on, has been very careful not
to be directly involved in acts of terror himself, while nonetheless verbally
fully supporting the acts of Jewish violence and terrorism perpetrated against
Arabs.13 Some Kach members have
nevertheless found themselves in jail occasionally. Kahane himself spent six
months there in 1980, following the promulgation of an exceptional
administrative decree against him. The details of the charge have never been
fully disclosed for reasons of state security, but the prevailing rumour was
that a very provocative act of sabotage on the Temple Mount was planned by
Kahane and a close associate of his, Baruch Green.14
Prior to the Yom Kippur War of October 1973, no other
political entity fully devoted to the nationalist cause to the point of direct
action existed in Israel, Kahane therefore became convinced that, with his
nationalist credentials, he could be elected to the Knesset, despite his earlier
denial of any intention of becoming a candidate. Following a very skilful
electoral campaign, handsomely financed, Kahane polled 12,811 votes, just a few
hundred short of the number required to obtain a Knesset seat.
The new political strategy
In 1974, Israeli politics underwent a considerable
change, with important repercussions for Kahane's position. Following the Yom
Kippur War and the consequent Israeli political earthquake, Gush Emunim (the
Block of the Faithful), an energetic and deeply-rooted revitalization movement,
became very active.15 Gush Emunim had
everything that Kach and Kahane lacked: it was a cohesive cultural and social
entity; it had a skilful, yet modest, collective leadership, as well as an
effective membership. A religious movement, it was, however, fully backed by
rabbinical authorities — unlike Kach — in addition to being very Israeli in
character. In contrast to the rather fringe-like nature of Kahane's followers,
it attracted thousands of supporters and hundreds of settlers and potential
settlers, who began establishing outposts in Judea and Samaria with or without
government permission.16
In view of the emergence of Gush Emunim and its
prestigious and highly publicized activities. Meir Kahane had to reassess his
political strategy. He could not join Gush Emunim, since by nature he was only
interested in running a one-man show, but neither would he consider quitting
politics. His decision was rather to remain active politically, but to the right
of Gush Emunim. Now that the job of settling Judea and Samaria was being handled
by the Gush, his strategy was to create unbearable conditions for the Arabs in
order to provoke their departure. While Gush Emunim never conceived of an Arab
evacuation of the occupied territories as an inevitable consequence of its
settlement activities,17 Kach did. Its
role was now to subvert the declared intention of Gush settlers to co-exist with
the Arabs by instigating local conflicts of an ethnic character. Kahane
consequently moved to Kiryat Arba — the Jewish suburb of Hebron — and, with a
violent group of supporters, began making headlines through aggressive
provocation.
The Camp David Accords provoked a further development in
Kahane's strategy. Menachem Begin, whom he had admired for years as the
successor of Vladimir Jabotinsky, now became a "traitor."
18 Consequently, the years 1979-81 witnessed many illicit actions in
Judea and Samaria and in Jerusalem. The most famous of these took place in April
1982 in Yamit, the capital of the Rafiah salient, which was about to be returned
to Egypt. Kahane's followers who took part in the "Movement against the Retreat
from Sinai," which had a strong Gush Emunim colouring, fortified themselves in
an underground security shelter and declared in front of the media of the entire
world that they intended to commit suicide.19
Kahane then staged a masterly operation in which he was rushed back from New
York by the Israeli govemrnent in order to convince his followers not to commit
suicide. Negotiations, fully televized, ended the drama peacefully. When some
members of the same group later participated in a shooting incident involving an
Arab bus in Samaria, Kahane backed them fully and their defence was financed by
Kach. A young soldier who, unassociated with Kach, fired a missile at an Arab
bus in a Jerusalem neighbourhood was made an honorary member of the League.
It is difficult to judge when and how Kach and Meir
Kahane became politically respectable to the point of securing 25,907 votes in
the Israeli general election of 1984. In 1977, and again in 1981, Kahane had
stood for the Knesset. In these elections he polled only 4,396 (0.2 per cent)
and 5,128 (0.3 per cent) votes respectively. At that time, no one believed he
would ever win a Knesset seat. What seems to have happened is that Kahane
benefited from the increasing polarization of Israeli society along ethnic,
social and political lines.20 Many
established and respected politicians came to use Kahane-like language. Though
no others openly suggested the eviction of all the Israeli Arabs, statements
were made by some which could well be construed as supporting such action.21
The isolated Kahane now appeared to some on the right as the only man who had
always honestly believed in these views. The fact that he was by far the most
vocal on this issue, and totally unequivocal, further enhanced his popularity.
