The Guardian (USA)

Israel: leader of far-right Jewish Power party pays tribute to late racist rabbi

- AP in Jerusalem

A far-right Israeli lawmaker, whose surging popularity helped propel former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu back to power in last week’s general election, has delivered a glowing tribute at a memorial event for an extremist rabbi assassinat­ed in 1990.

Itamar Ben-Gvir, whose ultra-nationalis­t Jewish Power party emerged as the second biggest group in Netanyahu’s bloc and the third largest in the country, praised the late racist rabbi Meir Kahane in a speech at the memorial in Jerusalem on Thursday.

Ben-Gvir has long admired Kahane, whose violent anti-Arab ideology – including calls to ban Jewish-Arab intermarri­age and for the mass expulsion of Palestinia­ns – was considered so repugnant that Israel banned him from parliament and the United States listed his party as a terrorist group. Kahane was assassinat­ed by an Arab assailant in New York 32 years ago.

Ben-Gvir, whose ultra-nationalis­t Jewish Power party emerged as the second biggest group in Netanyahu’s bloc and the third largest in the country, praised Kahane in his speech at the memorial in Jerusalem.

“I think that the main characteri­stic of Kahane was love. Love of Israel without compromise and without any other considerat­ions” he said.

At the same time, Ben-Gvir has sought to portray himself as more of a moderate since entering politics, saying on Thursday that it’s “no secret that today I am not rabbi Kahane”. Israeli

critics, though, have cast doubt on the sincerity of his shift, arguing that his very presence at Kahane’s memorial subverts his attempts at moderation.

Ben-Gvir no longer displays in his home a portrait of Baruch Goldstein, an American-Israeli who killed 29 Palestinia­ns and wounded more than 100 in a shooting attack as they knelt in prayer at Hebron’s Tomb of the Patriarchs in 1993. He has recently urged his supporters to chant “Death to terrorists” instead of “Death to Arabs”.

But the audience was not having it on Thursday. The crowd booed as BenGvir told them he does “not support the expulsion of all Arabs”.

“I will not enact laws for separate beaches for Jews and Arabs,” he said. “Although, it is certain that we will act and do everything to expel terrorists from the country for the sake of the Jewish character of Israel, for the settlement­s and its Jewish identity.”

Even as Ben-Gvir has been careful to publicly distance himself from Kahane’s most extreme beliefs, he has called for the deportatio­n of Arab lawmakers, the death sentence for convicted terrorists and greater immunity for Israeli security forces battling Palestinia­n militants.

His party also hopes to end Palestinia­n autonomy in parts of the occupied West Bank. Their triumph in last week’s election has raised fears among Palestinia­ns who see it as a blow to their national project. Israel captured the West Bank in the 1967 Mideast war, along with East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip. The Palestinia­ns seek those territorie­s for their hoped-for independen­t state.

Israeli president Isaac Herzog held consultati­ons with party leaders this week, and is expected to grant Netanyahu the mandate to form a coalition in the coming days. Netanyahu’s al

 ?? ?? Ben-Gvir has long admired Kahane, whose violent anti-Arab ideology included calling for the mass expulsion of Palestinia­ns. Photograph: Amir Cohen/Reuters
Ben-Gvir has long admired Kahane, whose violent anti-Arab ideology included calling for the mass expulsion of Palestinia­ns. Photograph: Amir Cohen/Reuters

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