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Gush Emunim
Israeli ultranationalist movement
Israeli ultranationalist movement
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Gush Emunim |
| native_name | |
| logo | File:Gush Emunim.png |
| colorcode | black |
| leader | Zvi Yehuda Kook (1974-1982) |
| successor | Yesha Council |
| wing1_title | Armed body |
| wing1 | Jewish Underground (1980s) |
| wing2_title | Settlement body |
| wing2 | Amana (active) |
| wing3_title | Political party |
| wing3 | National Religious Party (2025: in government) |
| governing_body | Hanan Porat |
| Moshe Levinger | |
| Shlomo Aviner | |
| Menachem Froman | |
| Yoel Bin-Nun | |
| Yaakov Ariel | |
| founder | Zvi Yehuda Kook |
| Haim Drukman | |
| dissolved | Ceased operations by 2010 |
| founded | |
| ideology | Neo-Zionism |
| Religious Zionism | |
| Jewish messianism | |
| Jewish fundamentalism | |
| Halachic state | |
| Settler interests | |
| religion | Orthodox Judaism |
| country | Israel, West Bank, Gaza Strip |
Moshe Levinger Shlomo Aviner Menachem Froman Yoel Bin-Nun Yaakov Ariel Haim Drukman Religious Zionism Jewish messianism Jewish fundamentalism Halachic state Settler interests
Gush Emunim (, lit. "Bloc of the Faithful") was an Israeli ultranationalist religious Zionist Orthodox Jewish right-wing fundamentalist activist movement committed to establishing Jewish settlements in the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and the Golan Heights. Gush Emunim, as of 2010, had never been formally disbanded, but it has nevertheless officially ceased to exist.
While not formally established as an organization until 1974 in the wake of the Yom Kippur War, Gush Emunim sprang out of the conquests of the Six-Day War in 1967, encouraging Jewish settlement of the land of Israel based on two points, one religious and one practical. The religious point was a belief that, according to the Torah, God wants the Jewish people to live in the land of Israel and had returned lands such as the biblical Judea and Samaria as an opportunity for the Jewish people to return to their ancestral homeland.Analyses of Gush Emunim have been carried out by David Newman. See:
- D. Newman, "Gush Emunim", Encyclopaedia Judaica Decennial Yearbook, 1994, pp. 171-172, Keter Publishers.
- D. Newman, "Gush Emunim: Between Fundamentalism and Pragmatism", Jerusalem Quarterly, 39, 1986, pp. 33-43.
- .
- See also T. Hermann & D. Newman, "Extra Parliamentarism in Israel: A Comparative Study of Peace Now and Gush Emunim", Middle Eastern Studies, 28 (3), 1992, pp. 509-530. The second point stemmed from a concern that the pre-1967 borders, a mere 10 km wide at its narrowest point, were indefensible, especially in the long term, and it was therefore necessary to ensure that the land captured in the Six-Day War remained under Israeli control by creating a Jewish presence in the region and placing "facts on the ground".
Political affiliations
Gush Emunim was closely associated with, and highly influential in, the National Religious Party (NRP). In the late 1980s, they referred to themselves – and were referred to by the Israeli media – as Ne'emanei Eretz Yisrael (English: "Those who are loyal/faithful to the Land of Israel"). It also had a close relationship with the Jewish Agency.
History
Gush Emunim was founded by students of Zvi Yehuda Kook in February 1974 in the living room of Haim Drukman, who is also credited with coining the term. In addition to Drukman, its ideological and political core consisted of other students of Zvi Yehuda Kook such as Hanan Porat, Moshe Levinger, Shlomo Aviner, Menachem Froman, Eliezer Waldman, Yoel Bin-Nun, and Yaakov Ariel. Kook remained its leader until his death in 1982.
In 1974, an affiliated group named Garin Elon Moreh, led by Menachem Felix and Benjamin (Beni) Katzover, attempted to establish a settlement on the ruins of the Sebastia train station dating from the Ottoman period. After eight attempts and seven removals from the site by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), an agreement was reached according to which the Israeli government allowed 25 families to settle in the Kadum army camp southwest of Nablus/Shechem. The Sebastia agreement was a turning point that opened up the northern West Bank to Jewish settlement. The small mobile home site housing 25 families eventually became the municipality of Kedumim, one of the major settlements in the West Bank. The Sebastia model was subsequently copied in Beit El, Shavei Shomron, and other settlements.
