JEWISH
FUNDAMENTALISM IN ISRAEL
by:
Israel Shahak and
Norton Mezvinsky
Chapter .6.
The Real Significance of Baruch Goldstein
The story of the massacre committed
by Baruch Goldstein in the Patriarchs' Cave in Hebron on February
25, 1994, is well known. Goldstein entered the Muslim prayer hall
and shot worshippers mostly in their backs, killing 29, including
children, and wounding many more. In this chapter we shall not describe
that massacre; rather we shall focus upon Goldstein's career prior
to the massacre and upon the reactions of the Israeli government
and fundamentalist Jews to the massacre a short time after it occurred.
This should provide a vivid illustration of Jewish fundamentalism.
We shall extend our discussion of some details until the summer
of 1998.
One important background fact about Goldstein exemplifies the influence
of Jewish fundamentalism in Israel: long before the massacre, Goldstein
as an army physician repeatedly breached army discipline by refusing
to treat Arabs, even those serving in the Israeli army. He was not
punished, either while in active or reserve service, for his refusal
because of intervention in his favor. Political commentators discussed
this story in the Hebrew press even though not a single Israeli
politician referred to it. This story deserves detailed exploration
in our analysis of Jewish fundamentalism.
In his March 1, 1994, Yediot Ahronot article, Arych
Kizel, a regular Davar correspondent, wrote that Goldstein,
shortly after immigrating to Israel and as a conscript assigned
to an artillery battalion in Lebanon as a doctor, refused to treat
Gentiles. According to Kizel, Goldstein, after refusing to treat
a wounded Arab, declared: "I am not willing to treat any non-Jew.
I recognize as legitimate only two [religious] authorities: Maimonides
and Kahane." Kizel further reported:
Three Druze soldiers who served in Goldstein's battalion approached
their commander and asked for another doctor to be stationed in
their battalion, because they were afraid that Goldstein would
refuse to treat them in case they were wounded. Because of their
request Goldstein was reassigned to another battalion. He continued
to serve as a military doctor both in the conscript army and in
the reserves. After some years he was reassigned to the regional
Hebron brigade of the central command where he thereafter served
his reserve stint. Immediately after receiving this assignment,
he told his commanders that his religious faith would make it
impossible for him to treat wounded or ill Arabs; he asked to
be reassigned elsewhere. His request was granted, and he was reassigned
to a reserve unit serving in South Lebanon.
Amir Oren, who subsequently became the military correspondent of
Haaretz, provided the most complete story of Goldstein's
relations with the Israeli army and the entire Israeli political
establishment in his March 4 Davar article. According
to Oren, after the 1984 elections and the subsequent formation of
the national unity government, then Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin
and then Chief of Staff General Moshe Levy learned about Goldstein's
refusal to treat non-Jews in Lebanon. Oren wrote:
When Goldstein's refusal to treat non-Jewish patients became
evident to his commanders, both the artillery corps and medical
corps commanders quite naturally wanted to court-martial him and
thus get rid of him. They took it for granted that this could
be easily done, because Goldstein had graduated only from the
army's course for medical officers. [Goldstein did not have combat
officer training, which is normally a prerequisite for admission
to the course for medical officers.] The two corps [commanders]
also knew that Goldstein, while attending the army's course for
medical officers, had become notorious as an anti-Arab extremist.
According to other Hebrew press reports, some of Goldstein's trainee
colleagues demanded that he be dismissed from the course; their
demand was refused. Oren related: "(Goldstein) was already then
protected by highly placed people in senior ministries. Those patrons
requested that Goldstein be allowed to serve in Kiryat Arba rather
than in a combat battalion." The situation then developed into "a
bone of contention between the commander of the army's medical corps
and its chief rabbi." Oren continued:
In the end the issue of what to do with an officer who openly
refused to obey orders by invoking Halacha has never been resolved,
even if that officer openly refused to provide medical help both
to Israeli soldiers and POWS. Can we avoid being stunned by the
army's failure to court-martial Goldstein? Why was no order to
court-martial him ever issued by the entire chain of the army
command? That chain of command included the commander of the northern
command, Reserve General Orri Or [a Labor MK and later in 1994
the chairman of the Knesset Committee for Foreign and Defense
Affairs], and General Amos Yaron, who now is the commander of
the manpower department. Why did they refuse to decide without
first consulting the chief rabbi? The already embarrassed medical
corps [commanders] now [after the massacre] admit that they were
scared by publicity that might have propelled the religious parties
and religious settlers' lobbies to make things more of a mess
than ever before. The fear of publicity time after time prompted
the army commanders to give in to all kinds of Goldsteins, rather
than to denounce their views and court-martial them.
Many sources corroborated Oren's hinting that this Goldstein situation
did not constitute a unique case. The story told by Oren revealed
the pervasiveness of the religious parties' influence in the Israeli
army. Jewish orthodoxy's stance against non-Jews, as openly advocated
by Goldstein's idolized leader, Rabbi Meir Kahane, was—and still
is—an essential position held by the major religious parties. As
such, this stance has had a strong impact upon the Israeli army.
