The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 28, 1994 - 7 West Bank Massacre Aftershocks Defiant Israeli settlers hail murderer as hero PLO may withdraw from peace talks Leadership expected to reject President Clinton's call for new talks in Washington THE WASHINGTON POST KIRYAT ARBA, Israeli-Occu- pied West Bank - Heavy fog and cold rain muffled the Hebron hills yesterday as Baruch Goldstein was laid to rest in a barren, muddy back lot by friends who called him a hero for massacring Arabs as they prayed in a mosque. A tractor scraped at the stubborn earth as elite Israeli soldiers with green berets and Galil assault rifles stood guard. It was a temporary grave, resi- dents said, because tensions were run- ning too high to permit permanent burial in the Jewish cemetery in the middle of Hebron. To the rest of the world, Goldstein was a mass murderer who fired his Galil into the backs of worshiping Muslims on Friday, killing 39 and injuring more than 200 in the Tomb of the Patriarchs, a shrine revered by Jews, Muslims and Christians. Goldstein was then killed by the sur- viving worshipers. But in the low-lying, box-like apartments of Kiryat Arba, at the bank and store near the entrance to this Jewish settlement of 5,000 people, and in a local yeshiva, or Jewish school, Goldstein and his deed were being discussed in far different terms. Here, Goldstein was described in the language of blood, fear, nationalist dreams and messianic longing that of- fered a glimpse into the embattled out- look of the most militant Jewish set- tlers. They claim a biblical right to these rocky hills and believe Jews should use force to prevail over the Arabs. Most of the 110,000 Jewish set- tlers in 140 communities in the West Bank and Gaza Strip are political cen- trists - many came simply for a cheap mortgage, clean air and a swim- ming pool. But it is the relatively small cadre of militants who pose the biggest challenge to the peace accord between Israel and the Palestinians, because they have vowed to fight to the end for what they contend is a historic right to the land. Some say they fear that the surge in tensions is just the begining of an all-out war between the radical settlers and Pal- estinians, especially the Islamic ex- tremists, that could doom any peace agreement. The most militant settlers are at the core of Kach, followers of the late American Rabbi Meir Kahane. Ac- cording to friends, Goldstein was a Kahane disciple, first in the Jewish Defense League in the United States and later in Israel. Goldstein's tempo- rary grave was dug yesterday just beyond a stone garden that residents here erected in memory of Kahane in 1990, after he was assassinated in New York. Kach leaders were the target yesterday of Israel's govern- ment as it struggled to respond to outrage over the massacre. The cabi- net authorized arrests and detentions of the leaders. Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin denounced the militants yes- terday and said he was "ashamed of those who came out publicly and sup- ported (Goldstein's) act." Many in the crowd here supported it openly. "Baruch Goldstein was the greatest Jew alive, not in one way, but in every way," said Shmuel Hacohen, a teacher in a Jerusalem college who was a friend of Goldstein. THE LOS ANGELES TIMES TUNIS - The PLO leadership, visibly dissatisfied with Israeli offers to crack down on Jewish settlers and release Palestinian prisoners, began debate yesterday about whether to resume negotiations with Israel or heed popular calls to pull out of the troubled peace process. Palestine Liberation Organization sources said the Executive Committee, which began meeting late yesterday, and was scheduled to resume delibera- tions today, would almost certainly re- ISRAEL continued from Page 1 death toll in that incident now stands at 39, and at least 25 more have been killed in subsequent rioting. The government said it had autho- rized use of of administrative deten- tion orders against leaders of Kach, permitting authorities to take them into custody without charge or trial. In the past, such orders have been used almost exclusively against Pal- estinians. The government also said it had authorized use of restraining or- ders to keep some Jewish militants from entering the West Bank, as well as to seize their weapons and confis- cate their gun permits. But of the initial five members of Kach sought under the crackdown, only one had been apprehended by late yesterday; two low-level Jewish activists also were arrested. Leaders of the settler movement estimate that Kach has about 100 members. The Cabinent decisions constitute "a fundamental shift" in the government's relationship with the settler movement, according to a se- nior official who was present. 7~4557 ject President Clinton's invitation to begin peace talks Wednesday in Wash- ington, though they were prepared to leave the door open to commence talks at a later date. PLO leader Yasser Arafat said the Israeli Cabinet's offer to arrest Jew- ish extremist leaders, disarm hard- core settlers and release 800 to 1,000 Palestinian prisoners is "empty and hollow." He demanded further security measures in the wake of Friday's massacre of 48 Palestinians at a West Bank mosque. "These are cosmetic measures only aimed at containing the crisis rather than reaching real solutions to the existing tension," added Yasser Abed- Rabbo, head of the PLO Information Department. "What is requested are measures to stop the killing of Pales- tinian citizens." With popular demonstrations breaking out in many parts of the Arab world in response to the massa- cre, PLO officials are insisting that they will not accept a return to the peace talks under current conditions. That would undermine the Palestin- ian leadership and defeat the peace process itself, they say. "What has really broken this peace process is the massacre in Hebron, and that massacre cannot be undone, it cannot be forgotten so that business can go back as usual," said Nabil Shaath, who has headed the PLO's negotiating team on security talks. 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