Yitzhak Rabin’s Vision Of Peace Wasn’t What The Liberals Claim

Facebook Twitter Flipboard Rabin’s vision of peace The Yartzeit of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin (Yartzeit is a Jewish remembrance day for someone who passed away) is the 12th of the Jewish month of Cheshvan, which this year corresponds to October 18.  Rabin was assassinated by a crazed Israeli named Yigal Amir on November 4, […]

By Dunetz שמואל בן נח

October 18, 2021 at 9:47 am

Rabin's vision of peace

The Yartzeit of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin (Yartzeit is a Jewish remembrance day for someone who passed away) is the 12th of the Jewish month of Cheshvan, which this year corresponds to October 18.  Rabin was assassinated by a crazed Israeli named Yigal Amir on November 4, 1995, using the secular calendar.  There was an official state memorial ceremony in Israel commemorating former prime minister Yitzhak Rabin at Mount Herzl.

During the ceremony, Prime Minister Bennett emphasized the need for national unity:

“On November 4, 1995, Israel was on the brink of an abyss,” Bennett said in his speech during Monday’s state ceremony. “The lesson I took away from Rabin’s murder — under no circumstances, no matter the situation, should the nation be torn apart.”

“We mustn’t burn our house down. We are brothers. The only comfort from this terrible murder is the fact that we managed to flourish, to correct,” he added.

Former PM Netanyahu did not attend today's ceremony, but we at a previous (2016) commemoration said:

"The scar from the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin will ensure for generations and will not be erased," Former Prime Minister Netanyahu once said at a Rabin memorial ceremony atop Mount Herzl. He went on to say that Rabin had spoken of the threat posed by radical Islam to Israel and the entire free world, and he even quoted remarks made by Rabin to then-U.S. President Bill Clinton. "Rabin sought peace," Netanyahu said, "but he recognized the unwillingness of a significant part of the Palestinians to make peace."

Indeed, most people do not realize Rabin was not the "sacrifice everything including security for the sake of peace" person described by the liberal media and Democratic politicians in the U.S. In fact, Yitzhak Rabin was the last prime minister of Israel who did not support the creation of a Palestinian state. 

Since his death twenty-six years ago, the myth of Rabin's peacemaking expanded. While it is true that he was the Prime Minister who began the "Oslo Process," it is also true that Rabin's final vision for the Oslo process was more hardline than supposedly "hawkish" Prime Ministers. Rabin did not support the creation of a Palestinian state, and he believed that the entirety of Jerusalem is the indivisible capital of the Jewish State.

Nine days before he was assassinated, Rabin delivered a speech to the Knesset laying out his vision for the future of Israel and the disputed territories, including:

This is not meant to denigrate the memory of the Israeli PM, who was slaughtered by a maniac over two decades ago. Its purpose is to show the true nature of the media and world leaders like the former American President Barack Obama, who slanted Rabin's legacy to tell the story they want to tell. They have taken upon themselves to recreate Rabin into something he was not. For many years, Rabin's legacy was defined by liberals' interpretation of the dreams of the peace process that he engaged in with the Palestinians.

Some of his friends and family were aware of his growing doubts about the intentions of Yasser Arafat. He was already sabotaging the diplomatic process by ordering terrorist attacks before, during, and after the time of Rabin's assassination.

A dozen years ago, Rabin's daughter Dalia wrote in an Israeli magazine :

“Many people who were close to father told me that on the eve of the murder he considered stopping the Oslo process because of the terror that was running rampant in the streets and that Arafat wasn’t delivering the goods.

Father after all wasn’t a blind man running forward without thought. I don’t rule out the possibility that he considered also doing a reverse on our side.

After all he was someone for whom the security of the state was sacrosanct.”

Rabin was not the blind peace-maker like some prime ministers who followed him, such as the late Shimon Peres, Ehud Barak, and Ehud "comb-over" Olmert. The Oslo process Rabin started came to be roundly criticized, as it led to deadly violence, including the second intifada. At the same time, it consolidated the power of the terrorist Arafat. Truth be told, nobody really knows what would have happened if a crazy zealot didn't strike him down 26 years ago? Oslo might have been over long before the intifada, and Arafat might have been sent back to his hiding place under a rock in Tripoli where he belonged.

Remember Yitzhak Rabin today the way he really was, a seeker of peace who was unwilling to trade off the security of the people he served.

זיכרונם לברכה

May his memory be a blessing 

Rabin's vision of peace

Rabin's vision of peace

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