Had Rabin and the army commanders mentioned by Oren, moreover, felt
no affinity whatsoever with Kahane's and Goldstein's views, they
would not have given in to the religious parties with such abandon
and thus sacrificed all consideration of military discipline. Israeli
policies, directed towards Palestinians, other Middle East Arabs
(perceived by Zionists as non-Jews) and people of other nations,
are only explainable by assuming that they are based upon anti-Gentile
feeling. The anti-Gentile feeling is strongest among the most religious
Jews but exists as well in this secular milieu. This is the reason
why support for Goldstein in 1984 and 1985 had a sequel in the excuses
by many Israeli leaders for the slaughter. These excuses were thinly
disguised by mostly hypocritical expressions of shock.
Goldstein's refusal to give proper medical treatment to non-Jews
continued after he was transferred to Kiryat Arba. In his February
27,1994 Yediot Ahronot article, Nahum Barnea wrote:
The senior Israeli army officer in the Hebron area told me about
his two encounters with Baruch Goldstein. The second time he saw
him was in the company of Kach goons who were abusing President
Ezer Weisman during his visit to Kiryat Arba. The first time he
encountered Goldstein was after an Israeli soldier had wounded
a local Arab in his legs. The Arab was brought to an army clinic
for treatment, but Goldstein refused to treat him. Another army
physician had to be summoned to substitute for Goldstein. The
officer did not explain why Goldstein was thereafter not demoted
in rank but was rather allowed to keep performing his duties in
the reserves. Incidentally, his misconduct also constituted a
violation of the oath he had taken upon becoming a doctor, but
for this the Israeli army cannot be blamed.
Barnea made clear that the entire Israeli establishment, not just
the army, was responsible for the leniency granted to Goldstein
for his misdeeds. The leniency lasted until the massacre. Only after
the massacre did the official line change to shock, coupled with
assertions that Goldstein had acted alone. Thus, during the first
three hours after the slaughter Rabin and his retinue insisted either
that Goldstein was a psychopath or that he was a devoted doctor
who happened to suffer a momentary derangement. Barnea reported:
"Within hours a whole edifice of rationalization was built, according
to which Goldstein had allegedly been under unbearable mental pressure,
because he had to attend so many wounded and dead [persons], including
Arabs." The men who propagated this lie knew that Goldstein had
refused to treat Arabs. Barnea continued: "Thus, the Arabs were
made guilty for what he could not avoid doing. The implication was
that the Arabs assaulted him rather than the other way around and
that he really acted for the benefit of the Arabs by letting them
finally realize that Jewish blood could not be shed with impunity."
This brazen lie was maintained as long as possible before being
abandoned without apology. The propagation of such a lie reveals
the influence of Jewish fundamentalism upon the secular parts of
the Israeli establishment.
Goldstein represented Jewish fundamentalism in the extreme. Some
of the Gush Emunim leaders at the time of the massacre were only
a bit less extreme. Barnea compared Goldstein's attitude toward
non-Jews with that of Rabbi Levinger, the Gush Emunim leader whom
he interviewed on the day of the massacre:
Levinger was in a good mood; after arguing about how religious
settlers should respond to the massacre, he shortly before had
won the three hour debate at a session of the Kiryat Arba municipality.
The secretary of the Council of Judea, Samara and Gaza District,
Uri Ariel, [who became director of the prime minister's office
in 1998] proposed condemning the massacre. Levinger staked his
authority behind the proposal that the [Israeli] government should
instead be condemned [for putting Goldstein] under unbearable
mental pressure [propelling him to action].
In the discussion the terms "murder," "massacre" or "killing" were
avoided; instead the terms used were "deed," "event" or "occurrence."
The reason is that according to the Halacha the killing by a Jew
of a non-Jew under any circumstances is not regarded as murder.
It may be prohibited for other reasons, especially when it causes
danger for Jews. In many cases the real feelings about a Jew murdering
non-Jews, expressed in Israel with impunity, correspond to the law.
Levinger told Barnea that the resolution "expresses in passing"
the sorrow about dead Arabs "even though it emphasizes the responsibility
of the government." When asked by Barnea whether he felt sorry,
Levinger answered: "I am sorry not only about dead Arabs but also
about dead flies."
Goldstein on principle had refused to treat non-Jews for many years
before the massacre. He worked as the municipal doctor of Kiryat
Arba and treated Arabs only when he could not avoid doing so. Barnea
quoted one of Goldstein's colleagues from the Kiryat Arba clinic
who recalled that "whenever Goldstein arrived at a traffic accident
spot and recognized that some of the injured were Arabs, he would
attend to them but only until another doctor arrived. Then, he would
stop treating them. 'This was his compromise between his doctor's
oath and his ideology,' said his colleague."