Socio-economic pressures and a significant growth of a profound anti-Arab
sentiment in poor neighbourhoods and development towns also played an important
role in his 1984 electoral success. A close reading of the election results
clearly suggests that he gained country-wide support.
2. Ideology and Politics
Ideology
In contrast to the leaders of Gush Ernunim, to whom he
is sometimes compared, Meir Kahane is markedly an ideologue. Ever since the
establishment of the Jewish Defense League, Kahane, the former associate editor
of the Brooklyn Jewish Press, has been writing extensively. His twelve books and
lengthy pamphlets indicate that he was always aware that without a formal
ideology and as an unknown rabbi, he could never mobilize support, raise money
or attract the attention of the media. While it is true that none of his essays
is either original in content or comprehensive in scope, the compendium presents
a cohesive political belief system. This system is marked by basic assumptions,
usually drawn from selective interpretations of religious authorities,
derivative propositions, usually of a general political character, and by
operative conclusions. The Revisionist influence of Jabotinsky is very marked,
and in the past Kahane was also ready to admit to the influence of the
nationalist thinking of Dr. Israel Eldad, a well-known right-wing extremist.22
Emphases in Kahane's writings have greatly changed over the years, but his
typical cast of mind has always been the same.
The uniqueness and singularity
of the Jewish people
Kahane's fundamental axiom is religious and highly
particularistic in character and amounts to a repeated insistence that the
Jewish people is unique, singular and holy. No other people or nation has
matched it in the past or could do so in the future. The reason is patently
clear — this is the only nation chosen by God:
The Jewish people is a unique, distinct and separate
people, divinely chosen at Sinai, a religion-nation, transcending the
foolishness and danger of shallow secular nationalism. That merely divides
without raising up. It is a chosen people, a nation of priests and holy
people, whose nationalism and religion are identical and indivisible. Its
chosenness is not a racial or national thing, but based on the chosen mission,
i.e. it is a people that was given a sacred law, the Torah, and an immutable
destiny to live and uphold the Torah so as to serve as a light unto the
nations. The observance of the mitzvot is the sole reason for Jewish
chosenness and Jewish existence . . . All that happened, happens and will
happen goes according to a divine plan at the center of which stands the
Jewish people.23
The meaning of this fundamental axiom is that the Jewish
people is in possession of a complete system of normative behaviour which is
exclusively its own. No respect should be paid to the moral or behavioural norms
of other philosophies or nations. In taking this position, Kahane manifestly
denies the existence of any normative system which is universally binding.
Universalism, whatever its worth, does not concern the Jewish people. And, since
the Almighty God of Israel stands behind his people, not only is the Jewish
nation morally entitled to its own unique path, but this path is bound to
succeed.
This basic axiom of religious singularity may, on its
own, be attacked from a humanist, universalist perspective, but it is shared by
a wider orthodox constituency, and is not really the defining attribute of
Kahane's ideology in particular. This is rather to be found in the specific
twist which Kahane gives to the traditional world view, to the emphases which he
places on certain aspects of the tradition, and to the very operative
conclusions which he alone draws from the sources in response to his particular
reading of contemporary events. Thus, he takes it for granted that the world is
hostile to the Jew and "Esau (the Arab) is especially hateful of Jacob (the
Jew)."24 The Jewish people should
consequently concern itself solely with its own redemption and there is no
sense, in his view, in either being kind to Gentiles or in trying to convince
them of the righteousness of the Jews. Among themselves, Jews should stand
united, always helping each other.25
The world that created Auschwitz cannot be trusted again and Jews must see that
Auschwitz should "never again" be realized.
