Rabin, the Last Day - exposes Bibi Netanyahu's culpability

I have always maintained that not only was Netanyahu a direct beneficiary of the murder of the then Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin but that he triggered the event by creating an environment of hatred in which Rabin had to die for Bibi to shine. 
Recently, in early November, 20 years to the day after the assassination of Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin by a right-wing religious extremist, Amos Gitai’s mesmerizing and disturbing new film “Rabin, the Last Day” premiered in Tel Aviv’s symphony hall — about 200 yards from the spot where Rabin was shot. It’s no ordinary movie: “Rabin, the Last Day” is a disorienting mixture of drama, documentary and meticulous re-creation, and very little of it takes place on the last day of Rabin’s life. (The title ultimately takes on other meanings.) And in the context of Israel today, not to mention the context of the Middle East and the world, this was no ordinary movie premiere. Gitai is both a living legend of Israeli cinema and a highly controversial cultural figure, and with “Rabin, the Last Day” he seizes the third rail of Israeli politics with both hands.
You can find out how Bibi fed a climate of hate that killed off the last chance for peace and sparked 20 years of carnage and chaos and about the movie by clicking here

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