Yaakov Heruti

Yaakov Heruti (Hebrew: יעקב חרותי, born 1927) is an Israeli lawyer and right-wing activist. He was a member of the pre-state militant group Lehi, during which he built bombs for the organization and in particular, assembled the letter bomb that was sent to Roy Farran while stationed in Britain as an undercover agent.[1] He later became the leader of the group Kingdom of Israel, which bombed the Soviet embassy in Tel Aviv and carried out other acts of political violence in the 1950s, for which he served a two-year prison term. He later became involved in politics and settlement activity, participating in the founding of two right-wing political parties and assisting settlers in purchasing land.

Heruti in 2012

Early life

Heruti (right) as a Jewish Settlement Police officer with his father Mordechai, 1945

Heruti was born in Tel Aviv to Polish Jewish parents. His father was a supporter of Mapai.[1] After graduating from the Herzliya Gymnasium he joined the Jewish Settlement Police.[2] As an adolescent, Heruti's political outlook had been shaped by the writings of Lehi founder Avraham Stern and the nationalist poetry of Uri Zvi Greenberg, and he joined Lehi soon after becoming a policeman.[2]

Lehi

Heruti was part of Lehi's technical department and specialized in making bombs.[1] Heruti devised a new form of explosive for use by Lehi and opened a paint factory which produced explosives along with regular paint. Bell states that he was appointed head of the technical department in 1945.[3] In April 1947, one of his bombs destroyed a British police post at the Sarona Compound, killing four policemen. In 1947 Nathan Yellin-Mor directed him to set up a Lehi cell in the UK.[1] Heruti enrolled at London University law school as a cover and recruited a dozen accomplices from the ranks of right-wing Zionist groups like Betar and the Hebrew Legion.[2] Lehi's leadership instructed Heruti to kill British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin, General Evelyn Barker, the former commander of British troops in Palestine, and Roy Farran, a British soldier who had been tried but acquitted for his role in the alleged murder of a teenage Lehi member. The order to kill Bevin was later rescinded. A letter bomb was sent to Barker's home, but his wife saw it as suspicious and called the police. The bomb sent to Farran's home was opened by his younger brother Rex, who was killed.[1] Heruti left the UK in May 1948, and took a ship from France to Israel.[4] He fought in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, in the Jerusalem area.

Kingdom of Israel

Kingdom of Israel members pose with prison guards following their release in 1955. Heruti is second from the left.

In the 1950s Heruti led a small militant group composed primarily of former Lehi members called Kingdom of Israel, also known as the Tzrifin Underground. In February 1953, Kingdom of Israel bombed the Soviet embassy to protest Soviet antisemitism, injuring three people including the Soviet ambassador's wife and severely damaging the building. The Soviet Union cut off diplomatic relations with Israel in response. The group also targeted the Czech embassy and attempted to assassinate German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, and occasionally shot at Jordanian troops in Jerusalem. Heruti and the other members of the group were apprehended in May 1953 and he was sentenced to ten years in prison. However, he and the other Kingdom of Israel members who were convicted had their sentences commuted two years later.

Later activities

Heruti was one of the founders of the right-wing political parties Tehiya and Tsomet. He coined the name of Rehavam Ze'evi's party Moledet. As a lawyer he helped settler activists purchase land in Yesha, and he remains close to the leadership of Gush Emunim. In the 1990s and 2000s he was active at the Ariel University Center of Samaria. He supports the expulsion of Arabs from Israel and the eventual establishment of a Jewish state "[f]rom the Euphrates to the Nile." Heruti is not religiously observant; his political views are still defined by the work of Stern, Greenberg, and Israel Eldad.[1]

Heruti has been married twice. He has one son from his first wife and six children from his second wife. He lives in Tel Aviv.

Notes

  1. Melman, Yossi (13 January 2005). "The Heruti code". Haaretz.
  2. Cesarani 183
  3. 175n7
  4. Bell, J. Bowyer (1996). Terror Out of Zion: Irgun Zvai Leumi, Lehi, and the Palestine Underground, 1929-1949. Transaction Publishers. p. 309.
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References

  • Cesarani, David (2009). Major Farran's Hat: The Untold Story of the Struggle to Establish the Jewish State. Da Capo.

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