The Halacha enjoins precisely the behavior of Goldstein's refusing
to attend non-Jews. The Halacha dictates that a pious Jewish doctor
may treat Gentiles when his refusal to do so might be reported to
the authorities and cause him or other Jews unpleasantness. There
is reason to believe that whenever doctors as pious as Goldstein
were forced to treat Arabs they behaved as did Goldstein. In his
previously cited Yediot Ahronot article, Arych Kizel
added that the Israeli army found that Goldstein's conduct did not
require any disciplinary measures. A Maariv correspondent
wrote in his March 8, 1994 article that Goldstein's military service
record was sufficiently distinguished to earn him a ceremonial promotion
from the rank of captain to that of major. The president of Israel
would have officially awarded this promotion on April 14, 1994,
Israel's independence day. Only Goldstein's death, which occurred
at the time of the massacre, prevented what would have been a revealing
promotion.
An even greater example ofJewish fundamentalism's influence upon
the secular part of the Israeli establishment can be detected in
the official arrangement of Goldstein's elaborate funeral at a time
that the deliberate character of the massacre could not be denied.
The establishment was affected by the fact, widely reported in the
Hebrew press but given little place in the foreign press, that within
two days of the massacre the walls of religious neighborhoods of
west Jerusalem (and to a lesser extent of many other religious neighborhoods)
were covered by posters extolling Goldstein's virtues and complaining
that he did not manage to kill more Arabs. Children of religious
settlers who came to Jerusalem to demonstrate sported buttons for
months after the massacre that were inscribed: "Dr. Goldstein cured
Israel's ills." Numerous concerts of Jewish religious music and
other events often developed into demonstrations of tribute to Goldstein.
The Hebrew press reported these incidents of public tribute in copious
detail. No major politician protested against such celebrations.
President Weizman expressed more extravagantly than others his
sorrow for the massacre. Weizman, as reported by Uzi Benziman in
his March 4, 1994 Haaretz article, was also engaged
in lengthy and amiable negotiations with Goldstein's family and
Kach comrades concerning a suitably honorable funeral for the murderer.
Kiryat Arba settlers, many of whom had already declared themselves
in favor of the mass murder in radio and television interviews and
had lauded Goldstein as a martyr and holy man, demanded that General
Yatom, the commander responsible for the Hebron area, allow the
funeral cortege to parade through the city of Hebron, in order to
be viewed by the Arabs even though a curfew existed. Yatom did not
object outright to the demand but opposed it as something that could
cause disorder. Tzvi Katzover, the mayor of Kiryat Arba and one
of the most extreme leaders of the religious settlers, telephoned
Weizman and threatened that the settlers would make a pogrom of
Arabs if their demands were not met. Weizman responded by telephoning
the chief of staff and asking why the army opposed the demand of
the settlers. According to Benziman, Chief of Staff Barak answered:
"The army was afraid that Arabs would desecrate Goldstein's tomb
and carry away his corpse." In further negotiations involving Barak,
Yatom, Rabin, Kach leaders and Kiryat Arba settlers, Weizman assumed
the consistent position, as stated by Benziman, that "the army should
pay respect to the desires and sensibilities of the settlers and
of the Goldstein family." Ultimately, the negotiated decision was
that a massively attended funeral cortege would take place in Jerusalem
and that the police would close some of the busiest streets to the
traffic in Goldstein's honor. Afterwards, the murderer would be
buried in Kiryat Arba along the continuation of Kahane Avenue. According
to Benziman, Kach leaders at first rejected this compromise. General
Yatom had to approach the Kach leaders in person and beg them abjectly
for their agreement, which he finally secured. Yatom also had to
obtain consent from the notorious Kiryat Arba rabbi, Dov Lior. As
reported in the March 4, 1994, issue of Yerushalaim
Lior declared: "Since Goldstein did what he did in God's own name,
he is to be regarded as a righteous man." Benziman explained the
conduct of Weizman and his entourage: " After the fact the officials
of the presidential mansion justify those goings on by the need
to becalm the settlers' mood." After the funeral the army provided
a guard of honor for Goldstein's tomb. The tomb became a pilgrimage
site, not only for the religious settlers but also for delegations
of pious Jews from all Israeli cities.
The details of Goldstein's funeral as arranged through the office
of President Weizman are significant. The facts below were taken
mostly from the Ilana Baum and Tzvi Singer report, published in
Yediot Ahronot on February, 28 1994. The funeral's
first installment took place in Jerusalem. Among the estimated thousand
mourners only a few were settlers from Kiryat Arba. Baum and Singer
noted: "Without having met Goldstein personally, other mourners
most of whom were Jerusalemites, were enthusiastic admirers of his
deed. Many more were Yeshiva students. A large group represented
the Chabad Hassidic movement, another group [consisted of anti-Zionist]
Satmar Hassids." Other Hassidic movements were also well represented.
