Rabbi
Meir David Kahane - leader, philosopher,
visionary, revolutionary, scholar, warrior,
activist, fighter, hero, rabbi, writer, speaker,
Rosh Yeshiva, father, grandfather, husband,
teacher, author and statesman.
Rabbi Meir Kahane was born Aug. 1, 1932 (29th
of Tamuz) and assassinated Nov. 5, 1990 (18th of
Heshvan 5750).
As a youth he was active in Betar. He met
Jabotinsky, who was a guest at his parents home,
and a close friend of his father, Rabbi Charles
Kahane.
Rabbi Kahane resided with his wife Libby in
Jerusalem, Israel. They lived there from the
time that they immigrated to Israel from the
U.S. with their four children in 1971.
All of his children have been active in
preparing and publishing his books, writings and
manuscripts along with his wife Libby. Before
his youngest son Binyamin Zev Kahane was
murdered with his wife Talya on December 31,
2000 (May G-d avenge their blood), he headed the
yeshiva founded by his father and also served as
the former director of the Kahane Chai Movement.
Rabbi Kahane received his smicha - ordination
as Rabbi - from the world famous Mirrer Yeshiva
in Brooklyn, NY.
He earned an International Law degree from
New York University.
Rabbi Kahane served as a pulpit Rabbi and
teacher in NY in the early and mid 1960's.
During that time he also was one of the editors
of the Jewish Press, which was the biggest
English speaking Jewish newspaper in the world.
He worked as a correspondent for the Jewish
Press until his tragic death.
Rabbi Kahane was the author of many books on
Judaism, Israel, Torah and politics. He wrote
books in English and in Hebrew.
Rabbi Kahane was well known for his
electrifying speeches in Israel, on U.S.
campuses and in synagogues throughout the world.
He was viewed as an eloquent, dynamic spokesman
and orator, appearing frequently on radio and TV
talk shows.
Rabbi Kahane founded the militant Jewish
Defense League in 1968 to combat the rampant
growth of anti-Semitism in the inner cities. At
that time, the poor and elderly Jews were easy
targets for Jew hating thugs. Rabbi Kahane
rescued these abandoned Jews and changed the
image of the weak and vulnerable Jew to one of a
mighty fighter who strikes back fiercely against
tyrants. Jew-haters around the world soon began
to respect and fear the wrath and retribution of
Kahane's Chaya Squad, a group within the JDL,
which succeeded in instilling fear in the hearts
of the would-be criminals against Jews.
The JDL went on to conquer other local issues
and problems as well as global Jewish problems.
The JDL was the first group to really bring
world attention to the plight of Soviet Jewry.
They did so by engaging in unconventional and
often violent tactics which succeeded in
highlighting the plight of millions of oppressed
Jews, suffering behind the Iron Curtain. The JDL
succeeded in moving the issue off of the back
pages and on to the front pages, where it
belonged. Kahane was the "Moses" for Russian
Jewry. It wasn't long before the major Jewish
establishment organizations were embarrassed and
forced into action, after so many years of
apathy and indifference.
Russian Jews started to flow out by the
hundreds of thousands, thanks to Rabbi Kahane's
dedication and vision. But as Rabbi Kahane said,
"More than what we did for Russian Jewry was
what they did for the young and lost American
Jewish youth who finally had a Jewish cause to
fight for, and boy did they fight, without sleep
and at a risk to their freedom they did that
which their parents never did for their Jewish
brothers and sisters who perished during the
Holocaust."
Rabbi Kahane coined the phrase "Never Again"
which did not mean that a Holocaust could never
happen. It meant that never again would Jews
stand idly by while their brothers cry out for
their help.
Rabbi Kahane was jailed many times and was
sentenced to prison terms for his actions
related to the campaign on behalf of Soviet
Jews.
Other famous causes which Rabbi Kahane fought
for included Jewish identity and continuity. Far
before the Jewish establishment realized that
there was a problem - Rabbi Kahane was demanding
that Jewish funds go for Jewish causes,
primarily for Jewish education. He spoke out
against intermarriage and assimilation among
Jewish youth. He saved thousands of lost Jewish
souls from spiritual destruction.
Aliyah to Israel was another key campaign
launched by Rabbi Kahane. In fact, he was
assassinated lecturing at an emergency
Z.E.E.R.O. conference calling for the mass
Aliyah of American Jewry. He directly convinced
hundreds of Jewish families to make Aliyah.
After Rabbi Kahane immigrated to Israel he
formed the Kach movement. Kach was most famous
for its platform calling for the removal of the
hostile Arab population from Israel, the
annexation of all of the territories liberated
in 1967, and to have the right of unlimited
Jewish settlement there. He believed that
settling the land without removing the hostile
Arab enemies would be counter productive. He
predicted autonomy and retreat far before Likud
ever signed the Camp David Accords and before
the Oslo Declaration of Principles were dreamed
up.
Rabbi Kahane was despised by many for quoting
Jewish sources about Jews being a chosen nation
and the exclusive owners of Eretz Israel. Many
hated him for pointing out the contradiction
between authentic Judaism and Western style
democracy. "Judaism is not Thomas Jefferson and
the Middle East is not the Mid West, Kahane
would say." Kahane made "comfortable" Jews feel
uncomfortable for forcing them to deal with the
painful truth and painful answers to problems
they refused to think about.
Rabbi Kahane was jailed and imprisoned many
times in Israel by both Labor and Likud
governments. Rabbi Kahane was the first Jew to
be held under administrative detention without
charges or due process. He was also the first
Jew charged with sedition for his population
exchange proposal.
Rabbi Kahane also pioneered the campaign to
save Syrian and Ethiopian Jewry as well as the
battle against cults and missionaries in the
Holy Land. Rabbi Kahane dreamed of creating an
independent Israel which would no longer fear
the Gentiles. He dreamed of a state of Israel
that would sanctify G-d's name through Jewish
power and faith in G-d.
Rabbi Kahane was elected to Knesset in 1984.
He headed the quickest growing party in Israel's
history. Polls predicted him receiving as many
as 12 seats in the 1988 elections. If he would
not have been banned from participating in the
elections he would have turned in to the third
largest party in Israel, on the way to becoming
its next Prime Minister. Likud and Labor joined
together and banned Kahane from the 1988
elections.
Two years later, he was killed. Never in
Israel's history was there a bigger funeral.
Never before did so many different types of Jews
stand side by side together. All of the enemies
of Israel celebrated his death. Many of the
leftists in Israel happily predicted the death
of Rabbi Kahane's yeshiva and programs in
editorials published in the Israeli press,
shortly after his death. Much to their amazement
and disappointment, Rabbi Kahane's yeshiva and
programs lived on. Some have even grown and
expanded despite the governments continued
harassment and the outlawing of the Kahanist
movements.
As you read on and progress through this home
page you will find out more about his
institutions, successors, books and writings.
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