The sanctity of the Land of
Israel and its territorrial integrity
The second fundamental axiom of Kahane's ideology is the
insistence upon the sanctity of the Land of Israel. Since it goes without saying
that every Orthodox Jew adheres to this view, what makes Kahane different are
the operational conclusions which he draws from this position, which amounts to
one of the most extreme expressions of the Greater Israel position on the
inadmissability of withdrawing from any territories and on the territorial
integrity of the State of Israel. According to him, the State of Israel is fully
entitled to the Land of Israel and to sovereignty over all of it, as promised in
the Bible. The government of Israel should thus see that this sovereignty be
immediately extended and not a single thought of its surrender should be
permitted: "There is only one land the Land of Israel — and not one inch is not
ours and not one inch dare be given back." 26
According to his latest interpretation, in 1967 God showed his great might by
directing from above the victory of the Six Day War. It is consequently a
criminal offence of the first degree not to abide by his command.27
Jews, according to Kahane, should be ready to die rather than surrender the
Land. Yehareg velo yaavor ("Be killed but not trespass") is the rule that
should govern the case of the "liberated territories."
28 Kahane's position on the territorial question should therefore
be understood to include both a strong religious element and a violent
insistence on territorial integrity. Indeed, he further maintains that Israel's
national interests dictate that even occupied territories which are not included
in the biblical promise may not be returned to the enemy. Only under the strict
conditions which imply unconditional surrender, recognition of Judaism's
religious superiority and irrevocable readiness for peace, is negotiation over
territory permissible.29 This all
undoubtedly places him among the most extreme of the Greater Israel school.
Messianic redemption
For several years, Meir Kahane's message was far more
political than religious and did not include messianic philosophy or millenarian
dreams. But ever since the Six Day War, other religious movements in Israel —
principally Gush Emunim — have greatly stressed the messianic call.30
In the 1970s, talk about the redemption of the Jewish people in this generation
became common. In this context, a religious, territorial-maximalist creed could
not be considered complete if it did not include a messianic component, and
Kahane inserted this into his ideology. According to his present conviction,
redemption is imminent. In 1980 he argued that a total national redemption could
in fact have already taken place if only the government of Israel would
undertake what it should have done a long time ago: namely, immediately annex
the occupied territories, expel all "alien worship" from the Temple Mount, and
evict all the "enemies of the Jews" from the State of Israel. "Had we acted
without considering the Gentile reaction, without fear of what he may say or do,
the Messiah would have come right through the open door and brought us
redemption." 31 The only question
pending is whether redemption will come willingly and smoothly or whether it is
to be forced upon the Jews. Should the Jews not be sufficiently prudent as to
understand their religious and national duties, redemption will be forced upon
them through great suffering.32 It is
for the people of Israel to decide which way to turn.
Democracy and the rule of law
The question of democracy and the rule of law has in the
last several years become central to the teaching and especially the preaching
of Rabbi Kahane. For many years this was not the case. In the United States,
Kahane had nothing to say about democracy and he mostly concentrated on a single
issue: Jewish self-defence against ethnic hostility and street hooliganism. Over
the years in Israel, however, Kahane has often been accused of being
anti-democratic and has had to take an unequivocal stand on the question of
democracy, which he has done most clearly in his book Chok Vaseder Be-Israel
("Law and Order in Israel").33 Kahane's
position on the issue is that democracy as a value is an alien, Gentile idea.
Under certain conditions, it may be a useful political arrangement for Jews, but
in that context it must submit to the laws of the Torah. If the democratically
elected government obeys religious laws and the interpretation of Orthodox
authorities, then it is admissable, but if it does not, all its laws,
regulations and policies are unacceptable.34
While already in ideological confrontation with Israeli
democracy, it shoud be stressed that Kahane has not yet developed a philosophy
of total delegitimation of Israel's prevailing political system,35
which disturbs Kahane only by its concrete, erroneous policies. There is,
however, one element in his teaching which is not only critical of policy but
also of structure and substance: because of his position on the Arabs, Kahane is
extremely critical of Israel's Declaration of Independence. He considers this
document, which in 1948 promised equal rights to all residents of the state,
national and racial origins notwithstanding, to contain a contradiction in
terms,36 because it is impossible to
establish in the Land of Israel a state which will be Jewish and at the same
time a classical democracy. Should the State of Israel remain democratic, in the
long run it is bound to lose its Jewish nature.37
Since the Arabs have the demographic factor working for them, the loss of the
Jewish majority is just a matter of time. The State of Israel, Kahane concludes,
can either be Jewish or democratic; and since it is bound to be Jewish, the
sooner the Arabs are excluded from the democratic system, the better.
