Rabbi
Meir David Kahane was born in August 1st, 1932 in Brooklyn, New
York. As a young rabbi in Howard Beach in the years 1958-1960, he
succeeded in bringing many of the younger members of his
congregation to strict religious observance. Fired in 1960 by the
assimilated parents of these youngsters who were not pleased with
the Rabbi's "influence" upon their children, he eventually found
work in a Jewish Anglo-Saxon newspaper called "The Jewish Press." He
wrote at least one column a week for almost thirty years.
In the
early 60's he also established a political think tank with under the
pseudo name "Michael King", and established a movement called "July
4th", which supported America's participation in the
Vietnam War. In 1967, he co-wrote a book called "The Jewish Stake in
Vietnam," in which he opposed the leftist stance of withdrawing
American troops from Vietnam, feeling that a defeat for America
would result in an emboldened Soviet Union - and an emboldened
Soviet Union would spell trouble for Israel.
As editor
of the Jewish Press, the Rabbi began receiving numerous letters from
American Jews lamenting the unbearable levels of anti-Semitism, and
the lack of any official help or even acknowledgement of the
problem. The Rabbi heard many "horror stories" of beatings,
muggings, extortion, threats and vandalism, and was appalled at the
lack of any kind of response by the relevant authorities. He turned
to the major Jewish organizations to inform them of these incidents,
and found to his chagrin that they too were "aware of the problem,"
but preferred to either react "quietly," or - more often than not -
deny the problem altogether. He came to the conclusion that a new
Jewish organization must be formed - a grassroots organization
which would really engage with the problem. In 1968 he put an ad in
the Jewish Press declaring the establishment of a new organization
called "The Jewish Defense League," or "JDL" for short.
The JDL
began by taking on local anti-Semitism in the city school systems.
Soon after, JDL members began guarding Jewish cemeteries from young
hoodlums who would vandalize and desecrate Jewish tombstones
annually on Halloween. In 1969, the JDL received its first major
publicity when a black militant named James Forman began demanding
compensation from churches and synagogues, for the slavery and other
injustices committed against the black people. Forman contacted
Temple Emmanuelle, a reform synagogue, and announced that he would
be arriving on Friday night to highlight his grievances, and demand
"compensation". The JDL announced that if Forman show up, they would
"break both his legs." Jewish Defense League members stood in front
of Temple Emmanuelle with sticks and chains to await Forman's
arrival. He never showed up. The media was stunned at such a
response from a Jewish organization. While this reputation garnered
them much hatred from the Jewish Establishment groups, it also
gained them the admiration and respect of the Jewish public in
general.
In 1969
the JDL opened up a summer camp, where for the first time - instead
of going kayaking and horse-riding - Jewish youngsters underwent an
intense course of military and firearms training, karate classes,
and Torah classes. That year, the JDL continued defendeding Jewish
teachers who were being attacked by black anti-Semites, claiming
that the Jewish teachers were "castrating" their children
educationally. As time went by and their membership grew, the JDL
also organized patrols (sometimes legally armed) in neighborhoods
where Jews were being victimized and physically attacked and offered
regular courses in self-defense, as well as dealing with day to day
anti-Semitism in schools and campuses across the country.
As JDL
membership grew, the Rabbi felt it was possible to start helping the
Jews languishing behind the "Iron Curtain." The JDL, led by Rabbi
Kahane, began the struggle for the release of the Jews of the Soviet
Union. On December 29, 1969, the JDL simultaneously raided the
offices of Intourist (a Soviet tourist agency) and Aeroflot (the
official Soviet airline) and leaped aboard a Soviet airliner that
had just landed at Kennedy Airport in New York. At that same time,
Rabbi Kahane himself, along with three young militants, took over
the TASS office (Soviet News Agency). The next day, having only just
been released on bail, Rabbi Kahane and 200 JDL members held a
full-scale riot opposite the Soviet mission, breaking through a
police barrier, effectively ending the policy of silence that the
Jewish Establishment groups had so long kept in place. Many other
high-profile demonstrations and activities were to follow, including
the JDL's disruption in January, 1970, of a performance by the
Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra who were playing a concert at Brooklyn
College. This was just a small part of the overall JDL policy of
threatening to fracture the already delicate "détente" between the
Soviet Union and the USA, unless the Soviet Jewish issue was dealt
with.