(Not mentioned in the English-language press, Goldstein, a follower
of Kahane, was also a follower of the Lubovitcher rabbi.) Baum and
Singer continued:
People awaiting the arrival of the corpse could be heard repeating:
"What a hero! A righteous person! He did it on behalf of all of
us." As usual in such encounters between religious Jews, all the
participants tuned into a single, collective personality, united
by their burning hatred of the Israeli media, the wicked Israeli
government and, above all else, of anyone who dared to speak against
the murder.
Before the start of the procession well-known rabbis eulogized
Goldstein and commended the murder. Rabbi Israel Ariel, for example,
said: "The holy martyr, Baruch Goldstein, is from now on our intercessor
in heaven. Goldstein did not act as an individual; he heard the
cry of the land of Israel, which is being stolen from us day after
day by the Muslims. He acted to relieve that cry of the land!" Toward
the end of his eulogy Rabbi Ariel added: "The Jews will inherit
the land not by any peace agreement but only by shedding blood."
Ben-Shoshan Yeshu'a, a Jewish underground member, sentenced to life
imprisonment for murder and amnestied after a few years spent under
luxurious hotel conditions, lauded Goldstein and praised his action
as an example for other Jews to follow.
Border guards, police and the secret police protected the funeral
cortege. Baum and Singer related:
An entire unit of border guards precede the cortege; they were
followed by young Kahane group members from Jerusalem who continuously
yelled: "death to the Arabs." While obviously intending to find
an Arab to kill, they could not spot one. Suddenly, a border guard
noticed an Arab approaching the cortege behind a low fence. The
border guard immediately jumped over the fence, stopped the Arab
and, using force, led him away to safety before anyone could notice.
He [the border guard] thus saved him [the Arab] from a certain
lynching.
Behind the young Kahane group members was a coffin, which was surrounded
by leaders of Kahane splinter groups, some of whom were wanted by
the police. (The police and the secret police claimed later that
they did not recognize these wanted leaders. The press correspondents
easily recognized them.) Baum wrote:
Tiran Pollak, a Kahane group leader wanted by the police, granted
me an interview near the coffin. "Goldstein was not only righteous
and holy," he told me, "but also a martyr. Since he is a martyr,
his corpse will be buried without being washed, not in a shroud
but in his clothes. The honorable Dr. Goldstein has always refused
to provide medical help to Arabs. Even during the war for Galilee
he refused to treat any Arab, including those serving in the army.
General Gad Navon, the chief rabbi of the Israeli army, at that
time contacted Meir Kahane to ask him to persuade Baruch Goldstein
of blessed memory to treat the Arabs. Kahane, however, refused
to do so, because this would be against the Jewish religion."
Suddenly the crowd began yelling: "Death to the journalists."
I looked around and realized that I was the only journalist inside
the crowd of mourners. I clung to Tiran Pollak and begged him
to "please protect me." I was scared to death that the crowd might
recognize me as a journalist.
Military guards transported Goldstein's coffin to Kiryat Arba through
Palestinian villages. A second round of eulogies was delivered in
the hall of the Hesder Yeshiva Nir military institution by a motley
of religious settlers, including the aforementioned Rabbi Dov Lior.
Lior said: "Goldstein was full of love for fellow human beings.
He dedicated himself to helping others." The terms "human beings"
and "others" in the Halacha refer solely to Jews. Lior continued:
"Goldstein could not continue to bear the humiliations and shame
nowadays inflicted upon us; this was why he took action for no other
reason than to sanctify the holy name of God."
Tohay Hakah reported in Yerushalaim on March 4,1994
upon another Lior eulogy of Goldstein a few days after the funeral.
He recalled that Lior several years ago was excoriated in the press
for recommending that medical experiments be performed on the live
bodies of Arab terrorists. The outcry against this recommendation
influenced the attorney general to prevent the otherwise guaranteed
election of Lior to the Supreme Rabbinical Council of Israel. The
attorney general, however, did not interfere with Lior's current
rabbinical duties. The press reported upon other eulogies, delivered
not only in religious settlements but in religious neighborhoods
of many Israeli towns during the days immediately following the
slaughter. The Hebrew press reportage of these eulogies suggests
that the most virulent lauding of Goldstein and the calling for
further massacres of Arabs occurred in the more homogeneous religious
communities.
The approval of Goldstein and his mass murder extended well beyond
the perimeters of the religious Jewish community. Secular Israeli
Jews, especially many of the youth, praised Goldstein and his deed.
That Israeli youth were even more pleased by the massacre than were
the adults is well-documented. The concern here nevertheless will
be with the adult population, which in many ways is the most significant.
