A Voice For Leah Rabin addressed a packed sanctu- ary at Temple Israel. ce Leah Rabin reiterates her pro peace and anti-Orthodox stances during her visit to Temple Israel. ALAN HITSKY Interim Editor "Our Shabbat is our Shabbat. Our holidays are our holidays. We feel 150 percent Jewish," she told the approv- ing .crowd. "How we live our Jewish life is each individual's priority. You need to let your voices be heard." The remaining questions dealt with the peace process. Mrs. Rabin down- played reports about Palestinian chair- hen Leah Rabin spoke on Sunday, 1,000 people in Temple Israel's sanc- tuary listened politely. But when the widow of slain Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin began answering questions from the audience, the crowd grew animated and she visi- bly relaxed. Mrs. Rabin's 30-minute speech looked back at the Middle East peace process, the successes in negotiating with the Palestinians and the political events in Israel leading up to her husband's murder two years ago. Airs. Rabin She gave a stinging ,intognzpimei rebuke to Orthodox Jewish cotyies 1 , ' her factions, who she blames in part for her husband's mur- der. "You [Reform and Conservative Jews] are the man Yassir Arafat's poor health. She majority, the strong part of Judaism in said her husband had tried to find the United States. another Palestinian leader for the "If the Orthodox don't recognize peace process "but found there was you, that's too bad. They are the only one Yassir Arafat. He has enor- minority in the U.S. and the minority mous standing among his people ... in Israel." just give them a chance." She said the Orthodox are trying to Giving the Palestinians a chance to control Jewish life in Israel and "it will make peace was a common thread never happen. during Mrs. Rabin's appearance at Temple Israel. She expressed the belief that autonomy would lead to a Palestinian statehood that should not be feared by Israelis. "We deterred Egypt and Syria three times [in war]. So what if the Palestinians say they want Tel Aviv. They won't have a strong army. The Palestinians will destroy our country? What non- sense! Egypt couldn't. Syria couldn't. So a few Palestinians with rifles will?" But on the issue of Jerusalem, Mrs. Rabin was unbending, saying flatly that there would be no partition of the Jewish capital. "Jerusalem is the strongest Jewish symbol for Jews throughout the world," she said. While there have been discus- sions about returning the Golan Heights and parts of Judea and Samaria in exchange for a true peace, 'we never said we'd give up Jerusalem. Once it was reunited, we would never divide it again." During the 1995 election campaign in Israel, opponents accused Yitzhak Rabin of planning to divide the city. "It was a vicious lie," Mrs. Rabin said. "Yitzhak fought for Jerusalem in 1948 and again in 1967. He would never divide it." She suggested that an undivided Jerusalem could serve as the capital of both Israel and the future Palestinian state. Asked what she would say to Americans who are afraid of visiting Israel, Mrs. Rabin quipped, "Are the& such?" She said visitors and Israelis have more to fear from Israel's danger- ous highways than from terrorism. "You have to be a fatalist," she said. "There is trouble in Paris, in Egypt, everywhere." In response to one of the final questions, Mrs. Rabin again chastised the Orthodox in Israel. She said the Labor and Likud political factions a could get along "if the Orthodox were not involved in politics. They are increasing their presence with lots of money." Then she drew laughter from her audience when she asked, "Do you think now I can go back to Israel?" Mrs. Rabin's appearance was part of Temple Israel's annual speaker's forum. She spoke at earlier events • during the day Sunday and auto- graphed copies of her book, Rabin: Our Life, His Legacy. A photographic exhibit featuring Yitzhak Rabin is on display in the Temple atrium through Dec. 15. El