Rabbi Moshe Levinger, who founded the militant Gush Emunim
movement which pushed Jewish settlements in the West Bank, died aged 80 on
Saturday, relatives said.
Born in 1935 in Jerusalem to a family of German origin,
Levinger studied in his youth under Rabbi Tzvi Yehudah Kook, the spiritual
father of religious nationalism.
Shortly after the 1967 Six-Day War in which Israel captured
east Jerusalem and the West Bank, Levinger and a group of like-minded people
decided to settle in the occupied territory.
Their goal was to create a Jewish presence in Palestinian
cities which are important sites from Jewish history, such as Hebron and
Bethlehem.
In September 1967, the Labour government authorised the
creation of the first settlement at Kfar Etzion, on the ruins of a kibbutz
destroyed by the Arab Legion on the eve of the 1948 declaration of the state of
Israel.
He was implicated in but never convicted after the arrest of
an extremist Jewish network in the 1980s that carried out several
anti-Palestinian attacks.
But in 1990, he was convicted of manslaughter for shooting
into a crowd in Hebron, killing a Palestinian.
Levinger, who had 11 children, was sentenced to five months
in prison but released after three months for good behaviour.
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