Redirected from Kach movement
Initially, Kach was led by Meir Kahane. The party participated in the 1983 elections, where the right-wing votes helped it win several places in the Knesset (Israeli parliament). However, as they were elected, the Knesset voted for changing Israel's basic law[?] (which has a constitutional status), in a way that would forbid racist movements from balloting in elections to the Knesset. Kahane appealed to the Israeli Supreme Court, but it supported the law and he was forced out of the Knesset.
Following Kahane's assassination in 1990, the movement split into two overlapping groups: "Kach" and "Kahane Chai" ("Kahane Lives"). Kahane Chai was led by Meir's son Binyamin until he was murdered in 2000. Both were outlawed by Israel in 1994 under anti-terrorism laws following statements in support of Baruch Goldstein's massacre of Arabs at the Cave of the Patriarchs. They still retain several hundred hard-core supporters, including support from individuals in the United States and Europe.
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