THE JEWISH NEWS SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS SERVING DETROIT'S JEWISH COMMUNITY NOVEMBER 9, 1990 / 21 HESHVAN 5751 The Violent Life, Death Of Kahane The militant rabbi's murder in New York has stirred passions of anger and zealotry. Rabbi Meir Kahane, the former Knesset member and Jewish Defense League founder who was assassinated Monday night in New York, was buried in Jerusalem on Wednesday, stirring passions of anger and zealotry in death as he did throughout his life. Supporters of the 58-year- old Orthodox rabbi vowed revenge on Arabs, and Israeli officials braced them- selves for outbreaks of violence, following the shooting death of Rabbi Kahane at the hand of a lone gunman, identified by New York police as El Sayyid Nosair, an Egyptian-born devout Muslim who worked for New York City repairing air conditioners. The alleged gunman, who reportedly shot the rabbi twice in the head after he had addressed about 60 sup- porters at a midtown New York hotel, was himself shot in the chin by a police officer with the U.S. Postal Service as he fled the hotel and tried to escape in a taxicab. The gunman was listed in critical but stable condition. Even before Rabbi Kahane was laid to rest, the killing of two elderly Palestinians in the West Bank on Tues- day was attributed by Israeli authorities to an act of revenge. Authorities are concerned that the rabbi's supporters will seek to make him a martyr. During funeral services in a Brooklyn synagogue on Tuesday, attended by an overflow crowd of up to 20,000 people, the con- troversial rabbi was eulogiz- ed as a man who stood up for Jewish pride and principles. "He was the second Moshe Rabbeinu — Moses took the Jews out of Egypt and Kahane took the Jews out of anti-Semitic countries," said Bernard Berkowitz, 58, a mourner at the service. Rabbi Moshe Tendler, a professor of Talmud and biology at Yeshiva Univer- While supporters spoke of his private warmth, the public Meir Kahane displayed anger. sity and a close friend of the slain rabbi, delivered the main eulogy. God "spoke to Rabbi Kahane clearly," Rabbi Tendler said, but most Jews did not listen to Rabbi Kahane's "prophecy." Rabbi Tendler mocked the "self- hating Jewish assimila- tionists" who did not heed Rabbi Kahane's call. Some of those leaders that Rabbi Kahane criticized bitterly were among the mourners in the synagogue, including Abraham Foxman, national director of the Anti- Defamation League of B'nai B'rith, and Seymour Reich, chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organiza- tions. Spokesmen for Jewish es- tablishment organizations, who came in for intense criticism from Rabbi Kahane, issued statements deploring his violent death, while distancing themselves from his policies, most notably his repeated call to remove all Arabs from Israel. Henry Siegman, executive director of the American Jewish Congress, said he "deplored the wanton murder" of the rabbi and noted that his organization frequently criticized Rabbi Kahane, "precisely because the use of force and violence is intolerable and despicable regardless of the political perspectives of the parties." Harriet Drissman of Farm- ington Hills is Detroit area president of the Jewish Idea, the fund-raising arm for Rabbi Kahane in the United States. Mrs. Drissman first met the rabbi in the 1960s at a Washington, D.C., rally for Soviet Jewry. "I got the same sick feeling that I remember from (the assassination of President John) Kennedy," Mrs. Drissman said when she heard about the murder of Rabbi Kahane from her daughter Monday evening. "Even though he is gone, the problems that he talked about are still here." Mrs. Drissman said 200- 250 Detroiters have sup- ported Rabbi Kahane "and there are others who did not want their names on any lists." She lamented that "everything Rabbi Kahane said has come to pass. We have to continue his work." Jordan, she said is the Pales- tinian homeland and she wondered if Iraqi pressure in the Middle East might lead to the fall of King Hussein and the creation of a Pales- tinian-controlled state. "That way, if there is Continued on Page 41 CLOSE-UP THE DAY Waiting lists and overall fear of the unknown await many parents of the adult developmentally disabled. PAGE 28