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Rabin
[rah-been]
noun
Yitzhak 1922–95, Israeli military and political leader: prime minister 1974–77 and 1992–95: Nobel Peace Prize 1994.
Rabin
/ rəˈbiːn /
noun
Yitzhak . 1922–95, Israeli statesman; prime minister of Israel (1974–77; 1992–95); assassinated
Example Sentences
Dr Michal Shteinman, director at Rabin Medical Centre where the three released hostages were treated, told the BBC their bodies still bore the marks of "this horrific captivity".
“As it gets more dire out there, there’s more incentive to try to make it work,” Timoner said of a congregation that includes Israelis, Americans, ardent Zionists, intense critics of Israel, progressives, moderates, those who can remember when Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated and those who weren’t yet born.
Yet he has also always wanted to expand Israel’s acceptance regionally and cement his legacy alongside former Israeli leaders such as Menachem Begin and Yitzak Rabin, both of whom made landmark peace deals with Arab countries such as Egypt and Jordan.
The peace was agreed by the current monarch's late father, King Hussein, with the late Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
Rabin was assassinated by a Jewish extremist the following year.
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