The Arabs
Kahane's Weltanschauung is reminiscent of late
nineteenth century "catastrophic Zionism," with a strong emphasis on "negation
of the Diaspora."
The Arabs are, taken together, the collective entity
that, for Kahane, threatens Jewish existence; and the Israeli Arabs (there is no
Palestinian nation for Kahane) are a highly explosive time bomb. The Arabs claim
the same land as the Jews, refuse to recognize God's biblical prescriptions and
would never be ready to settle for less than the whole. This places them in the
same position as the native population of Canaan at the time of the Israelite
conquest, and all biblical rules and regulations adopted and applied by Joshua
against the Canaanites are relevant today.38
Joshua, Kahane reminds us, sent the Canaanites three letters offering them three
alternative courses of action: leave the land, fight for it and bear the
consequences or peacefully surrender to the Jews and obtain the status of loyal
"resident strangers." Any individual Arab is thus welcome to stay provided he
fully accepts Jewish sovereignty, as well as the right upon which it is founded.
Applying the rules of Halakha (written and oral tradition) according to
his understanding, Kahane maintains that even in the case of complete
submission, full rights of citizenship should not be given to "strangers." Only
"strangers" who will obey the seven commandments of "Noah's sons," pay special
taxes and submit to special labour regulations may remain. Following the
"kingdom rules" of Maimonides, the ,"strangers" must also constantly be
"humiliated and detested," 39
In his most recent book, They Must Go, by
far the most radical treatise Kahane has ever composed, he is even more extreme
concerning the fate of the Arabs. Fearful of the treacherous nature of even the
best of them, he suggests that their permission to stay be limited to one year
only. Each year they should resubmit their credentials for examination. A
further restriction stressed in the book is that no "stranger" be allowed to
live in Jerusalem, and that their total number be determined in accordance with
the state's security requirements.
Upon close examination, it is hardly questionable that
the ideology of Kach, as expressed by Meir Kahane, represents by far the most
extreme variant of the present radical right in Israel. It is exclusivist and
nationalist to the point of racism. Kahane, who began as a follower of the
ideology of Jabotinsky, does not now follow him at all.
Kach as a quasi-fascist phenomenon
While a formal presentation of the background and
ideology of Kach and its leader is helpful in identifying its place on the
ideological map of Israel, only a closer examination of Kach's actual modus
operandi, its imagery and symbolism, as well as some hidden undercurrents in
its history, may locate it accurately on a general comparative political map.
Having examined these facets of the Kach phenomenon, it would appear that, from
a radical movement of minority self-defence with no comprehensive political
ideology, it has gradually evolved into a radical right entity, with many
similarities to historical fascist movements. Kach today is a quasi-fascist
movement.
Legitimation of violence
In the days of the American JDL, Kahane emphasized the
importance of force. One of the pillars of the JDL's operative ideology was the
notion of "Jewish iron." Kahane, it is true, did not invent either the idea or
the metaphor: he adopted it from the ideology of Vladimir Jabotinsky. The
expression "Jewish iron," according to Jabotinsky, meant that in the Diaspora or
under foreign rule, Jews were no longer to bow to their oppressors but were
called upon to respond to them in kind and with physical force, if necessary.40
It also meant that the sovereign Jewish state should have a strong army, capable
of defending it against all threats. Kahane was so impressed by the notion of
"iron" and the application of physical force for self-defence that he divided
the JDL groups in America in two: the Chaya groups and the Scholar
groups.41 Chaya in Hebrew means
animal, and the Chaya squads were in charge of the use of violence
against the League's rivals. In Israel, there was no place for further
expression of "Jewish iron:" since 1948, the country has been sovereign
andJabotinsky's notion has been realized in the Israel Defence Forces. Meir
Kahane was apparently not satisfied. Though he did not establish Chaya
squads in Israel, he maintained that if the state was incapable or unready to
react in kind against those who spilt so much as "one drop of Jewish blood,"
then it was the duty of individual Israelis to do so. Slowly and without
developing a fully-fledged ideology of violence, Kahane took to legitimizing
anti-Arab terror, a message fully absorbed and acted upon by his followers.
