A Leader of An Israeli Extremists Group Justified Burning of Christian Churches
A nun
surveys damage from the fire at the Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves
and Fishes in northern Israel, photo credited to The Telegraph Uk
JERUSALEM,
Israel -- After the Church of the Multiplication of the Loaves and Fishes in
the town of Tabgha, suffered from attack by the Jew extremists who set fire to
the church, destroying much of the roof and gutting large portions of the interior.
They also spray painted a graffiti message saying, "Idol worship will be
destroyed."
Head of
Lehava, known for violent campaign against Jew-Arab assimilation, risks arrest
with public defence of setting fire to Holy Land churches, The Telegraph reports.
The leader
of a far-Right Israeli group has risked arrest by apparently voicing support
for arson attacks on Christian churches amid an official crackdown on Jewish
extremism.
Benzi
Gopstein, the leader of the Jews extreme right-wing movement Lehava, photo credited
to The Telegraph Uk
Benzi
Gopstein, the outspoken head of Lehava - which has drawn notoriety for its
violent assaults on Jewish-Arab assimilation - made the remarks at a panel
discussion for Jewish yeshiva students when asked by a fellow panelist if he
believed burning down churches in Israel was justified.
He later
tried to evade accusations of inciting his followers to fire-raise, saying it
was the government's responsibility to carry out what he presented as a
religious teaching of the 12th century Jewish philosopher, Maimonides.
“Did the
Rambam [Maimonides] rule to destroy [idol worship] or not? Idol worship must be
destroyed. It’s simply yes – what’s the question?” Mr Gopstein told the panel.
His comment
alarmed his questioner Benny Rabinovich, a journalist, who told him:
"Benzi, I must say I’m really shocked by what you’re saying here. You are
essentially saying we must go out and burn down churches. You’re saying
something insane here.”
Told by
another panelist, Moshe Klein, rabbi of Israel's Haddash medical centres, that
the discussion was being filmed and that his remarks could lead to his arrest, Mr
Gopstein answered: “That’s the last thing that concerns me. If this is truth,
I’m prepared to sit in jail 50 years for it.”
He later
retreated slightly after a recording of the exchange was posted on Kikar
Shabbat, an ultra-Orthodox Jewish website. "I stressed several times I was
not calling to take operative steps, but that this is the Rambam’s approach and
that it’s the responsibility of the government, not of individuals," he
said in a statement.
Nevertheless,
the incendiary comments could not have been more provocatively timed. They came
after Moshe Ya'alon, Israel's defence minister, ordered the detention without
trial of Mordechai Meyer, 18, for extremist activities believed to include
starting a fire that badly damaged the symbolic Church of Loaves and Fishes in
Galilee in June.
He was one
of three extremists detained after Benjamin Netanyahu's government was prompted
to launch an unprecedented offensive against "Jewish terrorism"
following an arson attack by suspected hardline settlers in the West Bank
village of Duma last Friday that killed a one-year-old Palestinian toddler and
gravely injured his parents and brother.
Head of a
Jewish extremist group Meir Ettinger, photo credited to The Telegraph Uk
Also
arrested was Meir Ettinger, grandson of the late Meir Kahane, a Jewish rabbi
notorious for racist beliefs who was murdered by a Palestinian in 1990.
Mr Gopstein,
Lehava's founder, is a one-time member of Mr Kahane's Kach party, which was
banned because of its racist philosophy.
However,
Shin Bet - Israel's domestic intelligence agency - recently concluded that
there are no legal grounds for similarly outlawing Lehava, despite a request
from Mr Ya'alon to consider doing so.
Two of the
group's members were recently jailed for setting fire to Jerusalem's Jewish-Arab
Max Rayne Hand in Hand school last November. Hebrew graffiti reading
"Kahane was right" was sprayed on a wall of the school.
Mr Gopstein
was arrested along with 20 other Lehava members for suspected incitement to
violence last last year but has so far not been charged.
Lehava -
whose name means "flame" but is also the Hebrew acronym for
"prevening assimilation in the Holy Land" - regularly holds open
gatherings in Jerusalem's Zion Square, where members distribute literature
warning of the dangers of relationships between Jewish women and Arab men.
The group
held a demonstration at which members chanted "death to the Arabs"
outside a wedding between a Muslim and Jewish woman who had converted to Islam
during last summer's Gaza war.
It also
staged a protest against last week's gay pride march in Jerusalem, where an
ultra-Orthodox Jewish man attacked six participants, leading to the death of a
16-year-old girl.
A Leader of An Israeli Extremists Group Justified Burning of Christian Churches
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