The Korea Times

Film gets inside head of Yitzhak Rabin’s killer

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JERUSALEM (AFP) — An Israeli film released to coincide with the 24th anniversar­y of the assassinat­ion of former prime minister Yitzhak Rabin offers fresh insight into his killer — and contempora­ry politics in Israel.

On Nov. 4, 1995, Jewish rightwing extremist Yigal Amir shot and killed Rabin at a peace rally in central Tel Aviv.

The killer opposed Rabin signing the Oslo autonomy accords with the Palestinia­ns and the assassinat­ion dealt a serious blow to the peace process.

The name of the killer still invokes trauma in Israel, and the decision to make a biopic humanising Amir was a risky one for director Yaron Zilberman.

“Incitement” shows the killer as a complex figure.

Yehuda Nahari Halevi portrays Amir as the spoiled son of a domineerin­g mother who promised him a messianic destiny, seeking in extremist rabbis the strength lacking in a father whose moderation he despises.

Everything is shown through the eyes of the killer: The inflammato­ry preaching of rabbis against surrenderi­ng any “Israeli land”, attacks plaguing the country, and protests calling for the death of Rabin.

Eventually, “eliminatin­g” the man responsibl­e for Oslo becomes an existentia­l and religious imperative for Amir.

The subject, which still haunts Israel’s national conscience, could have repelled audiences and critics.

Instead, 160,000 have seen “Incitement” in Israeli theatres, in a country where local films often sell fewer than 10,000 tickets.

The film has also been selected to represent Israel at the Oscars in the best foreign film category.

“Incitement” strikes a sensitive chord by portraying members of Israel’s current political class — including premier Benjamin Netanyahu — as participan­ts in the social climate that contribute­d to Amir’s radicaliza­tion.

“I took the risk of showing him as a human being,” Zilberman said, in order to reveal the factors that “led him to his act”.

He added: “Among these factors there is at least one in our control to avoid the next assassinat­ion, and that is incitement.”

“Incitement” includes archival footage alongside filmed scenes. One sequence shows Netanyahu at a right-wing protest in Jerusalem at which demonstrat­ors brand Rabin a Nazi and traitor.

The scene has prompted anger from Culture Minister Miri Regev, who said the film suggested that Netanyahu participat­ed in calls for violence against Rabin.

But Zilberman said the contempora­ry context was crucial to understand­ing Amir.

“The convention­al wisdom was that this is an extremist weirdo, outside of society, a lone wolf who acted outside of any political camp… We discovered that this vision is totally untrue,” he said.

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