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TEL AVIV, Nov. 12 (Xinhuanet) -- Tens of thousands of Israelis on Saturday poured
into the Rabin Square in Tel Aviv, where former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin was
murdered 10 years ago.
Holding signs with slogans such as "The path to peace will never be
killed," the crowd stood for a moment's silence and sang memorial songs on the
square, which has seen numerous peace rallies since Rabin's assassination in
1995.
Rabin was shot dead by an ultranationalist Israeli Jew who opposed his 1993
interim peace deal with the Palestinians, for which he shared a Nobel Peace
Prize with the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.
Rabin came to believe that in exchange for real peace the Jewish state
should withdraw from the Gaza Strip and large parts of the West Bank, two
territories occupied while he was chief of staff in the 1967 Middle East war.
At Saturday's rally, an enormous picture of Rabin was hung behind the stage
next to the words "10 Years After The Murder" as thousands of sombre Israelis as
far as the eye could see listened to speeches and songs in the name of peace.
The rally began with a played recording of Rabin's last speech,an address
against violence, delivered in the same square one hourbefore he was shot by
Yigal Amir.
Waving Israeli flags and banners, some carrying candles, the crowd stood
shoulder to shoulder, faces tilted toward the stage towatch and listen to
footage looking back on Rabin's life and the fateful night 10 years ago.
Former US President Bill Clinton joined dozens of foreign dignitaries at
the rally. Clinton, who helped broker the 1993 peace accord, said he had loved
Rabin and urged Israelis see his work through.
"There has not been a week in the last 10 years, not a single week when I
have not thought of him and missed him. He is as real to me today as he was in
his last day on this earth," Clinton toldthe rally.
He urged the masses to carry on Rabin's legacy.
"Remember if hewere here he would say... If you really think I lived a good
life,if you think I made a noble sacrifice in death then for goodness sake take
up my work and see it through to the end," he said.

Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres, who also shared the1994 Nobel
peace prize with Rabin and Arafat, delivered an impassioned plea for peace.
"No one made peace in your place... You must give direction to an immense
peace movement. We don't want candles of remembrance, but flames of hope,"
shouted the 82-year-old veteran statesman.
The square is completely full. There are tens of thousands of people there.
More than 1,500 police are securing the whole area, said national police
spokesman Mickey Rosenfeld.
The rally begins a series of official ceremonies to honour Rabin's life and
death that will culminate on Monday, when the anniversary falls in accordance
with the Hebrew calendar.
Polls find that Rabin is considered Israel's best prime minister since the
Jewish state was set up in 1948.
Saturday's demonstration was the biggest peace rally in Israel since its
Gaza pullout on Sept. 12.
Violence has worsened since Rabin's death, especially during the past five years of a Palestinian uprising in which more than 3,400 Palestinians and almost 1,000 Israelis have been killed. Enditem
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