According to Yuval Katz, who wrote an article published in the March
4, 1994 issue of Yerushalaim, it is not true that "with
the exception of a few psychopaths, the entire nation and its politicians
included, has resolutely condemned Dr. Goldstein, even though, luckily
for us, all major television networks in the world were last week
still deluded by this untruth." Katz told how a popular television
entertainer, Rafi Reshef, who was not controlled as tightly as the
moderators in sedate panels, "could this week announce the findings
of some reliable polls." Katz continued:
It is important that according to one poll about 50 per cent
of Kiryat Arba inhabitants approve of the massacre. More important
is another poll that showed that about 50 per cent of Israeli
Jews are more sympathetic toward the settlers after the massacre
than they were before the massacre. The most important poll established
that at least 50 per cent of Israeli Jews would approve of the
massacre, provided that it was not referred to as a massacre but
rather as a "Patriarch's Cave operation," a nice-sounding term
already being used by religious settlers.
Katz reported that the politicians and academics interviewed by
Reshef failed to grasp the significance of those findings. Attributing
them to a chance occurrence, they refused to comment upon them.
He tended to excuse them:
I presume that those busy public figures, along with everybody
else who this week exerted himself to speak in the name of the
entire nation simply did not have time to walk the streets in
the last days. Yet, with the exception of the wealthiest neighborhoods,
people could be seen smiling merrily when talking about the massacre.
The stock popular comment was: "Sure, Goldstein is to be blamed.
He could have escaped with ease and have done the same in four
other mosques, but he didn't."
The impression of many other Israelis corresponded to the Reshef
findings. People were rather evenly divided into two categories:
in one category the people were vociferous in cheering the slaughter;
in the other category the people mostly remained silent and condemned
the massacre only if encouraged to do so. Katz continued:
Therefore, this was the right time to draw finally the obvious
conclusion that we, the Jews, are not any more sensitive or merciful
than are the Gentiles. Many Jews have been programmed by the same
racist computer program that is shaping the majority of the world's
nations. We have to acknowledge that our supposed advancement
in progressive beliefs and democracy have failed to affect the
archaic forms of Jewish tribalism. Those who still delude themselves
that Jews might be different than [people of] other nations should
now know better. The spree of bullets from Goldstein's gun was
for them an occasion to learn something.
The wise comments of Katz were not heeded in Israel except by a
minority. It may be that had more Israeli Jews paid attention and
heeded the words of Katz the murder of Yitzhak Rabin would have
been averted. In the view of this book's authors, the important
difference between the real shock caused by Rabin's murder and the
lack of shock caused by Goldstein's massacre lies in the fact that
Goldstein's victims were non-Jews.
Although less direct than Katz, many other commentators in the
Israeli Hebrew press have focused upon that part of the Israeli
Jewish public who were shocked by the rejoicing over the massacre
of innocent people and disturbed by the apologia offered by many
politicians and public figures. Some of those people who were shocked
described the backers of and apologists for Goldstein as "Nazis"
or "Nazi-like." These same people, who can be considered moderate
hawks rather than Zionist doves, had before the massacre reacted
negatively to the use by a few Israeli Jewish critics of such terminology
in describing a part of the Israeli Jewish population. These "moderate
hawks" had habitually labelled many Arab organizations, such as
the Abu Nidal group and the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine, "Nazi" or "Nazi-like." They did not repudiate their views
about these Arab organizations; they merely concluded that some
Jewish individuals and organizations also merit being so labelled
on equal terms with some Arabs. The prestigious journalist, Teddy
Preuss, reflected upon all of this in a most severe but substantially
representative manner in his March 4, 1994 Davar article:
Compared to the giant-scale mass murderers of Auschwitz, Goldstein
was certainly a petty murderer. His recorded statements and those
of his comrades, however, prove that they were perfectly willing
to exterminate at least two million Palestinians at an opportune
moment. This makes Dr Goldstein comparable to Dr Mengele; the
same holds true for anyone saying that he [or she] would welcome
more of such Purim holiday celebrations. [The massacre occurred
on that holiday.] Let us not devalue Goldstein by comparing him
with an inquisitor or a Muslim Jihad fighter. Whenever an infidel
was ready to convert to either Christianity or Islam, an inquisitor
or Muslim Jihad fighter would, as a rule, spare his life. Goldstein
and his admirers are not interested in converting Arabs to Judaism.
As their statements abundantly testify, they see the Arabs as
nothing more than disease-spreading rats, lice or other loathsome
creatures; this is exactly how the Nazis believed that the Aryan
race alone had laudable qualities that were inheritable but that
could become polluted by sheer contact with dirty and morbid Jews.
Kahane, who learned nothing from the Nuremberg Laws, had exactly
the same notions about the Arabs.
Really, Kahane had the same notions about non-Jews. Although less
scathing than Preuss, other Israeli commentators suggested the same
consideration.
