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November 12, 1993 - Image 46

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-11-12

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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The Jewish News
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Call 354-5959

New Terrorist Attack
Stirs Settler Unrest

Jerusalem (JTA) — Jewish
settlers have launched a se-
cond series of violent demon-
strations in as many weeks
to protest the latest attack
by Arab terrorists bent on
destroying the Israeli-
Palestinian peace initiative.
The demonstrations oc-
curred after terrorists at-
tacked the car of Rabbi
Chaim Druckman near the
West Bank town of Hebron.
Rabbi Druckman is a
founding member of the
Gush Emunim settlers
movement and a former
Knesset member from the
National Religious Party.
Ephraim Ayubi, 30, the
settlement leader's driver,
was killed in the attack.
Rabbi Druckman suffered
bullet wounds in the arm
and shoulder.
The Damascus-based
Democratic Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, a
group opposed to the peace
process, claimed respon-
sibility for the attack.
Israeli security officials
said Rabbi Druckman may
well have been targeted for
assassination.
It was the latest in a series
of recent attacks by radical
groups seeking to derail
Israel's autonomy accord
with the Palestine Libera-
tion Organization, and it
provoked a violent reaction
among settlers.
Last week, Israeli settlers
embarked on a series of
violent demonstrations after
an Israeli settler from Beit
El, Chaim Mizrachi, was
kidnapped and murdered by
gunmen from the Islamic
fundamentalist Hamas
movement.
The violent demonstra-
tions, directed at Palestinian
homes and property, were
held as a protest against an
Israeli government that the
settlers believed has turned
a blind eye to their security
needs.
In the latest demonstra-
tions, dozens of Israeli set-
tlers came to the scene of the
shooting, while hundreds of
others reportedly charged
the outdoor Arab market in
Hebron, where they over-
turned food stalls, smashed
windows and blocked roads.
A demonstration was also
held in downtown
Jerusalem. Settlers and
yeshiva students battled
with mounted police and
border police during the
demonstrations here.

The demonstrators snarled
up traffic in the capital as
the work day ended and then
tried to make their way to
the prime minister's
residence in the Rehavia
district.
The demonstration follow-
ed the funeral of Mr. Ayubi,
which was attended by
several thousand mourners,
among them rabbis and po-
litical leaders from several
parties.
In the West Bank set-
tlement of Kiryat Arba,
leaders of the Judea and
Samaria Council resolved to
block all the main arteries in
the territories.
Settlers held a stormy

Chaim Druckman:
Wounded in the attack.

meeting with Maj. Gen.
Nehemia Tamaria, com-
mander of the Israeli army's
central region. They warned
him "not to be surprised" if
some settler, unable to con-
trol his grief and anger, were
to enter an Arab village and
kill dozens of inhabitants.
That, the general was told,
would change the entire po-
litical equation in the Mid-
dle East in one stroke.
Gen. Tamaria, in a brief
television interview, said
that Israeli soldiers would
soon open the roads that had
been closed by protesters.
He declared, too, that the
army would deal with any
group seeking "to take the
law into its own hands."
The latest settlers' pro-
tests followed incidents of
violence in Hebron that
began last week, when Jews
were stoned while walking
to payers at the Machpelah
Cave, where the biblical
patriarch Abraham is
believed to be buried.
Jewish groups reacted by

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