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Israeli leaders have a duty to speak out against a climate of division and hatred

There are worrying parallels with the atmosphere leading to Rabin's assassination.

May 5, 2022 08:45
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TOPSHOT - Head of Israel's right-wing Yamina party Naftali Bennett addresses lawmakers during a special session to vote on a new government at the Knesset in Jerusalem, on June 13, 2021. - Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faced the likely end of his 12-year rule as a fragile alliance of his political enemies hoped to oust him in a parliament vote and form a new government. (Photo by Emmanuel DUNAND / AFP) (Photo by EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

Last week, Israel’s Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and his family received two death threats in the mail. Both letters had a live bullet attached.

Israel was shaken to its core in 1995 when Prime Minister Yitzchak Rabin was shot and killed by Igal Amir, a right-wing extremist. So when a prime minister is sent bullets in the post, we can’t afford to ignore the warning signs.

Too many people describe Igal Amir as a lone wolf. We talk about violent extremists as bad apples, as the people on the side-lines. Of course they aren’t the majority - but they don’t exist in a vacuum.

We have a duty to learn and be aware of the behaviours, language and actions that allowed the murder of a prime minister to take place.

Rabin’s murder was not simply about one event on one day. It was part of a very long process of incitement, hate, lies and propaganda that led to death threats, violence and eventually three bullets and a dead Prime Minister.

Dvir Kariv, formerly a senior Shin Bet official (the Israeli Security Service), spoke about this recently on Israel’s Channel 11. He pointed to the fact that while extremists like Igal Amir are not sent by anyone, in their minds they believe they are representing a specific camp. It’s therefore crucial that the people who lead that “camp” speak out and condemn inflammatory language and threats.

The leader of Israel’s right, Benjamin Netanyahu, has however said nothing. Worse, he has fanned the flames of hatred, with help from his sons, his MKs and far-right allies, such as Bezalel Smotrich – whose response to the death threats against Bennett was to suggest that they were a spin story, a distraction.

Meanwhile we’ve seen increasingly divisive politics in Israel’s right wing – a wing Bennett has been historically part of, but which now labels him a traitor and a defector.

Netanyahu’s son Avner – the tamer of the two sons –recently called Bennett a liar and a conman (the most common insult currently used by Netanyahu supporters) and compared him to historical figures who pose a danger to the Jewish people as a whole: Herod Archelaus and Abimelech. These are specific and carefully chosen references, painting the PM as a historic threat to Jews.