Gush Emunim was founded by students of
Zvi Yehuda Kook in February 1974 in the living room of
Haim Drukman, who is also credited with coining the term. In addition to Drukman, its ideological and political core consisted of other students of Zvi Yehuda Kook such as
Hanan Porat,
Moshe Levinger,
Shlomo Aviner,
Menachem Froman,
Eliezer Waldman,
Yoel Bin-Nun, and
Yaakov Ariel. Kook remained its leader until his death in 1982. In 1974, an affiliated group named
Garin Elon Moreh, led by
Menachem Felix and
Benjamin (Beni) Katzover, attempted to establish a settlement on the ruins of the
Sebastia train station dating from the
Ottoman period. After eight attempts and seven removals from the site by the
Israel Defense Forces (IDF), an agreement was reached according to which the
Israeli government allowed 25 families to settle in the Kadum army camp southwest of
Nablus/
Shechem. The Sebastia agreement was a turning point that opened up the northern West Bank to Jewish settlement. The small mobile home site housing 25 families eventually became the municipality of
Kedumim, one of the major settlements in the West Bank. The Sebastia model was subsequently copied in
Beit El,
Shavei Shomron, and other settlements. In 1976, Gush Emunim founded the settlement-building arm
Amana, which soon became independent and is still active. That same year, Gush Emunin held
a two-day march through the West Bank with around 20,000 people joined the march. In 1979-80, a group of members from Gush Emunim radicalised and formed the
Jewish Underground. This organization conducted several terror attacks and plotted to blow up the Dome of the Rock. The uncovering of the terrorist organization led to a severe blow to the settler movement's reputation. Following the crisis, Gush Emunim's role as the formal umbrella organization of the settler movement was gradually taken over by the
Yesha Council, although Gush Emunim, as of 2010, never formally ceased to exist. The Yesha Council, in its role as the political umbrella organization, and Amana, as the executive, settler-building branch, nowadays form the two main institutions of the settler movement.
Yoel Bin-Nun, one of the founding members of Gush Emunim, broke off from the organization in the aftermath of the
assassination of Yitzhak Rabin. ==Ideology==