Already by
1971, the Soviet Jewry issue was being publicized, and the Soviet
Union finally began granting exit visas to Jews living there, who
were previously unable to leave. In March, 1971, a massive rally was
held for Soviet Jews in Washington DC. Thousands of demonstrators
marched from the White House towards the Soviet embassy. Against
police orders, they blocked traffic, yelled out slogans, and sang
Jewish songs. Over a thousand people were arrested, in a unique
display of Jewish pride and activism that was to rock the American
Jewish community to its core. In April of 1971, the JDL celebrated
Passover with a unique version of the ten plagues: 50 frogs were
released into the offices of Aeroflot, and quantities of mice were
let loose in the offices of "Amtorg" (a company dealing in commerce
between American and Russian.)! Such dynamic, creative protests were
to become the trademark of the ever more popular - and increasingly
successful - Jewish Defense League…
Statistically, the JDL's success can be measured by the drastic
increase in the number of Jews released from the Soviet Union during
the JDL's active years. For decades earlier, only a few hundred had
been released. Since JDL began its activities, however, the
statistics read far more positively: 15,000 Jews left the Soviet
Union in 1971, 34,000 left in 1972, and 37,000 in 1973.
On
September 14, 1971, Rabbi Kahane made aliyah to Israel and continued
the struggle to free Soviet Jews such as the known refusenik Siliva
Zalmanson. In Israel, the Rabbi also started to take on the local
problems. He came out strongly against the "Black Hebrews," a group
of black Americans who reside illegally in the southern Israeli town
of Dimona. The Rabbi was also active against Christian Missionaries
in Israel, who were preying on the impoverished, simple Jewish
immigrants from the USSR and Northern Africa. He also organized
demonstrations against US pressure that was being put on Israel to
accept territorial concessions to the Arabs. He dedicated a great
deal of his time appearing before students and young people to
spread his message of Torah and activism.
He
dedicated much time to the subject of American aliyah. During
these early years he was in Israel, he would go to America for
months at a time to speak to Jews and influence them to learn
Judaism and make aliyah, and succeeded in influencing tens of
thousands of Jews in this direction. In May of 1972, he began a
movement in the U.S. called "Homeward" which was to encourage
aliyah from America to Israel. During this time, he published
his book "Time to Go Home," which dealt strictly with the subject of
aliyah. He had already finished writing "Never Again" a year
earlier.
Towards
the end of 1972, the Rabbi began to deal increasingly with the Arab
problem. He arrived at the conclusion that the only way to prevent a
"northern Ireland in Israel" was through encouraging the Arab
population to leave Israel. The Rabbi wrote thousands of letters to
Arabs within the state, as well as to those Arabs living within the
territories liberated in 1967, offering financial compensation to
any Arab who was willing to leave the country. Many Arabs responded
in the positive, and in actual fact an entire village in the
Galillee, Gush Chalav, proposed transferring its entire population
to Canada, on the condition that they be provided with their own
replacement village to reside in.
In June of
1973 Rabbi Kahane was arrested by Israeli police. He sat for thirty
days in prison for sending letters and telegrams to his supporters
in American, calling upon them to do everything to disrupt the
Soviet leader Brezhnev's visit to the US. He also called for actions
against the Russian and Iraqi embassies, for the persecution of the
Jewish minorities within those respective countries.
Running on
a JDL ticket emphasizing Jewish education and pride, the Rabbi ran
for the Israeli Knesset in 1973. The election committee gave the
party the letters "kaf" and "kaf." Later on, these letters became
the name of Rabbi Kahane's movement – Kach. The name is reminiscent
of the Irgun slogan: "Rak Kach!" which means " Only This Way!"
"Rak Kach!" became the JDL's official slogan for the elections. The
Kach list received 12,811 votes - 3,000 votes short of receiving a
mandate.