In contrast to the above criticism were the even more numerous
comments about the harm caused to Israeli Jews by the Goldstein
massacre. The lament in the February 28, 1994 Haaretz Economic
Supplement, for example, was headlined: "Goldstein's massacre
caused distress on the Tel-Aviv stock market." Other papers voiced
similar sentiments. More importantly, Shimon Peres and other senior
dovish politicians presented a typical political apologia in their
criticism of the massacre, which they delivered in a meeting of
the Knesset Committee for Foreign and Defense Affairs. Specific
detail of this meeting is included below to illustrate the real
opinions of most Israeli politicians and their general disregard
of a major massacre of non-Jews except as it affected the interests
of Israel and its allies. A March 8, 1994 Haaretz article
reported the discussion at this meeting. Peres wasted no time expressing
heartfelt shock about the murdered Palestinians but spoke instead
about the harm to Israel caused by the "pictures of corpses that
the entire world could watch." Peres did not condemn the armed religious
settlers for their public rejoicing and shooting; he deplored the
harm caused to Israel and to themselves by the pictures of them.
As quoted in Haaretz, Peres added: "The events in Hebron
also adversely affected the interests of President Mubarak and King
Hussein, and even more of the PLO and its leadership." Peres then
went on to say: "We have had Jewish Kibbutzim located in the midst
of Arab inhabited areas for 80 years, and I cannot recall a single
instance of such a slaughter nor of firing at Arab buses nor of
maiming Arab mayors." At this point in the discussion senior Likud
politicians interpolated Peres. As reported in Haaretz:
The first to interrupt Peres' speech was Sharon. "Kibbutzim are
dear to me no less than to you, but there have been many cases
when somebody from a kibbutz would go out to murder Arabs." Peres
answered: "The two cases are not comparable, because in the case
under discussion the murderer was supported by a whole group of
followers." Benny Begin [answered]: "Why are you always talking
in generalities?" Peres [responded] : "I am not. I only maintain
that in order to pursue the peace process we need the PLO as a
partner, and now this partnership is in straits and we need to
help the PLO." Sharon [answered]: "You mean that we should help
that murderer [Arafat]." Peres, angrily banging the table [responded]:
"And what about Egyptians with whom you, Likud, made peace? Didn't
Egyptians murder Jews? Really. What's the difference between war
and terrorism? Does it make any difference how 16,000 of our soldiers
were killed? Everywhere, states are making deals with terror organizations."
Netanyahu [spoke]: "No state exists that has made a deal with
an organization still committed to its destruction. The PLO has
not rescinded the Palestinian Covenant. You are dwelling upon
the crime committed in Hebron not in order to reassure people
[Jews] living there but in order to advance your plan to establish
a Palestinian state." Peres [answered]: "It is you and your plans
that will lead to the formation of a Palestinian state, because
it is you, the Likud, that created the PLO in Madrid. It is you
who conceived the autonomy in the first place, contrary to all
our [previously pursued] aims." Netanyahu [stated]: "Autonomy
is not the same thing as state." Peres [continued]: "But it is
Sharon who is first to say that autonomy is bound to lead to a
Palestinian state... I am not less steadfast than are you; this
is why I have elaborated the most restrictive possible interpretation
of autonomy in Oslo, in relation to its territory, power and authorities.
This is why we are against international observers and consent
only to the temporary presence of representatives from the countries
contributing money. And regarding the Palestinian Covenant, they
have renounced it publicly, but they find it difficult to convene
their representative bodies to ratify this renunciation." Begin
[answered]: "Let me remind you that the PLO has not undertaken
publicly to rescind the Palestinian Covenant." Peres [answered]
: "I don't give a damn about you and/or your legalistic verbiage!
Arafat said that he renounced the Palestinian Covenant and for
me Arafat is the PLO."
The above passage shows, among other things, that knowledge of
Israeli politics and more generally Jewish affairs can be best attained
by using the original sources of what Jews say among themselves.
The continuing process of Goldstein's elevation to the rank of
saint by groups of Israeli Jews and his worship as such began soon
after the massacre. In his February 28, 1994 Haaretz
article, Shmnuel Rosner recounted a sermon delivered on the Sabbath
after the massacre by Rabbi Goren, the former chief military rabbi
and chief rabbi of Israel. Rosner wrote: "Goren's conclusion was
that next time an authorization would be needed for a massacre.
The authorization should come from the community 'not from the [present]
illegal government."' Rosner observed that the audience liked Goren's
sermon but would have preferred, as would numerous other Israeli
Jews, that the army rather than Goldstein had committed the massacre.
In the days and weeks after the massacre, appreciation of Goldstein
and his deed spread throughout the Israeli religious community and
among its supporters in the United States. The initial expressions
of that appreciation may be most significant, because they were
spontaneous and because they illustrated the influence, even beyond
the messianic community, of an ideology that approved indiscriminate
killing of Gentiles by Jews. Avirama Golan described in her February
28, 1994 Haaretz article how news about Goldstein on
the day of the massacre became known in the overwhelmingly Haredi
city of Bnei Brak and how the next day a religious Jewish crowd
reacted with praise of Goldstein during a mass entertainment event.
