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Dr. Baruch Kappel Goldstein (1955/1956 - February 25, 1994) was a Kahanist born in Brooklyn, New York and was responsible for killing 29 Muslim civilians in a 1994 massacre. After emigrating to Israel, Goldstein had served as a physician in the Israeli Defense Force, first as a conscript, then in the reserve forces. Following the end of his active duty, he worked as a physician and lived in the Kiryat Arba settlement. Goldstein is best known for having killed 29 Palestinian Muslims during Friday prayers, February 25th, 1994, in the Cave of the Patriarchs, a site in Hebron holy to both Muslims and Jews. After being subdued with a fire extinguisher, Goldstein was beaten to death by survivors. Goldstein left behind a widow and 4 children. Rioting immediately following the massacre led to the deaths of another 26 Palestinians and 2 Israelis. Testimony at the Israeli inquiry raised the possibility Goldstein had an accomplice - two Israeli army guards testified that a second settler entered Hebron's Tomb of the Patriarchs on February 25th shortly after Goldstein, and that when Goldstein went into the tomb he was armed with a different gun from the Galil assault rifle found by his body. The second settler was carrying a Galil, they said. This testimony was never confirmed, and a commission of inquiry established by Chief Justice Meir Shamgar found that Goldstein had acted on his own. Goldstein's actions were immediately condemned by the Israeli government, and the Israeli populace in general. Spokespeople for all the organized denominations of Judaism denounced his act as immoral and as terrorism. The Kach movement, to which he belonged, was outlawed. The victims of the shooting received financial compensation. However, he became a hero to some Israeli right-wing extremists. Members of the outlawed Kach organization glorify his mass murder (claiming that he pre-empted the mass murder of Jews by Arabs), and sometimes hold celebrations at his tomb. His tombstone in Kiryat Arba reads:
Most Israelis are repulsed by the glorification of this mass murderer. In 1998, a bill was passed in the Israeli Knesset that forbade the erection of monuments to terrorists; in 2000 a small shrine built around Goldstein's tomb was demolished. At the time, it was also declared that a discussion of the inscription on his tombstone was pending but no revisions have yet been made (as of 2005). See alsoExternal links
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