In 1976, Gush Emunim founded the settlement-building arm Amana, which soon became independent and is still active. That same year, Gush Emunin held a two-day march through the West Bank with around 20,000 people joined the march. In 1979-80, a group of members from Gush Emunim radicalised and formed the Jewish Underground. This organization conducted several terror attacks and plotted to blow up the Dome of the Rock. The uncovering of the terrorist organization led to a severe blow to the settler movement's reputation. Following the crisis, Gush Emunim's role as the formal umbrella organization of the settler movement was gradually taken over by the Yesha Council, although Gush Emunim, as of 2010, never formally ceased to exist. The Yesha Council, in its role as the political umbrella organization, and Amana, as the executive, settler-building branch, nowadays form the two main institutions of the settler movement.
Yoel Bin-Nun, one of the founding members of Gush Emunim, broke off from the organization in the aftermath of the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin.
Ideology
The ideological outlook of Gush Emunim has been described as messianic, fundamentalist, theocratic, and right-wing. Its beliefs were based heavily on the teachings of Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook and his son, Zvi Yehuda Kook, who taught that secular Zionists, through their gaining of Eretz Israel, had unwittingly brought about the beginning of the Messianic Age, which would culminate in the coming of the messiah, which Gush Emunim supporters believe can be hastened through Jewish settlement on land they believe God has allotted to the Jewish people as set forth in the Hebrew Bible. The organization supported attempts to co-exist with the Arab population, rejecting the population transfers proposed by Meir Kahane and his followers.
Impact
Political impact
The overall practical aim of preventing territorial compromise and annexation of occupied territories has only partly been accomplished. Prominent failures include the demolishing and evacuation of settlements in the Sinai peninsula following the Camp David Accords, the phased transfer of jurisdiction to the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank as part of the Oslo Accords, and the 2005 Gaza Disengagement.
Gush Emunim and its successors have successfully attracted billions of US dollars for the building and supporting of settlements. The 2005 Sasson Report revealed that the Ministry of Housing, the Ministry of Defense and the World Zionist Organization spent millions of shekels to support illegal outposts. Between 2013 and 2015, Amana received government funding of approximately 100 million shekels ($29 million). On 31 December 2019, the Israeli High Court of Justice decided that any government donations to the executive branch of the settler movement required approval from the court.
The settler movement has successfully appealed to sentiments related to Israeli identity, making it difficult for government officials and political leaders on the right to distance themselves from the settlers. Support for the settlement project has become mainstream in the US Republican Party, and almost all parties on the right of the political spectrum in Israel have settlers within its leadership.{{Cite book |last1= Zertal |first1= Idith |author-link1= Idith Zertal |last2= Eldar |first2= Akiva |author-link2= Akiva Eldar |title= Lords of the land: the war over Israel's settlements in the occupied territories, 1967-2007 |year= 2009 |orig-year= 2005 |publisher= Nation Books |location= New York |page= 235 |translator= Vivian Sohn Eden |isbn=978-0-786-74485-5 |edition= 1st |oclc= 694096363 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rds_DgAAQBAJ&pg=PA235
Societal impact
The establishment of Gush Emunim correlated with the revival of the Greater Israel ideology within the national religious community. The settler movement is also accused of provoking a culture of violence, with the Israeli government condoning its actions. The perpetrator of the 1994 Hebron massacre as well as the assassin of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin were proponents of the Greater Israel ideology, with the latter being educated in the Gush Emunim-oriented Yeshivat Kerem B'Yavneh. The murder of Yitzak Rabin is widely regarded to have been a breaking point in the Oslo peace process.
Since the founding of Gush Emunim in 1974, the number of settlers living in the West Bank has grown from close to zero in 1974 to approximately 440,000 in 2019. The number of settlements until 2020 stood at 132, and the number of illegal outposts at 135.
