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Baruch Marzel

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Baruch Meir Marzel or Baruch Marzel (Hebrew: ברוך מאיר מרזל; born 23 April 1959) is an Israeli activist. He is an American Orthodox Jewish-Israeli settler from Boston in the Jewish settlement of Hebron. He was the leader of the far-right-oriented Jewish National Front party. He was also a member of Otzma Yehudit, though he later left the party. He used to act as one of the "right-hand men" of assassinated Israeli far-right Rabbi Meir Kahane, acting as spokesman for this American Jewish-Orthodox-nationalist rabbi's organization Kach,Kahane Chai for ten years. The mainstream Israeli press has described him as an "extreme right-wing activist".

Biography

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Marzel was born in 1959 in Boston, and emigrated to Israel with his family when he was 6 weeks old, settling in Jerusalem's Bayit Vegan neighbourhood. Although his father Shlomo was a respected educator who did not deal much with politics, Baruch joined Kahane's Jewish Defense League at age 13. He gave up his US citizenship when he ran for the Knesset. He served in the IDF Armored Corps and fought in the 1982 Lebanon War, participating in battles along the Beirut-Damascus highway, after which he served in the United States as a representative for Sar-El. Marzel and his wife Sarah have nine children.

Political activism

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In 2004, he founded Chayil, and headed its Knesset list in the 2006 elections. During the election campaign, Marzel and Ben-Ari called on the Israeli military to "carry out a targeted killing against (left-wing figure) Uri Avnery and his leftist collaborators". This came in reaction to Avnery earlier saying on Israeli radio station Kol Israel that the assassination of Israeli tourism minister Rehavam Zeevi was a Palestinian "targeted killing", like the Israeli military's "targeted killings" of Palestinian political leaders. According to Gush Shalom, "the radio did not quote [Avnery's] next words: 'I am against all assassinations, both by Israelis and Palestinians.'"

Marzel and Ben-Ari were considered very far-right for even Israel's hard-right parties, such as the National Union or the National Religious Party (today's HaBayit HaYehudi party). Ultimately, the JNF party received 24,824 votes (0.79%), less than half the minimum 2% required to enter the Knesset.

In 2009, after fellow party member Michael Ben-Ari won a seat in Knesset on the National Union (Israel) list, Marzel agreed to serve as Ben-Ari's parliamentary aide. Marzel had originally planned to run independently. They eventually agreed not to submit their party's list on their own, and instead placed Ben-Ari on the National Union party list. In 2013, Marzel ran for the Knesset again, this time on the third slot of newly founded far-right Jewish nationalist Otzma Yehudit, which splintered from National Union. However, the party failed to cross the electoral threshold. Before the election, other right-wing parties, such as the Jewish Home party, had rejected including or co-operating with Marzel, Ben-Ari and even Ben-Gvir, considering them to be too outspoken, far-right.

Prior to the 2015 Israeli election, Marzel was put 4th on the Yachad-Otzma LeYisrael technical bloc. Marzel's inclusion came due to compromise between the two parties. In February 2015, the Election Committee disqualified ultra-Orthodox Jewish MKs Marzel and Ben-Ari, Arab MK Haneen Zoabi, from running in the election. The decision squeaked by with a 17 to 16 majority. The decision came after past attempts to block Marzel failed. The reasons given for the disqualification of Marzel were several statements attributed to him, which groups petitioning the move claimed qualified as "racism". Following Marzel's appeal, the Supreme Court accepted the appeals by both MK Haneen Zoabi and Marzel, against the decision of the Central Election Committee (CEC), which decided to disqualify them from participating in the next Knesset. In the end, the Yachad-Otzma bloc failed to pass the election threshold by a mere 11,000 votes, thus not entering the Knesset.


He is a writer for the Israeli newspaper Arutz Sheva.

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Marzel was first arrested by police at 14. His first conviction followed 3 years later. According to a 2003 report in the Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth, "Marzel had acquired a police record of some 40 files before he was 30". The report goes on to detail his criminal record, including assaults on Palestinians (one earning him a 12-month suspended prison sentence), an Israeli police officer, an Israeli left-wing activist, and journalist Uri Avnery.

In August 2012, Israeli police arrested Baruch Marzel at the entrance to the town of Kiryat Arba over his failure to report for questioning. He was suspected of being involved in several incidents in Hebron that took place six months prior, in which several Palestinians allegedly were attacked.

