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Moshe Levinger

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Rabbi Moshe Levinger (Template:Lang-he; born 1935) is an Israeli Religious Zionist who since 1967 has been a leading figure in the movement to settle Jews in the territories captured by Israel during the 1967 Six-Day War. He is especially known for leading Jewish settlement in Hebron in 1968 and for being one of the principals of the settler movement Gush Emunim founded in 1974.

Levinger was born in Jerusalem and studied at the Mercaz haRav yeshiva in Jerusalem under the guidance of Rabbi Zvi Yehuda Kook.[1] In his own words, he learned "that the Land of Israel must be in the hands of the Jewish people—not just by having settlements, but that it's under Jewish sovereignty".[2]

Settlement movement

At the time of the 1967 war, Levinger was the rabbi of the Nehalim religious moshav near Petah Tikva. Together with the Movement for the Whole Land of Israel, he organized the resettlement by Jews of the Etzion Bloc evacuated in 1948 following its massacre by Arab forces.[3] There was disagreement on whether to wait for government approval, with Levinger taking the position that settlement should go ahead regardless. In the event, the government approved a Nahal military outpost at the site and kept secret that it was not military at all.[4] Levinger himself was not one of the settlers.

Levinger first came to Hebron in 1968 after the West Bank was captured by Israel in the Six-Day War. He rented rooms in an Arab hotel in order to hold a Passover Seder, and then refused to leave. In a deal with the Israeli government, he moved with his family and followers to a former army base on a hill just northeast of Hebron, where, with the state’s cooperation, they established the settlement of Kiryat Arba.[5]

In 1987 the Hebrew weekly Hadashot asked a panel of twenty-two leading Israelis, from all parts of the political spectrum, to name the "person of the generation, the man or woman who has had the greatest effect on Israeli society in the last twenty years." First place in this poll was shared by Menachem Begin and Levinger.[3].

In 1992 Levinger created a political party called "Tora Ve'eretz Yisrael" (Torah and Land of Israel) for the 13th Israeli elections, but did not receive enough votes to enter the Knesset. Levinger has a wife, 11 children and 50 grandchildren, most of whom live in Judea and Samaria (the West Bank).[citation needed] His wife Miryam Levinger and several of his children are also known as activists.

Criminal charges

Levinger has been arrested and charged at least 10 times starting in 1975 in relation to incidents in Hebron or Kiryat Arba.[6]

In July 1985, Levinger was fined approximately $15,000 and given a three-month suspended sentence for trespassing in the house of a Hebron woman and attacking her six-year-old son. Levinger told the Jerusalem Magistrate Court that the boy had thrown a stone at his son.[7]

In 1988, Levinger was indicted on two separate criminal charges involving events in Hebron. On September 30, 1988, Palestinian store owner Khayed Salah was shot dead and a customer was wounded. Levinger claimed to have only shot into the air to defend himself against stone throwers. He was charged with "manslaughter, causing bodily harm in aggravated circumstances and intentionally damaging property".[8] His trial began in August 1989, despite protests by 13 right-wing Knesset members and hundreds of supporters.[9] Levinger pleaded not guilty to the charges but accepted a plea-bargain to the lesser charge of negligent homicide.[10] He was sentenced to 5 months imprisonment and 7 months suspended, of which he served 92 days.[11] During his imprisonment, he was given leave to attend a public event in Hebron.[12] On his release in August 1990, he told Israel Radio, "If I'm in a situation of danger again, I'll again open fire. I hope that next time, I will be more careful and I won't miss the target."[13]

In another case, which related to an event five months before the first, he was alleged to have assaulted a Palestinian woman and her two children after other Arab children had "made fun of" his daughter. At his trial in May 1989, the magistrate dismissed the evidence of the Arab witnesses on the grounds that they were "interested parties", and also dismissed the evidence of two IDF soldiers who testified to the assault.[14] Six weeks after Levinger's release from prison on his separate negligent homicide conviction (see above), the Jerusalem District Court overturned his acquittal on the earlier assault charges.[15] He was sentenced to 4 months imprisonment, plus an additional 10 days for an outburst in court.[16] He served about two months. On his release in March 1991, he said "Over the years, I've carried out dozens of actions and all of them were against the law. It was worthwhile to violate the law, as all these actions advanced the whole Land of Israel."[17]

In July 1995, Levinger was sentenced to seven months imprisonment for a violent altercation in the Tomb of the Patriachs in September 1991. The court found that Levinger had pulled down the partition separating Jewish and Muslim worshippers and assaulted an IDF officer.[18] He served four months in prison in 1996.[19]

In December 1995, Levinger was sentenced to six months in prison and six months suspended for an incident in June 1991. He was found guilty of rioting in the Hebron market, of overturning stalls, forcing other merchants to close their shops, and of firing his pistol. His defense was that he was attacked by Palestinians throwing rocks.[20]

In December 1997, Levinger was sentenced to six months jail and fined $2,300 for disturbing Muslim prayers at Hebron's Tomb of the Patriarchs in 1994 and of blocking an army commander from entering Kiryat Arba.[21]

References

  1. ^ Gershom Gorenberg, Accidental Empire, Times Books (2006), p108.
  2. ^ Gorenberg pp106-107.
  3. ^ Gorenberg, pp106-123
  4. ^ Gorenberg, pp106-123
  5. ^ ""Among The Settlers""., by Jeffrey Goldberg (The New Yorker, May 2004)
  6. ^ The Times, March 1, 1994.
  7. ^ Jerusalem Post, July 26, 1985, quoted by UN committee.
  8. ^ AP, Apr 12, 1989 and JP, Dec 4, 1989; also see [1].
  9. ^ Jerusalem Post, 15 Dec, 1989 and 17 Dec 1989.
  10. ^ Reuters, Jerusalem Post, etc, May 1, 1990.
  11. ^ AP, Aug 14, 1990.
  12. ^ Jerusalem Post, Aug 9, 1990.
  13. ^ AP and Reuters, Aug 14, 1990.
  14. ^ Jerusalem Post, May 5, 1989 and Oct 17, 1990.
  15. ^ Jerusalem Post, Sep 24, 1990 and Oct 17, 1990.
  16. ^ Jerusalem Post, Jan 15, 1991.
  17. ^ AP, Mar 26, 1991.
  18. ^ BBC Monitoring Service, July 13, 1995; Reuters, July 12, 1995.
  19. ^ Reuters, July 2, 1996.
  20. ^ Jerusalem Post, Dec 12, 1995.
  21. ^ Jewish Telegraphic Agency, quoted by Jewish News Weekly [2]; Jerusalem Report, Jan 8, 1998.
  • Hebron, Americans for Peace Now (Settlements in Focus, Vol. 1, Issue 13 - 10/28/05)
  • Friedman, Robert I. (1992). Zealots for Zion : Inside Israel's West Bank Settlement Movement, Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0-8135-2062-2 (paperback edition)

See also