Hillel Weiss is a prominent figure of the
Neo-Zionist movement. He was one of the founders of the religious Zionist movement in the early 1970s. He believes in the necessity of rebuilding the Temple and instating Jewish rule over
Greater Israel. Weiss believes that secular Jews are betraying their cultural heritage if they deny the mythical aspect of the
Masada narrative. In the chapter "The Messianic Theme in the Works of A.B. Yehoshua and Amos Oz" in the anthology
Israel and the Post-Zionists: A Nation at Risk, Weiss invokes the
Holocaust as a cognitive filter to describe the actions of the right wing Israeli government and portrays
post-Zionism as a negation of a
Jewish State, anti-Zionist and anti-Israel. Weiss views the Jewish experience as an "ongoing
Shoah". He has also opposed a visit by Pope
Benedict XVI to Israel because of previously expressed views by the Holy See that Jerusalem should become an
international city. In October 2014, Hillel Weiss was accused by several Israeli media outlets, including
Haaretz, of advocating "the annihilation of Palestinians". The accusation referenced a Facebook comment made by Weiss towards Palestinian Authority president
Mahmoud Abbas, in which he that stated that there is no genocide against the Palestinian people, as Palestinian Arabs have never constituted "a people". The statement was condemned by Bar Ilan University as ‘contemptible’ and ‘immoral’. Weiss himself has refuted these accusations, including the accusation that he called the elimination of Palestinians, enumerating specific ways by which
Haaretz grossly misrepresented the content of his Facebook post. ==Controversy==