Meir Kahane (born August 1, 1932, New York, New York, U.S.—died November 5, 1990, New York) was an American-born Israeli political extremist and rabbi who campaigned for self-protection of Jews.
The grandson and son of rabbis, Kahane joined a paramilitary, right-wing youth movement in 1946. He earned a B.A. from Brooklyn College (1954), an L.L.B. from New York Law School (1956), and an M.A. in international affairs from New York University (1957) and was ordained an Orthodox rabbi in 1957 after studies at Mirrer Yeshiva in New York. In the mid-1960s he wrote books and a weekly column for the Jewish Press and rallied support for U.S involvement in Vietnam. In 1968 he formed the militant Jewish Defense League (JDL), attracted followers with the post-Holocaust slogan “Never Again,” and sent armed patrols of young Jews into Black neighborhoods. After being imprisoned for conspiring to make bombs, Kahane moved to Israel in 1971.
There Kahane formed the Kach Party and stirred nationalist fervor against Arabs, whom he campaigned to remove (violently, if necessary) from Israel and all Israeli-occupied areas. He won a seat in the Israeli Knesset (parliament) in 1984, but his term ended when Israel banned the Kach Party for its antidemocratic and racist beliefs.
Back in New York, Kahane was shot to death by a naturalized American of Egyptian descent. His burial in Jerusalem was accompanied by mob violence and cries of “Death to the Arabs!”