From
1972-1975, the Rabbi had to attend to the many charges levied
against him by the Israeli authorities. He also began a campaign
against Israeli policy to concede the lands won in the Yom Kippur
War to the Arabs, and against the immense American pressure exerted
on Israel to do so. A few days before being sentenced to jail for
his political activities, he published the English book, "The
Story of the JDL." In the summer of 1976, Rabbi Kahane was
interrogated by the Shin Bet (Israeli General Security Services) in
Tel Aviv. The Rabbi talked about his experience in 1988: "I was
given an invitation to appear to the Shin Bet office in Tel Aviv.
There, someone named Brenner introduced himself and said: "Rabbi
Kahane, you have to stop." I asked him: "To stop what? Breathing?"
He answered: "Sir, we only warn once…" " A few months later, the
Rabbi was attacked by the Shin Bet, who violently beat him and
attempted to bundle him into a large sack. Only through a miracle
did he escape their clutches, but with a broken hand and serious
head-wounds.
In 1977,
the Kach Movement participated in the elections for the 9th
Knesset, which took place on May 17th . In his election
campaign, he attacked the National Religious Party for their long
time participation in leftist governments, their willingness to give
up land, and their compromising on the subject of "Who is a Jew?"
(The controversy was over how the State of Israel defined who was a
Jew.) Rabbi Kahane (along with many other religious voices) demanded
that this definition be given only according to the strict Halachic
(Jewish Law) requirements. The Rabbi only received 4,396 votes,
falling 13,000 votes short of a Knesset mandate. During these 1976
elections, Menachem Begin was voted Prime Minister of Israel. Rabbi
Kahane had always admired Begin from the days that Begin fought the
British in the pre-state days, and was happy to see him as Prime
Minister. But it quickly became evident that Menachem Begin the
Prime Minister was not the same Menachem Begin that everyone knew
and voted into office. In an interview in 1983 to the Israeli
newspaper "Yideot Achronot," he spoke of his disappointment: "The
evening he was elected, it was like a holiday for me. This was a man
who I expected would make the revolutionary changes in Israel. He
didn't do it…"
In 1977, the Rabbi published yet another book, called "Why Be
Jewish?", and in 1978, he completed "Listen World, Listen
Jew!" Together with his book writing, Rabbi Kahane continued his
political endeavors and activism, this time coming out strongly
against the supposedly "right-wing" government's policy concerning
the liberated lands of 1967, and their concession of the Sinai to
Egypt in the Camp David Accords.
In April of 1978, he was again arrested for trying to enter Beit
Hadassah in Hebron. In June of 1979, Rabbi Kahane publicly tore up a
restriction order preventing him from entering Hebron, and together
with his supporters marched towards Kiryat Arba-Hebron and was soon
arrested. On July 5 th, he passed through police barriers
with a group of supporters and reached the city of Shchem in order
to demand from the mayor and the rest of the Shchem residents that
they move to an Arab country. However, he was prevented from
entering the city hall and was arrested once again. On August 29th,
Rabbi Kahane and three other supporters were sentenced to three
months in prison for entering Hebron in violation of a restriction
order. He sat in the Maasiyahu prison and, while there, wrote the
Hebrew book "On Faith and Redemption."
On May 13th,
1980, the Likud government of Menachem Begin set a precedent by
ordering the administrative detention of Rabbi Kahane.
Administrative detention is a procedure instituted by the British
authorities in mandatory Palestine enabling the government to arrest
anyone for up to six months without trial or charges. The order was
signed by the then Security Minister, Ezer Weizman. While in Ramle
prison, he wrote "They Must Go!", his first book dealing strictly
with the Arab threat to Israel from a historical, demographic, and
Jewish point of view.
When Rabbi
Kahane finally left the jail, he prepared for the 10th
Knesset elections. The elections were held on June 30th,
1981. Heading the list was Rabbi Kahane, followed by Rabbi Yisrael
Ariel who was the Rabbi of the Jewish community of Yamit in the
Sinai. The list received only 5,128 votes, far short of the
necessary 19,373 to win a mandate. After the elections, the Rabbi
focused on the struggle over Yamit (and the struggle for the Sinai
in general), and many of his people went there to fight the
evacuation. With moment of the evacuation looming imminently, eleven
of the Rabbi's supporters fortified themselves in a bunker in Yamit,
and announced that they would commit suicide if the city was
uprooted. This caused great alarm throughout the country, and the
government pleaded with Rabbi Kahane to talk his people out of it.
