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Judaism

The biblical assassination that predated the death of Yitzhak Rabin

The 30th anniversary of the Israeli PM’s assassination is being commemorated this weekend

November 2, 2025 09:38
Rabin GettyImages-51423920
Israelis mourn their murdered prime minister days after he was shot at a peace rally on November 4 1995 (photo: Getty Images)
3 min read

On that Saturday evening 30 years ago the sky was crackling with early fireworks, the day before Bonfire Night, that idiosyncratic British commemoration of a failed assassination plot four centuries earlier, the details of which most of us will only be dimly aware. But 3,000 miles away an all too successful assassination was taking place that same November night in Israel.

Its prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin, was gunned down at a peace rally in Tel Aviv by Yigal Amir, a fanatic who believed that the Oslo Accords signed with PLO leader Yassir Arafat in 1993 represented a danger to his countrymen. The murder had come amid increasingly bitter political division within Israel over the deal with the Palestinians. But it was all the more shocking in that Amir claimed religious sanction for his action, believing that Jewish law justified it.

Months later, a commission headed by the president of the Supreme Court, Meir Shamgar, which had been set up to investigate the security failings over Rabin’s death, warned: “The reborn State of Israel must learn the lessons of Jewish history.”

In particular, the commission cited two particular episodes from the past: the zealotry preceding the destruction of the Second Temple that had led to “bloodshed among brothers” and the assassination of Gedaliah, the governor appointed by the Babylonians to look after the remnants of the population following the destruction of the First Temple. Suggesting that modern Israel needed to do some soul-searching over the social and political climate in which the prime minister’s death had occurred, it quoted a saying from the Talmud: “Bad culture in a man’s home is worse than Armageddon.”

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