In 1974 he first came up with the idea of TNT (Hebrew
acronym for Terror Neged Terror, i.e. Jewish terrorism against Arab
terrorism). In The Jewish Idea, he suggested that "a world-wide Jewish
anti-terror group" be established and that "This group must be organized and
aided in exactly the same way as the terrorists are aided by Arab
governments. With a totally serious face, the government of Israel must
deny any connection with the group, even while allowing the same
training bases on its soil as the Arab states allow the terrorists."
42 Since the government of Israel was not receptive to the idea,
Kahane's followers, and other individuals inspired by the idea, soon started to
act on their own. Out of fear of the Israeli police and the very efficient
intelligence services, they did not try to establish a genuine terrorist
organization, but engaged in occasional anti-Arab atrocities. These usually
occurred following Arab terrorist attacks, but by the 1980s no such pretext was
needed. Craig Leitner, a Kahane follower, described a typical operation:
One day towards the end of July 1984, I agreed with
Mike Gozovsky and Yehuda Richter to operate against the Arabs. We left Kiryat
Arba in a hired car, headed towards Jerusalem . . . That night around 23:00,
we went to the Neve Yaacov area. Yehuda was driving. Around midnight, we saw
an Arab in his twenties walking along the road. I said "let's stop the car." I
went out and hit the Arab with my fist on the shoulder. I also kicked him. He
escaped into the night. We continued to Hebron and it was decided — I don't
remember by whom — to burn Arab cars. We had in our car two plastic bottles
containing four and a half litres of gasoline. In Hebron Yehuda stopped the
car. Mike took the gasoline and poured it under several cars, maybe three.
Following the burning of the cars by Yehuda, we moved, not waiting to see what
would happen. Dogs were around and I was afraid that they would wake up the
neighbours or perhaps bite us and we would get rabies.43
When asked for his reaction to the activities of Leitner
and his friends, Kahane expressed his total approval. He said that he was sorry
that they would have to spend years in prison and added that, in his eyes, they
were Maccabees. Later, Kahane placed Yehuda Richter, the main suspect in the
operation, as number two on his list for the Knesset. Richter was also known for
his role as the commander of the "suicide" squad in the shelter at Yamit.
Anti-alien sentiment and
racist symbolism
Kahane's anti-Arab leitmotif has already been discussed.
Even as a political stand, it is profoundly radical and exceptional in Israeli
terms and no one else has come up with such a blunt proposition for mass Arab
eviction. A close examination of Kahane's popular publications and speeches,
however, reveals a deeper layer of animosity and hatred. It shows that, like
many movements of the radical right in the United States or Europe, Kach
displays a very strong anti-alien sentiment, with heavy racist overtones. The
racist propaganda of Kach closely follows other known patterns of racism in its
mixture of superiority complex, sexual anxiety and certain elements of an
inferiority complex. Portrayed in the manner of other vulgar racist ideologies,
the Arabs are seen at one and the same time as both inferior and superior. They
are inferior in the sense that all the Gentile nations are, i.e. by not being
the chosen people of Abraham. They are superior because their very presence in
Jewish neighbourhoods constitutes a great danger. Collectively they pose a
political threat of the first degree. "No amount of compromise will bring us
peace with the Arabs. . . . 'Hebronization' is what we expect from them . . . It
is madness to return anything to an enemy that is sworn to destroy us and will
do so if we allow him the slightest opportunity."
44
The Arabs are not only collectively dangerous;
individually they have also developed methods to defile the purity of the
nation. They date Jewish girls, sleep with them and even wish to marry them.
Kahane's leaflets on these issues are blunt, brutal and highly offensive. In
1979, Kach members talked of establishing "Jewish honour guards." Their task was
to identify Jewish girls dating Arabs to warn them about the consequences and to
intimidate them. In the same spirit, Kahane has suggested enacting laws
concerning sexual relations between Jews and Arabs. He proposes that both sides,
if guilty, be sentenced to five years in prison. It is not surprising that
Renato Yarark, who represented the state against Kahane in court in 1981, argued
that the leader of Kach was replicating the Nuremberg laws of the Nazis.45
When asked, Kahane always maintains that he is not a racist, but rather an
anti-Arab Jewish nationalist, who is guided by Halakha. His
interpretation of the Halakha is, however, racist. No other Orthodox Jew
before Kahane has ever approached the problem in this way.