The young men listened to their rabbi, and removed their threat of
suicide. Menachem Begin sent Rabbi Kahane a personal thank you
letter for his efforts. Nevertheless, Rabbi Kahane joined his
supporters inside the bunker, and together they fought off the
soldiers, who were only able to break through after many numerous
attempts. This bunker served to be the only real opposition to the
destruction of the community of Yamit.
In 1983, Rabbi Kahane published yet another work; a book called "40
Years," which was released in Hebrew the following year. In the
meantime, the elections for the 11th Knesset took place on July,
1984. The list received 25,907 votes, well over the 20,733-vote
threshold to enter the Knesset, and only 7, 665 votes short of a
second mandate. More than 2.5% of soldiers and 5% of Russian
immigrants voted Kach, with the majority of the Rabbi's support
coming from Sephardic Jews (Jews primarily from North Africa and the
Middle East). The Likud party offered portfolios and money, and in
return asked for Kach's support of the government coalition; but
Rabbi Kahane stressed that he would only do so if the Jewish
underground was released and granted an official pardon, and if the
"Who Is a Jew" law was amended, adding Jewish content to the Jewish
state. The Rabbi doggedly pursued this issue beyond the elections,
and was adamant that the State of Israel should be a "Jewish State,"
instead of a "State of the Jews," which would imply a
"Hebrew-speaking America or Portugal," as the Rabbi would often put
it.
Both the
left and right were deeply worried by Rabbi Kahane's entry to the
Knesset. The left disagreed ideologically, and the right was worried
in terms of diminished electoral support for their parties. The
Israeli media decided to totally boycott reporting Rabbi Kahane and
his activities, excluding some rare exceptions - and even then, they
would only select certain stories that they knew they would be able
to manipulate to reflect badly on the Rabbi (clashes with the
police, etc.)
In his
four years as member of Knesset, there was virtually a complete
media blackout and he was not invited once to any TV programs, nor
given a forum in any newspapers. Besides small newspapers like "Erev
Shabbat," he was never even interviewed. In America, however, things
were rather different. Rabbi Kahane was invited to speak on numerous
radio and T.V. programs. He spoke twice at the National Press club
in Washington - something very few Israeli government officials had
done.
To combat
the growing "Kahanism", as they called it, the army had a mandatory
course on "democracy". Knesset members from left to right, and from
the religious parties as well, exited the Knesset hall when he
spoke. He was constantly demonized by the media, without any chance
for rebuttal. Despite this, he was one of the most active members of
Knesset. He proposed hundreds of bills and motions, and gave
hundreds of speeches, all of which are recorded in the Knesset
protocols.
Numerous
obstacles were thrown his way: His parliamentary right to send
letters free of postage was removed, and his public rallies were
violently heckled and harassed. Knesset Member Geula Cohen of the
far-right Techiya party raised a bill making it illegal for a dual
citizen to be a Member of Knesset. As a result, Rabbi Kahane was
eventually forced to relinquish his American citizenship. In 1986, a
bill was passed that forbid any Knesset list which "incites to
racism" from running for Knesset.
In
addition to his political activity, Rabbi Kahane dedicated much of
his time to charitable causes. Many needy families were in fact
dependent on him for charity. The then Sephardic Chief Rabbi of
Israel, Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu said that on the Rosh HaShana before
the Rabbi's death (in 1990), the Rabbi distributed more than $34,000
in charity. The Rabbi also helped battered Jewish women trapped in
Arab villages - often with children. A shelter in Kiryat Arba was
provided to help these women rehabilitate their lives.
In 1986,
"The Black Book" was published, which outlined and documented the
spiritual holocaust that befell the Sephardic Jews (from the Middle
East and North Africa) when they came to Israel. The Rabbi was very
outspoken on this issue. In 1987, yet another booklet - called "I am
my Brother's Keeper" - was published, dealing specifically with the
disappearance of the children of many Yemenite Jews who were brought
to Israel primarily by the "Jewish Agency." That same year, the book
"Uncomfortable Questions for Comfortable Jews" was printed in the
U.S.A.
As the 12th
Knesset elections approached, all surveys showed a sharp rise in
support for the Kach movement and the ideas of Rabbi Kahane.