References
References
- (21 August 1978). "World: Two Standards of Justice".
- (1991). ["Fundamentalisms Observed"]({{Google books). University of Chicago Press.
- [[Sprinzak. (2013). "Inside Terrorist Organizations". Routledge.
- (March 1987). "Dogmatism, Ideology, and Right-Wing Radical Activity". [[International Society of Political Psychology]].
- Sprinzak, Ehud. (16 September 1986). "Fundamentalism, Terrorism, and Democracy: The Case of the Gush Emunim Underground".
- Taub, Gadi. (2010). "The settlers: and the struggle over the meaning of Zionism". Yale University Press.
- Allen, Katherine. (15 June 2005). "The Ideological Resonance of Zionist Fundamentalism in Israeli Society".
- Klein Halevi, Yossi. (2020). "The New Jewish Canon". Academic Studies Press.
- "Israel – Geography".
- While Gush Emunim no longer exists officially, vestiges of its influence remain in [[Politics of Israel
- Lustick, Ian S.. (1988). "For the land and the Lord: Jewish fundamentalism in Israel". the [[Council on Foreign Relations]].
- Lustick (1988), p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=dD-1Nm6NTHQC&pg=PA63 63].
- Gorenberg, Gershom. (2006). "The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Settlements, 1967-1977". Times Books, Henry Holt & Co..
- (2020). "The Israeli Settler Movement: Assessing and Explaining Social Movement Success". Cambridge University Press.
- Lustick (1988), p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=dD-1Nm6NTHQC&pg=PA73 73].
- Lustick (1988), pp. [https://books.google.com/books?id=dD-1Nm6NTHQC&pg=PA45 45]-46.
- Sprinzak, Ehud. (1 December 1987). "From messianic pioneering to vigilante terrorism: The case of the gush emunim underground". [[Journal of Strategic Studies]].
- Despite being rooted in Gush Emunim, the Yesha Council is considered more practical and pragmatic than its predecessor.Hirsch-Hoefler & Mudde (2020), p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=Ln-QzQEACAAJ&pg=PA75 75].
- Frey, Rebecca Joyce. (April 2025}}{{cite book). "Fundamentalism". Infobase Publishing.
- Inbari, Motti. (2012). "Jewish Fundamentalism and the Temple Mount: Who Will Build the Third Temple?". [[SUNY Press]].
- Aldrovandi, Carlo. (2014). "Apocalyptic Movements in Contemporary Politics: Christian and Jewish Zionism". Palgrave Macmillan.
- Masalha, Nur. (2007). "The Bible and Zionism: Invented Traditions, Archaeology and Post-Colonialism in Palestine- Israel". [[Zed Books]].
- Don-Yehiya, Eliezer. (2004). "Accounting for Fundamentalisms: The Dynamic Character of Movements". University of Chicago Press.
- Hirsch-Hoefler & Mudde (2020), p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=Ln-QzQEACAAJ&pg=PA2 2].
- (April 2025). ["Gush Emunim"](https://www.knesset.gov.il/lexicon/eng/gush_em_eng.htm}}{{dead link). [[Knesset]].
- "Settlement group will need High Court consent to get funding". Haaretz.
- (31 December 2019). "Breakthrough: Funding For Amana Will Now Be Overseen By The High Court Until A Verdict".
- Mendelsohn, Barak. (1 December 2014). "State Authority in the Balance: The Israeli State and the Messianic Settler Movement". [[International Studies Review]].
- Hirsch-Hoefler & Mudde (2020), p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=Ln-QzQEACAAJ&pg=PA223 223].
- Newman (2005), pp. 192–224, 204.
- "The emergence of Israel's settler government". Haaretz.
- (1985). "The Impact of Gush Emunim: politics and settlement in the West Bank". Croom Helm.
- Gazit, Nir. (1 June 2015). "State-sponsored Vigilantism: Jewish Settlers' Violence in the Occupied Palestinian Territories". Sociology.
- Rabinovich, Itamar. (2018). "The Rabin Assassination as a Turning Point in Israel's History". Israel Studies.
- "Population".
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