The massacre occurred on Purim, the festival during which religious
Jews are merry and sometimes drink alcoholic beverages to the point
of drunkenness. Bnei Brak streets were filled to capacity by joyful
celebrants that day; a special security force, comprised of religious
veterans of the Israeli army's elite units, had been hired by the
mayor to enforce order and modesty. Golan described the response
in the streets to the spreading news of the massacre:
A hired security guard, with a huge gun in his belt, a black
skullcap on his head, and special insignia of "Bnei Brak Security
Team " on his chest, stared at a fundraising stall. Then he noticed
his pal across the street. "A Purim miracle, I'm telling you,
Purim miracle," he shouted at the top of his voice. "That holy
man did something great. 52 Arabs at one stroke." However, the
fundraiser, a slim yeshiva student, was skeptical. "That's just
impossible," he said. "Those must be just stories." But the people
standing around confirmed the news. "It was on the radio," they
said. "Where?" "In the Patriarchs' Cave in Hebron." The yeshiva
student turned pale. "I don't mind the Arabs, but it is us who
will pay the price," he said. "What are you talking about?" the
security guard shouted, "It's a Purim miracle. God has helped."
People around the stall formed two groups: on the one hand those
who said that God Himself ordained a well-deserved punishment
of the Arabs; on the other, those who remained silent throughout.
The fundraiser went on writing receipts and shaking his head.
"Oh," he said, "nothing really happened." The Bnei Brak functionary's
wife said that dozens of visitors who, as is customary on Purim,
visited their home that morning, were shocked. "By the murder?"
somebody asked. "To tell you the truth, not exactly by the murder.
About what may now happen to the Jews."
Jumping to the evening of the next day, Golan continued: "Masses
of religious Jews were expected to come to Yad Eliahu Stadium [the
biggest in Israel] to be entertained by the famous religious jazz
singer, Mordechai Ben-David. For months before the massacre, this
evening had been planned as a demonstration intended to save the
land of Israel from Rabin, Peres and other Jewish infidels." All
factions of the religious community were represented in the crowd.
Golan again continued:
The first part of the evening passed quietly and even rather
dully. Only after the intermission, some minutes before the star
of the evening was to appear, the crowd went on a rampage. The
master of the ceremony called upon a Kiryat Arba resident to address
the crowd. He started by praising that "righteous and holy physician,
Dr. Goldstein, who rendered us a sacred service and got martyred
in the process." The speaker called upon the audience to mourn
him. By and large, the audience remained silent. Some applauded.
Only a single individual, wearing a small beard and a knitted
skullcap, stood up and yelled: "I disagree; that was a cold-blooded
murder!" Instantly he was physically assaulted. Many in the crowd
yelled: "Kick the infidel out of the hall!" The tempers calmed
down only when Ben-David finally appeared on the stage and began
singing. Outside after the performance some people reminisced
that more Gentiles had been killed by the Jews in Susa during
the original Purim [75,000]. They, therefore, reasoned that this
was the right time to kill a comparable number of Gentiles in
the holy land.
No wonder that Dov Halvertal, a member of the almost defunct faction
of the NRP doves, told Golan: "This Purim joy epitomizes the moral
collapse of religious Zionism... If religious Zionism does not undertake
soul-searching right now, I doubt if it will ever have another opportunity."
Subsequent developments showed that neither the religious Zionists
nor other factions within the Jewish religious community were or
are in any mood to engage in soul-searching. On the contrary, the
appreciation of Goldstein and the feeling that Jews have a right
and duty to kill Gentiles who live in the land of Israel are growing.
In his March 23, 1994 Haaretz article, Nadav Shraggai
discussed the visit of a delegation of all Israeli branches of the
Bnei Akiva, the large youth movement affiliated with the NRP, to
Kiryat Arba and Hebron, which was then under a curfew selectively
applied to its Arab inhabitants. The purpose of this visit was to
"encourage Jewish settlers." Yossi Leibowitz, a settler leader from
Hebron, as described by Shraggai, "beaming with satisfaction visible
in his face asked the delegation: 'Have you already visited the
tomb of holy Rabbi Doctor Goldstein?'" The visitors rejected the
suggestion but did not utter one word of rebuke to the worshippers
of the new saint. They then had to withstand a flurry of abuse from
their local Bnei Akiva comrades who argued that their refusal to
pay homage to Goldstein amounted to support of the left. Local rabbis
affiliated with the NRP seconded the denunciation. Rabbi Shimon
Ben-Zion, a senior teacher in the local Hesder Yeshiva and hence
a state employee, delivered a eulogy of Goldstein and of what he
called "his act." He added: "[If the government] keeps bowing low
to Arabs, all of whom are murderers, [and if] the Jews fail to establish
a firm rule over the land of Israel [there will be] more Goldsteins."
