Participants at memorial rally for Yitzhak Rabin say Israeli society has grown more divided, and more extreme, since he was assassinated
TEL AVIV — Twenty years after former President Bill Clinton uttered the words “Shalom, Haver,” at the funeral of Yitzhak Rabin, he stood in front of the Tel Aviv municipality building as the lights spelled out the same message.
The peace rally where Rabin was assassinated and the memorial event commemorating its 20th anniversary on Saturday night shared so many similarities: almost 100,000 people streaming into the same square amidst what they saw as a similar backdrop of terror and animosity enveloping the country, bloodthirsty violence from within Israeli society, doctored photos of politicians in SS uniforms, and a deeply divided country that continues to move farther apart.
“The reality is different [from 20 years ago], because people are becoming more and more extreme,” said 82-year-old David Agami, a Bat Yam resident who was at the 1995 rally at the end of which Rabin was assassinated. “We are in the midst of a difficult environment, there is no tolerance and so much aggression.”... Read More: Times of Israel