Propaganda and smear campaign
A typical feature of fascist and quasi-fascist movements
is their quick shift from ideology to propaganda and from propaganda to smear
campaign. These tactics are employed for their effectiveness and Kach follows
the pattern. One can find thoughtful essays by Kahane in which he seriously
tries to derive his ideology from the Holy Scriptures and distinguished
rabbinical exegesis but also vulgar leaflets whose contents amount to criminal
incitement. Kahane has always been aware of the alienated, déclassé,
impoverished and embittered who could be attracted to his extremism.46
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, he began to address the Sefardi Jews, arguing
that, not only was the government doing nothing about the Arabs, but it was
deliberately discriminating against Sefardis. According to this line of
argument, the Ashkenazi government had never done enough for the Sefardi
immigrants and now it was trying to ruin them economically by spending national
money in support of the Arabs at a time of economic crisis. Were the Arabs not
constantly subsidized, Jews could live in prosperity — especially Jews from the
weaker strata of the population. Arabs, who do not serve in the army and do not,
according to Kahane, pay sufficient taxes, are shown to be receiving the same
benefits from the state as Jews.47
Kahane knows his audience. The Sefardi Jews have indeed
suffered in the past from cultural discrimination and some of them have
developed a genuine anti-Ashkenazi sentiment. But Kahane articulates their
sentiments in a way that no one has done before. There is now said to be a
"conspiracy of the Ashkenazi establishment to help the Arabs instead of the
Sefardi Jews."
48 The Ashkenazi government does not
care about values like paternalism and chastity, and it is bound to destroy
them. It allows Arabs into Jewish society and makes it possible for Arab
youngsters to seduce poor Sefardi Jewish girls. Playing on the sensitivities of
some in his audience, Kahane goes to development towns and poor neighbourhoods
and tells lurid stories. He reminds his audience that in their native countries,
such as Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria, no daughter of theirs had dated Arab boys.
But now, in independent Israel, the dream of generations of suffering Jews, they
do — so he alleges.49
Evolution of a personality
cult
When the JDL was established in America, it was a
collective venture with several New York Jews co-operating to found the movement
under the inspiration of Meir Kahane. In 1969 and 1970, while it was already
clear that Kahane was the ideologue, the newsmaker and the leader, he was still
nevertheless accountable to others in the JDL. In Israel this has changed. The
JDL there is his own product. People of some theoretical and practical weight,
like Yoel Lerner and Yossi Dayan, have joined in the past, but Kahane would
never let them decide anything. And thus, gradually, with no theoretical
insistence upon the "leader principle," Kahane became the sole ideologue, the
only decision-maker, the major speaker and the treasurer. He makes all
statements, as well as policy decisions. In 1981 Yossi Dayan, the
Director-General of the movement, wrote in a JDL question-and-answer brochure:
Is Kach a one man movement?
Kach is not a one man movement. Rabbi Kahane is the
movement's head and ideologist. At his side there stands a very skilful and
reliable team which is fully devoted to the completion of the hard work under
the worst conditions. However, what distinguishes Kach from other political
movements is its perfect fitness for the idea and the principle. In this way a
movement that works like a "single individual" was created. The Kach movement
is a monolithic body in which no divisions or splits are possible. All of us
agree that Rabbi Kahane expresses the genuine Jewish idea and all see
eye-to-eye the reality in the country and the way to solve the hard problerns.50
Several months later, Mr. Dayan was forced to leave Kach,
following a difference of opinion with Kahane. Today, especially after his
electoral success, Kahane is worshipped within the movement. Nothing happens
without his consent. Nothing is said in the name of Kach without mentioning the
name of Meir Kahane.
All of the features discussed here add up to the reality
that Kach today is not just another party of the Israeli radical right. It is a
quasi-fascist entity in thought and action.
