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- WORLD, Page 56MIDDLE EASTWhere Hatred Begets Hatred
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- Even in death, Meir Kahane makes Israel an angrier place
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- Meir Kahane never expected to die peacefully. "People are
- frightened by my message because they know in their hearts that
- it is true," he once said. "They can stop me, but they cannot
- change the truth."
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- The Brooklyn-born rabbi spent his life preaching a doctrine
- of intolerance, racial hatred and violent confrontation. Last
- week he became a victim of Jewish-Arab animosity himself when he
- was gunned down by an assassin in a New York City hotel. Charged
- with Kahane's murder was El Sayid Nosir, an Egyptian-born New
- York City maintenance worker who became a U.S. citizen in 1989.
- Nosir, who was arrested after he was wounded in a shoot-out with
- a Postal Service officer, is believed to have acted alone.
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- The reaction in Israel was swift and violent. Hours after
- the shooting, two Palestinians were shot dead by a man witnesses
- identified as a Jewish settler in the West Bank, apparently in
- revenge. Bracing for further violence, Israel deployed
- reinforcements to guard roads, intersections and the homes of
- prominent Palestinian and left-wing Israeli politicians, who
- also came under Kahane's wrath. Said Miriam Cohen, a Kahane
- follower from Jerusalem: "The Arabs will pay for this with their
- lives. I don't care if hundreds die."
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- At Kahane's funeral two days later, more than 20,000
- followers marched through Jerusalem chanting "Death to the
- Arabs!" As the procession streamed through the city, they
- searched stores and markets for Arabs, beating one unconscious
- and injuring three others. Two policemen were also hurt, and 13
- Jewish rioters were arrested.
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- Kahane might have enjoyed the spectacle. He had managed to
- alienate even hard-line Zionists with his abrasive tactics and
- calls for the mass expulsion of Arabs from Israel and the
- occupied territories. But his message of hate and brutally
- simple solutions appealed to a small and dedicated constituency.
- Founder of the New York-based Jewish Defense League, Kahane
- moved to Israel in 1971, where he started the ultra-right Kach
- movement and was elected to the Knesset in 1984. Four years
- later the Israeli Supreme Court barred Kahane from running for
- re-election on the grounds that his movement was "racist."
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- Some Palestinians reacted with joy to the death of "someone
- who believed that all non-Jews were animals," as a spokesman for
- the extremist group Islamic Jihad put it. But they also feared
- reprisals from Kahane followers. Faisal Husseini, one of the
- most prominent Palestinian leaders in Jerusalem, warned that
- "the Kach supporters represent a real danger to the life of
- every Arab."
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- If the man is gone, his ideas still retain a dangerous
- appeal, and his death will only intensify anger among those who
- will endow him with martyrdom. As the cries for revenge
- continue, support for his doctrine of hatred and segregation is
- likely to grow among both Israelis and Palestinians.
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- By Guy D. Garcia. Reported by Christine Gorman/New York and Jon
- D. Hull/Jerusalem.
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