Most visitors made counter-arguments; they were nevertheless influenced
by their hosts' arguments; they came to believe that their duty
to support the Jewish settlers in Hebron was more important than
any minor disagreements about Goldstein's sainthood.
Gabby Baron reported in the March 16, 1994 Yediot Ahronot:
Deputy Minister of Education Mikha Goldman was physically assaulted
yesterday after delivering a welcoming speech at a meeting of
Jerusalem's district teachers in the Binyaney Ha'umah hall in
that city. He managed to avoid being hurt. His speech infuriated
dozens of religious teachers, because he talked about his visit
to Kiryat Arba and the shock he experienced when finding how enthused
the religious school children were by the massacre in the Cave
of the Patriarchs. A virtual riot erupted in the hall, which was
filled by about 5000 Jerusalem district teachers, as soon as he
spoke about it. Dozens of religious teachers jumped onto the podium.
A female teacher who managed to reach it [the podium] picked up
a flowerpot from the speaker's table; she was ready to hurl it
at him when at the last moment she balked. All the religious teachers
assembled in rage in front of the podium and decried the deputy
minister as "a fascist." Goldman insisted upon continuing his
speech. When he ended, he had to leave the building under heavy
guard, thanks to which the pursuing teachers were unable to injure
him.
Neither Education Minister Arnnon Rubinstein nor Prime Minister
Rabin uttered a single word in condemnation of the incident.
On April 5, 1994, Israeli radio reported that Rabbi Shimon Ben-Zion
had distributed a leaflet among the Kiryat Arba and Hebron settlers
requesting financial contributions for a book about "Saint Baruch
Goldstein." On April 6, Yediot Ahronot published the
text. The book refers to Goldstein as "Rabbi Doctor Baruch Goldstein
of blessed memory, let the Lord avenge his blood." The Kiryat Arba
municipal council backed the ideas of Ben-Zion. In his April 5,
1994 Haaretz article, Arnnon Barzilay reported that
two days earlier Gush Emunim leaders, including Mayor Benny Katzover,
had an amicable talk with Prime Minister Rabin who apologized to
them for his past outbursts against them and promised never to repeat
them. (The outbursts anyway were intended for consumption of the
Israeli "doves," Arafat and the Western media.) The two sides agreed
to cooperate closely in the future. Thus, Rabin understandably found
it ill-advised to say anything about Rabbi Ben-Zion's idea.
About one year later the Kiryat Arba municipality obtained a permit
from the Civil Administration of the Occupied Territories to build
a large and sumptuous memorial on Goldstein's tomb, which has become
a place of pilgrimage. Thousands of Jews from all Israeli cities,
and even more from the United States and France, have come to light
candles and pray for the intercession of "holy saint and martyr,"
now in a special section of paradise close to God and able to obtain
for them various benefits, such as cures for diseases from which
they suffer, or to grant them male offspring. The visitors have
donated money for Goldstein's comrades. No Orthodox rabbi has criticized
this.
The well-publicized worship of the new saint has brought increasing
opposition from secular Jews. (The opposition of Palestinians, especially
those living in Hebron, to the hero-worship of Goldstein and to
the monument to this mass murderer are not within the scope of this
book but should be obvious.) After a long campaign in the press,
Knesset members passed a piece of legislation in May, 1998, that
prohibited the building of monuments for mass murderers and ordering
removal of existing ones. The Israeli army should have removed the
monument immediately after passage of the law in the Knesset. Instead
army spokesmen announced that negotiations over the Goldstein monument
were on-going with Goldstein's family and local rabbis.
The book in praise of Goldstein, titled Blessed the Male,
was published in 1995 and sold in many editions. Most of the readers
were from the religious public. The book contained eulogies of Goldstein
and halachic justifications for the right of every Jew to kill non-Jews.
Rabbi Yitzhak Ginsburgh, the then head of the Kever Yosef (tomb
of Joseph) Yeshiva, located on the outskirts of Nablus, wrote one
chapter of that book. The essence of Rabbi Ginsburgh's views were
presented in Chapter 4. His and other such ideologies, even if expressed
more cautiously, explain Goldstein's massacre, the considerable
support Goldstein and later his followers have received from religious
Jews and the ambiguous attitude of Israeli governments to this crime.
Those people, especially Germans, who were silent and did not condemn
Nazi ideology before Hitler came to power are also, at least in
a moral sense, guilty for the terrible consequences that followed.
Similarly, those who are silent and do not condemn Jewish Nazism,
as exemplified by the ideologies of Goldstein and Ginsburgh, especially
if they are Jews, are guilty of the terrible consequences that may
yet develop as a result of their silence.
Web Editor's
Note:
This document has been edited slightly
to conform to American stylistic, punctuation and hypertext conventions.
Other than a slight reorganization of sections and the correction
of a few typographical errors, no further changes to the text have
been made.
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