The following groups have been considered religious terrorist organizations in Israel (in chronological order by establishment year):
1950s •
Brit HaKanaim ( "Covenant of the Zealots") was a radical religious Jewish underground organization which operated in
Israel between 1950 and 1953, against the widespread trend of
secularisation in the country. The ultimate goal of the movement was to impose Jewish religious law in the State of Israel and establish a
Halakhic state. • The
Kingdom of Israel group (
Malkhut Yisrael) or Tzrifin Underground, were active in Israel in the 1950s. The group carried out attacks on the diplomatic facilities of the
USSR and
Czechoslovakia, and occasionally shot at
Jordanian troops stationed along the border in Jerusalem. Members of the group were caught trying to bomb the
Israeli Ministry of Education in May 1953, have been described as acting because of the secularisation of Jewish North African immigrants which they saw as 'a direct assault on the religious Jews' way of life and as an existential threat to the ultra-Orthodox community in Israel.'
1980s •
Jewish Underground (1979–1984): formed by members of the Israeli political movement
Gush Emunim. This group is most well known for two actions: firstly, for bomb attacks on the mayors of
West Bank cities on 2 June 1980, and secondly, an abandoned plot to blow up the
Temple Mount mosques. The Israeli Judge Zvi Cohen, heading the sentencing panel at the group's trial, stated that they had three motives, "not necessarily shared by all the defendants. The first motive, at the heart of the Temple Mount conspiracy, is religious." • Keshet (
Kvutza Shelo Titpasher) (1981–1989): A
Tel Aviv anti-Zionist Haredi group focused on bombing property without loss of life. Yigal Marcus, Tel Aviv District Police commander, said that he considered the group a gang of criminals, not a terrorist group. •
Kach, a banned far-right party in Israel (officially registered 1971–1994), and its splinter group Kahane Chai (1991-1994), also banned. Today, both groups are considered
terrorist organisations by
Israel,
Canada, the
European Union and the
United States. The groups are believed to have an overlapping core membership of fewer than 100 people. The
Jewish Defense League in America, founded by Kahane, is also considered terrorist.
FBI statistics show that, from 1980 to 1985, 15 terrorist attacks were attempted in the U.S. by JDL members. The FBI's Mary Doran described the JDL in 2004 Congressional testimony as "a proscribed terrorist group". The
National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism states that, during the JDL's first two decades of activity, it was an "active terrorist organization." •
Terror Against Terror (
Terror Neged Terror,
"TNT"), active 1975–1984, was a radical Jewish militant organization that sponsored several attacks against Palestinian targets. The group was founded by
Meir Kahane's Kach organization, and took its name from Kahane's theory that Arab terrorism should be met with Jewish terrorism. •
Sicarii, an Israeli terrorist group founded in 1989 who made arson and graffiti attacks on leftist Jewish politicians. They were opposed to any process of
rapprochement with the
Palestine Liberation Organization. • The "Bat Ayin Underground" or
Bat Ayin group. In 2002, four people from Bat Ayin and Hebron were arrested outside of Abu Tor School, a Palestinian girls' school in East Jerusalem, with a trailer filled with explosives. Three of the men were convicted for the attempted bombing.
2000s •
Lehava (est. 2005), was referred to as an extreme religious minority trying through terror to implement their views of how the society should look. In January 2015, Channel 2 reported that Defense Minister
Moshe Ya'alon may be preparing to categorize Lehava as a terrorist organization. Ya'alon was reported to have ordered the
Shin Bet and the Defense Ministry to assemble evidence required for the classification. Former Justice Minister
Tzipi Livni stated that Ya'alon's move to name anti-assimilation group Lehava a terrorist organization should have been made months before. "This organization works from hatred, racism, and nationalism, and its goal is to bring an escalation of violence within us", she said. Tamar Hermann, a sociologist and pollster with the Israel Democracy Institute (IDI), reports that government action against Lehava has only come following months of petitioning by "left-leaning Israelis and media commentators."
Israeli rabbi
Binyamin Lau, warned that: "Lehava wants to implement a reign of religious terror." •
Sikrikim (first appeared in 2005), a radical group of ultra-Orthodox Jews based mainly in the
Israeli ultra-Orthodox neighborhoods
Meah Shearim in
Jerusalem and in Ramat
Beit Shemesh. The
anti-Zionist group is thought to have roughly 100 activist members. The Sikrikim gained international attention for acts of violence they committed against
Orthodox Jewish institutions and individuals who would not comply with their demands. They are loosely affiliated with
Neturei Karta. •
"The Revolt" terror group: Members of the Jewish "Revolt" terror group claim the secular State of Israel has no right to existence; they hope to create a Jewish Kingdom in Israel, and that Arabs will be killed if they refuse to leave. Shin Bet says the "Revolt" group's ideology began to evolve in October 2013, shaped by veteran "
hilltop youth", including Rabbi
Meir Kahane's grandson,
Meir Ettinger, who was temporarily put under administrative detention. Before the Duma attack, the group's members had committed 11 arson attacks against Palestinians or Christian churches. 23 of their members were detained because of the Duma attacks. ==Individuals==