According to results of surveys that appeared in all the newspapers,
the Kach movement was projected to receive 11% of the vote. This was
equal to 13 Knesset mandates. As the 1988 elections approached, six
parties proposed to the Central Election Committee of the Knesset
that the Kach party be banned. The right-wing Likud - worried about
losing voters to the Kach party - spearheaded the campaign. 28
members of the Election Committee voted to ban Kach, with 5 opposed,
and 3 abstentions. The Rabbi appealed the decision to the Supreme
Court, but on October 18, the Supreme Court upheld the Knesset
decision that the Kach party was "racist" and "anti-democratic," and
as a result they upheld the disqualification of the party. Following
the court decision, Rabbi Kahane said: "We won. We didn't change
our platform. Today, the Supreme Court of Israel banned Judaism,
Zionism, and Democracy all at once."
After the
elections of 1988, Rabbi Kahane established the "First Zionist
Congress of the State of Judea." The function of the congress was to
plant the seeds that would one day allow for a Torah-true "State of
Judea" to one day arise in the territories of Judea, Samaria and
Gaza, in the event that the State of Israel would decide to withdraw
from those areas - as the Rabbi predicted they would.
With the
Rabbi's Knesset option blocked, he started a referendum campaign,
posing the following question: If Israel is truly a democracy, let
the people vote on the following issues, yes or no: Shall the
present Knesset be immediately dissolved, new elections held within
a month which shall be open to all parties, including Kach, and
shall all parties be bound to implement the following minimal
program of crushing the Arab "intifada", the annexation of
Judea-Samaria-Gaza, and the removal of all Arabs who are not
prepared to accept the exclusive sovereignty and ownership of the
Jewish people over all of the Land of Israel. To publicize the idea,
the Rabbi held rallies demanding such a referendum. In 1990 he
published a book on the subject: "Israel: Revolution or Referendum."
The book gives the historical, legal, and logical justification for
a referendum in Israel, and sets out to prove that a government that
cannot protect its citizens, loses its right to exist. After the
banning, the Rabbi concentrated his energies on his yeshiva, and on
finishing his Torah scholarly book, "The Jewish Idea."
Following
Succot, 1990, the Rabbi traveled to America with the intention of
establishing a new organization: ZEERO (Zionist Emergency Evacuation
Organization). The purpose of the organization was to convince Jews
to "liquidate the exile before the exile liquidates them." On
November 11 th 1990, he gave a lecture at the Marriott
Hotel in New York, underlining this burning issue, and explaining
the importance in the Jewish people leaving the lands of the exile
and coming home to the Land of Israel. When he finished speaking, he
took personal questions from the crowd when he was approached small,
tubby, nondescript man with a scruffy beard lurking close by. As the
Rabbi continued to address his supporters and other members of the
crowd he was suddenly shot twice and fell bleeding to the ground.
The murderer, Arab Egyptian terrorist El Said Nossair, tried to
escape (wounding a civilian and a policeman in the process,) but was
shot and caught.
Despite
all the flashing lights that pointed towards Nossair's involvement
in international Islamic terrorism, and the existence of something
much more sinister than an isolated murder committed by a crazed
lone gunman, the FBI treated the case as an ordinary homicide,
ruling out any idea of a conspiracy. At the trial, the jury found
Nossair not-guilty of murder on a technicality, but sent him to jail
for illegal possession of weapons. In 1993, however, the
short-sightedness of the FBI in their investigation of the murder of
Rabbi Kahane was exposed to the world when the Twin Towers was
detonated by members of the Al Qaeda terrorist organization, killing
six people and wounding over a hundred. Only at this point were
federal charges finally opened against Nossair, and in 1995 he was
sentenced to life imprisonment for belonging to the same cell which
blew up the Twin Towers in 1993. The continued neglect of the FBI
during the Kahane murder case in fact contributed to the WTC
attack on September 11, 2001. If Nossair had been properly
investigated following the Rabbi's murder, the full extent of the
plot would have been unraveled, and he and his cohorts never would
have managed to carry it out.
Rabbi
Kahane was buried in the Har Haminuchot cemetery in Jerusalem, near
his father, his father in law, and his mother in law. The Rabbi's
funeral was one of the largest in Israel's history, where
approximately 150,000 participated.