Behind the Lines:
Jewish extremists

As Israelis -- and American Jews -- continue to search their souls in the aftermath of the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, many wonder how the extreme rightwing Jewish groups could have been ignored for so long. In fact, a handful of writers have been monitoring them for years.

Jonathan Broder, Washington correspondent for The Jerusalem Report and an editor with National Public Radio, recommends the following for people who want to learn more about these groups.

"Zealots for Zion: Inside Israel's West Bank Settler Movement."
by Robert I. Friedman. Rutgers University Press, paperback, 1994.

In this fast-paced account, Friedman, now a writer for New York Magazine, penetrates the xenophobic and violent world of Israel's rightwing Jewish settlers with detailed first-hand reporting from their West Bank communities. Written before the 1993 Israel-PLO agreement, Friedman's book explains how previous Israeli governments, both Likud and Labor-led, used the settlers' militant messianism as a front line against Palestinian national aspirations in the West Bank. Friedman's account of being attacked and beaten by a group of settlers provided a chilling early warning about their willingness to use violence against other Jews.

"The Ascendance of Israel's Radical Right."
by Ehud Sprinzak. Oxford University Press, 1991.

This scholarly volume is an exhaustive study of the political, intellectual and religious origins of Israel's extreme right. Sprinzak, a professor of political science at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, traces the movement's history after the 1967 war and includes detailed portraits of the leading terrorist organizations -- including followers of Rabbi Meir Kahane -- and of the so-called Jewish Underground that tried to blow up the Al-Aqsa mosque in the early 1980s. Sprinzak shows how previous Likud governments did little to limit the extremists' influence in such hotbeds of Palestinian-Jewish conflict as Hebron.

"Memoirs of a Jewish Extremist."
by Yossi Klein Halevi. Little, Brown, 1995.

"I wanted to be a Jewish outlaw at war with history." Thus Halevi, the Brooklyn-born son of a Holocaust survivor, begins this just-published memoir of a youth spent as an active member of the Jewish Defense League and disciple of Kahane. Halevi recounts his exploits in the 1970s against Soviet representatives in the United States and abroad as he and his fellow Jewish militants sought to dramatize the plight of Russian Jews. Halevi, now a senior writer for The Jerusalem Report, also recreates the feel of Brooklyn's mean streets where Jews hold their own against other ethnic toughs. His journey of self-discovery eventually takes him to Israel, where he settles, softens and matures into an advocate of reconciliation.

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Attack of the text snakes


Text snakes are slithering

across the Web -- long, narrow

columns of small bold type

featuring vinegary commentary

about the Net.


First to adopt this format was

Hotwired's "Flux" column,

a weekly dose of acerbity

from the pseudonymous pen

of one Ned Brainerd, who is

almost certainly a composite

of several editors on Hotwired's

burgeoning staff.


Then came Suck, which

adopted a Flux-like design

but pumped out its nose-thumbing

essays on a daily basis. Though

several of Suck's key anti-pundits

are Hotwired employees, the site

has staked out an ankle-biting

independence from its mothership.


Now comes Pathfinder, Time-Warner's

corporate sinkhole of a Website,

with its own text-snake mutation

-- the Netly News, a daily page

of news and commentary edited

by Joshua Quittner.


What we want to know is,

why do all these people think that

really tiny type

in widely spaced lines

makes their prose

more readable,

or their commentary

more insightful?


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