Future trends
There can be no doubt about Kach's achievement in the
1984 elections. Kahane succeeded in winning the electoral support of 26,000
citizens and a Knesset seat. Public opinion polls conducted since the elections
have indicated growing support for Kach. Recent estimates give Kach 9 per cent
of the vote if the elections were held now.51
In June 1985, the Van Leer Institute in Jerusalem published an opinion poll
conducted among 15-18 year old Israeli high school students which found that 42
per cent supported Kahane's views, while 11.3 per cent said they would vote for
him were elections to be held then.52
Given present trends, it is unlikely that the Kach phenomenon will vanish from
the Israeli parliamentary scene. Not only should cultural and ideological
trends, which are significant in themselves, be stressed but also political and
economic ones. Kahane is greatly sustained by the growth of internal Arab
terrorism, as well as by Israeli Arab support for PLO ideology. The more such
support is expressed, the more people turn to the catastrophic interpretation of
Kahane. Israel's present economic crisis also works for the leader of Kach. Many
of his supporters come from areas of high unemployment. In addition to their
anti-Arab chauvinism, fuelled by Kahane over the years, present uncenainty and
severe anxiety about Arab competition play an important role in establishing
their allegiance to Kach.
While present trends seem to support the prognosis of a
certain growth in Kach's following, it is important to identify weak points in
the movement's position. Three of these stand out: Kahane's isolation, Kach's
legal vulnerability and the challenge of Gush Emunim.
Despite its success, Kach was, and remains, a one-man
show. Kahane has never cultivated or wanted a second-generation leadership. Were
Kahane to be removed from the scene through illness, it is very likely that the
movement would cease to exist. It appears that few social ties or common
commitments bind Kahane's various strange and alienated supporters. The loose
structure of the local branches could very easily dissolve. Since no large
financial sums are involved, Kach without Kahane would most probably disappear.
Not only is Kahane isolated, but today he is also pursued by the government, the
Knesset and the law enforcement agencies. Though his ideology and intentions
were known long before 1984, it is only after his electoral victory that a
general consensus regarding the need to stop him through legislation has
emerged. The Knesset House Committee has already restricted Kahane's
parliamentary immunity and an amendment to the Fundamental Law on the Knesset
was recently introduced which forbids a party with incitement to racism among
its objectives or activities from participating in Knesset elections.53
It is highly likely that at least some of this legislation will be effective
and, if so, much of Kahane's uniqueness and appeal may be lost. A restricted
Kahane, kept away from the Arabs and isolated from the media, is bound to have a
reduced impact.
Of no less danger to Kach's political future is the
emerging opposition of Gush Emunim and its supporters in the existing political
parties of Tehiya, Morasha, the NRP and even the Likud. Until 1984, the extreme
religious and nationalist camp did not consider Kahane to be a challenge. No
effort was made to curtail his influence in yeshivot, settlements and the
other strongholds of this camp. This is no longer the case. Electoral strength
in Israel translates into power and money and there is little readiness to share
them with Kahane. Considering the financial and organizational weakness of Kach
and the growing outside pressures, it will have to struggle very hard in order
to survive politically.
Finally, the phenomenon of Kach should also be seen in a
historical and comparative perspective. Many Western democracies today are
experiencing occasional waves of quasi-fascist activity. In most cases the
movements involved, if they do not create soundly-based elite groups and
efficient organizations, are transient phenomena. Their situation greatly
depends on changing conditions such as national moods and economic crises. Kach
seems to fit this pattern and it seems reasonable to suggest that, in the long
run, it will lose much of its appeal and most of its political power.
Notes
1. Janet L. Dolgin,
Jewish Identity and the JDL (Princeton, NJ 1977), 16.
2. Ibid., 17.18.
3. See Meir Kahane,
Never Again: A Program for Survival (New York 1972).
4. Dolgin, SS-4.
5. Kahane, Never Again.
6. Dolgin, 36-7.
7. Dolgin, 41.
8. This information is based
on an interview (25 January 1984) with Yair Kotler, a journalist, whose book,
Heil Kahane (Hebrew), was published this year in Tel Aviv.
9. Dolgin, 38.
10. Ehud Sprinzak, The
Origins of the Politics of Delegliimation in Israel, 1967-73 (Jerusalem 1975),
26.
11. Ibid., 26.
12. Meir Kahane, The
Jewish Idea (Jerusalem 1974), I3-15.
13. Kahane has been
arrested in Israel several times, mostly for provocative acts and confrontation
with the police.
