Jewish Defense League
From: http://www.adl.org/extremism/jdl_chron.asp
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The Jewish Defense League, also known as JDL, was established in
1968 for the declared purpose of protecting Jews by whatever means
necessary in the face of what was seen by the group’s principals
as their dire peril. The founder, national chairman and leader of
the JDL was a then-38-year-old ordained rabbi from Brooklyn, New
York, Meir Kahane, who, in 1990, was assassinated in New York by
an Arab extremist.
In Rabbi Kahane’s gross distortion of the position of Jews
in America, American Jews were living in a fiercely hostile society,
facing much the same dangers as the Jews in Nazi Germany or those
in Israel surrounded by 100-million Arab enemies. Rabbi Kahane believed
that the major Jewish organizations in the United States had failed
to protect America’s Jews from anti-Semitism, which he saw
as “exploding” all over the country. "If I have
succeeded in instilling fear in you," Rabbi Kahane said in the
closing statement of his standard speech, "I consider this evening
a success."
In fact, Kahane consistently preached a radical form of Jewish nationalism
which reflected racism, violence and political extremism.
Description
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
The Jewish Defense League (JDL) is a tiny Jewish "self-defense" movement,
classed by the CIA and FBI as a terrorist group. It was founded in
1968 by Meir Kahane as a vigilante group to protect Orthodox Jewish
neighborhoods in New York City from attack by various gangs of street
thugs, and to protest local instances of anti-Semitic violence. The
JDL soon broadened its concerns to the global situation of the Jewish
community, and sought to defend Jews from perceived threats through
the use of violence.
The JDL is widely viewed as extremist and no mainstream Jewish organization
has ties to it. However, the JDL has close links with the outlawed
Israeli Kach movement (which was also founded by Meir Kahane) and
may have links to other right-wing movements within the Jewish settler
community in the occupied West Bank. Newspaper reports indicate that
membership in the JDL appears to have been limited to a few hundred
people by the year 2000, with a much smaller number actually being
active in the organization.
Alleged terrorism
JDL members have been accused by the FBI and CIA of 37-50 terrorist
attacks, including:
The bombing of the San Francisco branch of Melli, an Iranian bank,
in 1981.
The bombing of the Iraqi UN mission in 1982.
The bombing of the offices of Sol Hurok, who organized performances
of Soviet ballet in the United States (resulting in one death).
The bombing of the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee's
Los Angeles offices in 1985 (killing its director, Alex Odeh).
The murder of Tsherim Soobzokov (a Waffen-SS veteran) in a bomb attack
in 1985.
In these cases an anonymous caller would claim JDL responsibility
for the bombing, which was then denied by the JDL leadership, although
often they would say that, although they had nothing to do with it
themselves, they were happy the attacks had occurred: for example
JDL chairman Irv Rubin said Odeh "got what he deserved",
although they insist the attack was done by Arabs, not by them. (Sources:
[1], [2])
The primary motivation for attacks on Soviet targets such as Sol
Hurok was the refusal of the Soviet government to permit Jewish emigration
from the Soviet Union to Israel.
JDL has also defended the massacre of 29 Arabs in Hebron by Dr.
Baruch Goldstein, a former JDL activist, in February 1994, saying "we
feel that Goldstein took a preventative measure against yet another
Arab attack on Jews. We understand his motivation, his grief and
his actions. And we are not ashamed to say that Goldstein was a charter
member of the Jewish Defense League." ([3]).
After 1987, when several JDL members were convicted on terrorism
charges, there was a lull in reports of JDL terrorism. On December
12, 2001, Irv Rubin, the JDL Chairman, and Earl Krugel, a member
of the organization, were officially charged with conspiracy to commit
an act of terrorism. The two were allegedly caught in the act of
planning bomb attacks on Arab-American Congressman Darrell Issa's
office and on the King Fahd Mosque in Culver City, California. The
two were arrested as part of a sting operation when they received
a shipment of explosives at Krugel's home in L.A.
While awaiting trial for the mosque bomb plot, Irv Rubin cut himself
with a small razor and jumped off the jail balcony. His death was
ruled a suicide. On February 4, 2003, Krugel pled guilty to conspiracy
charges stemming from the plan. It has been argued that the death
of Irv Rubin has finished the JDL as a viable terror gang, with the
organization now reduced to a propaganda role.
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