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The Timeline between Rabin's assassination and Bibi's election

From Rabin's Assassination
to Bibi's Election:
A Time Line
of Ariga Articles and Editorials

The Rabin Assassination
  • Nov 6 1995 -- Now we are a country Israel is the only country born as a democracy after World War II that did not have a revolution, a junta, a coup, a civil war, a dictatorship calling itself a republic or people's democracy. Now we have had an assassination.
  • Nov 11 1995 -- Back to Business In Jewish tradition, the seven days of shiv'a are all about enveloping the mourner with the love of relatives, friends and community. But at the end of those seven days, though three more weeks remain until the end of the first month of a mourning period that will last a full year, the mourner is supposed to get on his or her feet and go back to work.
  • Nov 19 1995 -- A Mythological Moment This is a mythological moment in the history of the Jewish people. The dimension of this moment encompasses the entire hundred years of 20th century Zionism as Jewish self-determination.We are indeed divided, and in large part because of religion.
  • Dec 3 1995 -- From Zion shall come Torah Israel is the leading strategic power in the Middle East because of many reasons, among them its affiliation with the United States. That affiliation is derived from an inherently democratic impulse in Israel, that does not exist -- yet-- anywhere else in the Arab world. That impulse, unfortunately, is far from perfect -- witness the corrupting influence the occupation had on Israeli (and Palestinian) society.
  • Dec 10 1995 -- The election campaign has begun Democracy, said Plato, "is a charming system of variety and disorder.'' Israel's rules for the democractic process have always been slightly askew. From the start, the free press has been if not shackled, then at least reined in by security considerations; religion has been kept off the free marketplace of ideas; and pluralism has been frowned upon in the name of a desire for national consensus.



The Division Within - The 1996 Election Campaign

  • Tel Aviv is the Spiritual Center of the State of Israel: If not for the life and death issues at stake, the celebrations of Jerusalem's 3,000 birthday would seem farcical. A dissenter's view of the Jerusalem 3000 celebrations Originally Published in December 1995 issue of Moment Magazine
  • May 12 1996 A Strange Campaign Only the cynics and the ignorant believe that there is no difference between the two sides in this campaign, the most critical since at least the 1967 Six Day War, if not all the way back to the first election.
  • Dec 16 1995 -- Tonight, less than 24 hours before the first candle of Hannukah, the national religious community is invading Tel Aviv, assembling outside city hall in the place now known as Kikar Rabin, to declare that while they are not proud of Yigal Amir the assassin, they are proud of what he learned in their community. Say them: you don't blame a common criminal's secular education -- or lack of it -- for his crime. Why do you blame us for Yigal Amir's crime? They deserve an answer.
  • December 30, 1995 -- Goodwill is not naivete. It is the essence of the win-win deal, the best kind of commerce that exists. For the first time in their history as neighbors, Israelis and Syrians are talking about what they can share as common goals, listening to each other as partners rather than as adversaries. On both sides, those out of power are opposed to the move; expecting treachery to burst bloodily into the open at every turn of this long and winding road to a new era. On the fringes, they can't hide their disappointment that the violence is dwindling; the more diplomatic, if not responsible, stake increasingly desperate claims to isolationist ideologies, at a time when isolationism is increasingly impossible.
  • January 10 1996 -- Lots of firsts today -- the king, in day-time, in Tel Aviv, the head of the shabak named in the newspapers, the Syrians calling for marathon talks. It's all making Ariel Sharon very nervous.
  • January 21 1996 For Jews as well as Arabs the Palestinian elections are a key milestone on the road toward the 21st century. Meanwhile, the right-wing's complaints in America about free speech on the internet are as dissonant as the right wing Israeli's complaints about the "surrendering leftists," Bibi Netanyahu's latest euphemism for the government.
  • Feb 3 1996 Looking Ahead Elections this May or October, it doesn't matter. What matters is getting the roads open to Africa, Asia and Europe. Israel is the California of Europe, peculiarly facing West at the eastern end of the Med. It's possibly the Hong Kong of the next century -- it will be the world's most densely populated country by the year 2020 -- and there's no reason there shouldn't be a road all the way there. Meanwhile, the Negev's time is coming soon, as the interests of the country mature from tribalism and paranoia to internationalism and free trade.
  • Feb 11 1996 On Tel Aviv's Shenkin Street on Fridays more young Israelis between the ages of 12 to 40 juggle and jiggle through the one block roadblock of pedestrian walkway from Allenby to the little people's park with the huge fountain, than there are Jews in Palestine. Last week, a stand gathering signatures for the legalization of marijuana collected its thousand John Hancocks in a country where the military censor still is legitimate by democratic standards. This week, Prime Minister Shimon Peres, a 75-year-old man with more understanding of what could be in the year 2020 than most 20 year olds in Israel -- or for that matter overseas -- explained why he wanted what are being called early elections in Israel, probably in late May.
  • Feb 21 1996 In Israel, the choice is clear: What's better -- to need the army to get to Ma'arat Hamachpela aka The Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron, or to make a peace that enables MacDonalds to open a Palestinian franchise in Hebron open to anyone visiting the Tomb. Neither the tomb nor the burger joint is our idea of a fun place to visit. We prefer cyberspace, our own modest effort to respond to "don't ask what the 'net can do for you, ask what you can do for the 'net."
  • Feb 27 1996 Richard Sherwin of Bar Ilan University writes in response to "The Choice is Clear"


The Suicide Bombings
  • March 3 1996 HISTORY'S TIMETABLE There have been so many buses that became symbols: The coastal road bus, the Tel Aviv-Jerusalem bus, the Ashkelon bus. The Ismailia bus. The Hadera bus, the Afula bus, the Number Eighteens in Jerusalem Originally published as a Tel Aviv, Tel Aviv column February 8, 1990
  • March 5 1996 The Test of Terror Terrorism, in particular the horror of suicide bombers, is by virtue of its drama, the most immediate challenge. The instantaneous communications of the end of the 20th century makes the terrorism tangible to the rest of the world. Terrorism is as international as CNN... and even when it seems to be about the most local issues -- the Oklahoma bombing comes to mind -- it is really about a world war between the two main forces on the planet that have been in conflict for all of human history, reason and irrationality.
  • April 2 1996 What happened to the Israeli Left? ... Why should Meretz lose so much support to the Labor party ... Why do polls predict an increase of seats for Hadash, seven years after Communism failed? And where are the groups and individuals that comprised the extra-parliamentary left from the war in Lebanon until the Intifada? A Guest Editorial from Charles Lenchner
Grapes of Wrath

  • May 1 1996 Dialogue, not sanctions needed to change Iran A guest report from Andrea Wright at a conference in Texas.
  • April 14 1996 A Window of Opportunity: Between the Lebanese fleeing north and the Israelis fleeing south lies a political conundrum that both holds up the peace process and provides a window of opportunity for a great leap forward.
  • Pessah 1996 A Pessah Editorial On the face of it, therefore, a suicide bomber can tilt this election. But so could another Yigal Amir. That dilemma drives this campaign.




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