Israel on Thursday marked the 25th anniversary since the assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in a series of commemorative events, including a special Knesset plenum session.
Speaking at the state ceremony at the President's Residence in Jerusalem, Rivlin warned that much like in the days leading up to the murder, hatred is rampant in Israel, and the public seems torn into two opposing camps.
Warning that it was "unacceptable that we legitimize the next political murder," Rivlin cautioned that "the country is split like the Red Sea between two camps, and the hatred is simmering underfoot.
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"It cannot be that there are those who would dare to think that the political assassination of a prime minister, a minister, a president [or] an MK is even a possibility.
"It cannot be that we prepare the ground for the slightest possibility of another assassination, in words or in silence, with a look or with actions."
Rivlin called on the Israeli public to "find a way to "mend the damage done to Israeli democracy in the last quarter-century," saying that Israelis have a "responsibility to fix the rift in Israeli society that continues today."
Speaking at the special memorial session held by parliament, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pointed out that the public discourse since the Rabin assassination has not changed.
"Some 25 years after the murder, there is still incitement to murder the prime minister and his family members," he said.
Knesset Speaker MK Yariv Levine said, "Even now, 25 years after this terrible murder, the internecine hatred, incitement to violence, and violence itself has not ceased to exist among us. The time has come for us to learn a different way."
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