Massacre do Túmulo dos Patriarcas (Portuguese Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Massacre do Túmulo dos Patriarcas" in Portuguese language version.

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  • Bouckaert, Peter. Center of the Storm: a case study of human rights abuses in Hebron District. 2001, page 82 [1]

google.com.au

books.google.com.au

  • Tuman, Joseph S. (2003). Communicating Terror: The Rhetorical Dimensions of Terrorism. [S.l.]: Sage Publications, Inc. p. 93. ISBN 1412973244. Consultado em 13 de março de 2010. Although Goldstein did not say anything during his attack to explain his actions, it is known that the night before his assault he had attended a service at the Jewish side of the Cave of the Patriarchs where after listening to the traditional reading from the Scroll of Esther, he told others there that they should all behave like Esther. The timing of his attack the next day at the same site hardly seems the product of happenstance or coincidence. It was the day of Purim. Moreover, although his actions seemed to be the product of a mind that had snapped or become depraved, there did not seem to be any sign that he was suffering from a mental disorder. His actions were deliberate and intentional. Goldstein was troubled by the ongoing peace negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians in Oslo and openly concerned that a Palestinian state was about to be created. His attack on Muslim worshippers at the same site, while Purim coincided with Ramadan, was an attempt to cast himself symbolically in the story as Mordecai. Indeed that was exactly the way his actions were interpreted by other settlers at Kiryat Arba, and in the years to come after 1994, there would be numerous instances in which the settlers would celebrate Purim by also invoking Goldstein's memory and image in a provocative manner. 

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