Saturday, October 12, 2013

13-10-12 ISRAEL: Major demonstration commemorating the assassination of PM Rabin

Mass gathering was convene tongith in Tel Aviv tonight under the slogan: Remembering the assassination, struggling for democracy.
  • The vast majority of the large crowd were youth and students!
  • No politicians were among the speakers.
  • Rabin's grandson, from the stage, expressed his disbelief in the official "lone gunman" verson.
  • Documentary videos screened during the demonstration depicted current PM Netanayhu's incitement for the assassination in the months preceding the event.
Most of Israelis see the Rabin assassination in the context of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.  However, the assassination also marks the turning point in unprecedented corruption of government in Israel, and with it - robbing of the people:
  • A recent OEDC report says that income and assets distribution in Israel is inconsistent with a nation under a democratic regime.
  • A recent EU survey in Israel shows that 78% of responders beleve that the judges take bribes.  The justice system was also central to covering up the scope of Secret Service involvement in the assassination.


Official estimate - 30,000 (compared to 20,000 last year), but I never trust these estimates.  The important point is that the streets were full of young people, and that there is still freedom to demonstrate.
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Yitzhak Rabin memorial rally draws 30,000 people

Memorial event marks 18 years since former prime minister's assassination.

By Ilan Lior Oct. 12, 2013 | 10:30 PM  3
Crowds gather at a rally to mark the 18th anniversary of Yitzhak Rabin's assassination
Crowds gather at a rally to mark the 18th anniversary of Yitzhak Rabin's assassination, Oct. 12, 2013.Photo by Daniel Bar On
Daniel Bar-On
Crowds gather at a rally to mark the 18th anniversary of Yitzhak Rabin's assassination, Rabin Square, Tel Aviv, Oct. 12, 2013.Photo by Daniel Bar-On
Daniel Bar-On
Youths mark 18 years to the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, Oct. 12, 2013. Signs read, 'We won't let anyone raise their hand on democracy.'Photo by Daniel Bar-On
Thirty thousand people gathered Saturday night for a rally marking 18 years to the assassination of former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, according to police estimates.
The rally, which was scheduled to commence at 8 P.M., took place at Tel Aviv's Rabin Square, where the prime minister was assassinated on November 4, 1995 by right-wing extremist Yigal Amir. The site, formerly known as Malchei Yisrael Square, was renamed in memory of the late prime minister following his death.
Saturday's rally was organized by a coalition of youth groups and social movements under the title "Remembering the murder, fighting for democracy." The coalition was established ahead of last year's rally to take on the organization of the yearly event.
The vast majority of attendees at this year's rally were members of youth movements who were not born when Rabin was assassinated.
Various speakers were scheduled to speak at Saturday night's gathering, but none were active politicians. Yonatan Ben Artzi, Rabin's grandson, was among the speakers, as were Yair Tzaban, who served as Minister of Immigrant Absorption during Rabin's premiership, and Rabbi Ze'ev Karov, head of the yeshiva at Karnei Shomron. Various musicians were also scheduled to perform.
In his speech, Ben Artzi called upon Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to take advantage of the historic opportunity he is currently facing to achieve peace with the Palestinians. "My grandfather was murdered over peace and you owe this peace to us, to all of us," he said, adding that Netanyahu has the opportunity to simultaneously find a solution to the Iranian threat and Palestinian conflict with the backing of "the entire world."
Hadassah Froman, the wife of the late Rabbi Menachem Froman, said at the rally that, "striving for peace is the lifeblood of this country and will [Israel] will continue [to seek peace] despite those killing and conspiring against it." This land, she added, does not absolve "those who shed the blood of the innocent."
Rabbi Menachem Froman, who served as the rabbi of the West Bank settlement of Tekoa, died earlier this year. He was unique among settler rabbis in that he was a leading proponent of dialogue between Israelis and Palestinians.
Various streets in Tel Aviv were closed to traffic for the event, including Ibn Gabirol, between Pinkas and Shlomo Hamelekh streets, Arlozerov, between Weizman and Ibn Gabirol streets, and all side streets surrounding Rabin Square.
Last year, the annual memorial rally attracted some 20,000 people.

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