Controversies

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Anti-LGBT activism

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Marzel has in the past advocated violence towards homosexuals in Israel, calling for a religious war against them during a radio interview.[source needed] In 2006, in the days leading up to a planned gay pride parade in Jerusalem, Marzel reportedly stated that, "The stabbing incident during last year's parade will seem minor in comparison with what is anticipated this year. We have to declare a holy war."[no source] Marzel also was involved in the controversial March 2009 flag parade through Umm al-Fahm. He led protests against the eighth Jerusalem Gay Pride parade of 2010, opining that "[homosexuality] is a disease of choice, and a man can change his taste and his ways. When someone has AIDS, they tell them not to infect others, so why are these people allowed to march here in Jerusalem and infect us with their disease?"[1]

During the 2012 Gay Pride march in Jerusalem, Marzel led a counter-demonstration in the ultra-Orthodox neighborhood of Mea Shearim. He brought with him to the demonstration three donkeys. Each of the donkeys bore a sign, one of which read "I'm proud too", a second one read "Proud Donkey", and the third one simply read "Pride March".[2] Five years later, during the 2017 Jerusalem gay pride march, Marzel again led a counter-demonstration. Despite his previous rhetoric, Marzel stated that he did not protest against LGBT people on a personal level, saying: "I'm not fighting against these people personally, but against the parade and the phenomenon. [...] The nuclear family is a holy thing, and it's important to protect it."[3]

Anti-assimilation activism

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Marzel is seen as a central figure in the anti-assimilation Lehava group, along with Rabbi Ben-Zion Gopstein.[4] In 2006, Marzel sent an open letter to Linor Abargil, asking her not to marry non-Jewish Lithuanian NBA player Šarūnas Jasikevičius.[5] A similar open letter was addressed in March 2010 to Israeli model Bar Refaeli, urging her not to marry her non-Jewish boyfriend at that time, American actor Leonardo DiCaprio. Representing the Lehava organization, Marzel tried to convince Refaeli that her ancestors would have opposed such a marriage.[6][7][8] In 2013, he was among 50 activists who held an anti-assimilation protest at a wedding between an Arab man and a Jewish woman.[9] In July 2014, Facebook removed Marzel's page after readers complained about incitement.[10]

Party for Baruch Capel Goldstein

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In 2000, Marzel organized a Purim party at the grave of Baruch Goldstein, the religious extremist who perpetrated the 1994 Cave of the Patriarchs massacre. Marzel was quoted as saying, "We decided to make a big party on the day he was murdered by Arabs."[11][12]

"The Radical Jew"

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A short film about Baruch Marzel called The Radical Jew was the Winner of Best Short Documentary at the Charlotte Film Festival and the Golden Strands Award for outstanding short documentary at Tallgrass Film Festival.[13][14]

Sanctions

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On July 15, 2024, the EU added Baruch Marzel to its list of sanctioned individuals for "openly calling for an ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians, alongside Ben-Zion “Benzi” Gopstein, chieftain of far-right Jewish Ultra-Nationalist Lehava, Isaschar Manne, founder of unauthorised Manne Farm outpost in [South] Hebron Hills.[15]

  1. "Anti-gay protesters: Sick perverts – get out of Jerusalem". Haaretz. 29 July 2010. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
  2. Zeiger, Asher. "More than 5,000 participate in Jerusalem Gay Pride Parade". Retrieved 13 June 2017.
  3. Baruch, Hezki (4 August 2017). "You would never hold a gay parade in an Arab town". Arutz Sheva. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  4. Nachshon, Kobi. "Right of right: Eli Yishai's new party mired in controversy". Retrieved 5 July 2017.
  5. Efrat Weiss (2 March 2006). "Marzel to beauty queen: Don't marry a goy". Ynetnews (in Hebrew). ynet news. Retrieved 30 March 2010.
  6. Shimeon Cohen (10 March 2010). מרזל לבר רפאלי: אל תינשאי לליאונרדו (in Hebrew). Retrieved 20 March 2010.
  7. Felicity Kay (15 March 2010). "Marzel urges super model Refaeli not to marry DiCaprio". The Jerusalem Post | Jpost.com. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
  8. Jessica Elgot, "Bar Refaeli warned 'Don't marry Leo Di Caprio'", The Jewish Chronicle, 15 March 2010
  9. "Activists Protest Against Arab-Jewish Wedding". Arutz Sheva. 24 May 2013. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
  10. "Citing incitement, Facebook closes page of group that fights intermarriage". Haaretz. 22 July 2014. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
  11. Graveside party celebrates Hebron massacre. BBC News. 21 March 2000. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  12. The extremist who could bring Kahanism back to the Knesset. The Times of Israel. 18 February 2015. Retrieved 1 September 2015
  13. "'Radical Jew' stirs controversy at January 2 T.G.I.M." artswfl.com. January 4, 2017. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  14. "The Radical Jew". noamosband.com. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  15. "Extremist Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, as well as violent activists, blocking humanitarian aid to Gaza: five individuals and three entities sanctioned under the EU Global Human Rights Sanctions Regime". Council of the EU. July 15, 2024.