14. Yediot Ahronot,
24 May 1980,
15. See Ehud Sprinzak, "Gush
Emunim: the Tip of the Iceberg," Jerusalem Quartery, Fall 1981,
16. Dany Rubinstein,
On the Lord's Side: Gush Emunim (Tel Aviv 1982), chapter 5.
17. Sprinzak, "Gush Emunim,"
37-8.
18. Itzhak Ben Ner and Alex
Ansky, "Medinat Kach," interview with Kahane, Yediot Ahronot, 21
January 1981.
19. Maariv, 16
April 1982.
20. See David B.
Capitanchik, "A Guide to the Israeli General Election 1984," IJA Research
Reports, no. 8, July 1984, 4.
21. For instance, a
notorious reference by General Raphael Eitan, when he was Israel's Chief of
Staff, to the Arabs as "drugged roaches" was understood by many as a Kahane-like
statement,
22. Interview with Meir
Kahane, 18 April 1973.
23. Meir Kahane, The
Jewish Idea (Jerusalem 1974), 5.
24. Meir Kahane,
Netzah Israel Venizthono (The Glory of Israel and Her Victory) (The
Jewish Defense League 1973), 10.
25. Meir Kahane,
Never Again: A Program for Survival (New York 1972), chapter 11.
26. Kahane, The
Jewish Idea, 13.
27. Meir Kahane, Al
Haemuna Vehageula (On Faith and Redemption) (Institute for Jewish Ideas,
1980), 52-3.
28. Ibid.,57.
29. Ibid., 51.
30. Tsvi Raanan, Gush
Emunim (Tel Aviv 1980), chapter 5.
31. Kahane, Al
Haemuna Vehageula, 59.
32. Meir Kahane,
Bamidbar (In the Wilderness) (Kach Movement, n.d.), 8.
33. Meir Kahane, Chok
Vaseder Be-Israel (Law and Order in Israel) (Kach Movement, 1977).
34. Ibid., 8.
35. For a discussion of the
political meaning of delegitimation, see Ehud Sprinzak, The Ongins of the
Politics of Delegitimation in Israel, 1967-1972 (Jerusalem 1973), 2-7.
36. Meir Kahane, They
Must Go (New York 1981), chapter 4.
37. Ibid.
38. Kahane, Al
Haemuna Vehageula, 68.
39. Ibid., 72.
40. Janet L. Dolgin,Jewish
Identity and the JDL (Princeton, NJ 1977), 44-5.
41. Ibid., chapter 3.
42. Kahane, The
Jewish Idea, 14.
43. Quoted in Nadav Shragai,
"Yoztim lepeula" (Going for the action), Haaretz, 27 November 1984.
44. Kahane, The
Jewish Idea, 13. "Hebronization" refers to the massacre of Jews in Hebron
in 1929.
45. See Haolam Haze,
23 September 1984, 24.
46. Interview with Kahane,
18 April 1983.
47. See an interview with
Kahane's supporters by Eli Tavor, "In Beit Shemesh, they went with Kahane,"
Yediot Ahronot, 17 August 1984.
48. Kach leaflet (n.d.).
49. Based on interview with
Yair Kotler, 25 January 1985.
50. Yossef Dayan,
Kach Program (Kach brochure, n.d.).
51. Pori opinion poll,
published in
Haaretz, 2 August 1985.
52. See Le Monde, 27 June
1985.
53. Haaretz, 1
August 1985.
Acknowledgements
The research for this study was supported by the
Jerusalem Van Leer Foundation. I would like to thank my research assistant, Mrs.
Riki Hanuv, for her great help and co-operation.
About the Author
Dr. Ehud Sprinzak is Senior Lecturer in Political
Science at the Hebrew University, Jerusalem. His main research interests lie in
the field of extreme groups in Israeli society. (Web Editor's note: Professor
Ehud Sprinzak died in
November 2002.)
Further Resources
The
Official Kahane Web Site including information on how to become active in
the Kahanist Movement.
Kahane Tzadak ("Kahane Holy Man") containing writings by and about Meir
Kahane.
An article from Haaretz,
"We're not Kach, but we love Kahane" on the move of Kach leader,
Baruch
Marzel, to the Herut
Party.
Web Editor's Note
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renumbering of the footnotes from a sectional to a continuous list, no further
changes to the text have been made.
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