Difference between revisions of "Shimon Peres" - New World Encyclopedia
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− | {{Infobox | + | {{Use dmy dates|date=September 2016}} |
− | | name | + | {{pp-semi-blp|small=yes}} |
− | | image | + | {{recentdeath}} |
− | | | + | {{Infobox president |
− | | primeminister = [[Ehud Olmert]] | + | |name = Shimon Peres |
− | + | |image = Shimon Peres in Brazil (cropped 2).jpg | |
− | | term_start | + | |caption = Peres in 2009 |
− | | term_end | + | |office = [[List of Presidents of Israel|9th]] [[President of Israel]] |
− | | predecessor | + | |primeminister = [[Ehud Olmert]]<br>[[Benjamin Netanyahu]] |
− | | successor | + | |term_start = July 15, 2007 |
− | | | + | |term_end = July 24, 2014 |
− | | | + | |predecessor = [[Moshe Katsav]] |
− | | | + | |successor = [[Reuven Rivlin]] |
− | + | |office1 = [[List of Prime Ministers of Israel|8th]] [[Prime Minister of Israel]] | |
− | | | + | |president1 = [[Ezer Weizman]] |
− | | | + | |term_start1 = November 4, 1995 |
− | | | + | |term_end1 = June 18, 1996<br>{{small|[[Acting (law)|Acting]]: 4 November 1995 – 22 November 1995}} |
− | | | + | |predecessor1 = [[Yitzhak Rabin]] |
− | | | + | |successor1 = [[Benjamin Netanyahu]] |
− | + | |president2 = [[Chaim Herzog]] | |
− | | | + | |term_start2 = September 13, 1984 |
− | | | + | |term_end2 = October 20, 1986 |
− | | | + | |predecessor2 = [[Yitzhak Shamir]] |
− | | | + | |successor2 = [[Yitzhak Shamir]] |
− | | | + | |president3 = [[Ephraim Katzir]] |
− | | | + | |term_start3 = April 22, 1977 |
− | | | + | |term_end3 = June 21, 1977<br>{{small|Acting (unofficial)}} |
− | | | + | |predecessor3 = [[Yitzhak Rabin]] |
− | | birth_date | + | |successor3 = [[Menachem Begin]] |
− | | birth_place | + | |office4 = [[Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Israel)|Minister of Foreign Affairs]] |
− | | party | + | |primeminister4 = [[Ariel Sharon]] |
− | | spouse | + | |deputy4 = [[Michael Melchior]] |
− | | children | + | |term_start4 = March 7, 2001 |
− | | | + | |term_end4 = November 2, 2002 |
− | | signature | + | |predecessor4 = [[Shlomo Ben-Ami]] |
+ | |successor4 = [[Benjamin Netanyahu]] | ||
+ | |primeminister5 = [[Yitzhak Rabin]] | ||
+ | |deputy5 = [[Yossi Beilin]]<br>[[Eli Dayan]] | ||
+ | |term_start5 = July 14, 1992 | ||
+ | |term_end5 = November 22, 1995 | ||
+ | |predecessor5 = [[David Levy (Israeli politician)|David Levy]] | ||
+ | |successor5 = [[Ehud Barak]] | ||
+ | |primeminister6 = [[Yitzhak Shamir]] | ||
+ | |term_start6 = October 20, 1986 | ||
+ | |term_end6 = December 23, 1988 | ||
+ | |predecessor6 = [[Yitzhak Shamir]] | ||
+ | |successor6 = [[Moshe Arens]] | ||
+ | |office7 = [[Ministry of Defense (Israel)|Minister of Defence]] | ||
+ | |term_start7 = November 4, 1995 | ||
+ | |term_end7 = June 18, 1996 | ||
+ | |predecessor7 = [[Yitzhak Rabin]] | ||
+ | |successor7 = [[Yitzhak Mordechai]] | ||
+ | |primeminister8 = [[Yitzhak Rabin]] | ||
+ | |term_start8 = June 3, 1974 | ||
+ | |term_end8 = June 20, 1977 | ||
+ | |predecessor8 = [[Moshe Dayan]] | ||
+ | |successor8 = [[Ezer Weizman]] | ||
+ | |office9 = [[Ministry of Finance (Israel)|Minister of Finance]] | ||
+ | |primeminister9 = [[Yitzhak Shamir]] | ||
+ | |term_start9 = December 22, 1988 | ||
+ | |term_end9 = March 15, 1990 | ||
+ | |predecessor9 = [[Moshe Nissim]] | ||
+ | |successor9 = [[Yitzhak Shamir]] | ||
+ | |office10 = [[Ministry of Transport and Road Safety|Minister of Transportation]] | ||
+ | |primeminister10= [[Golda Meir]] | ||
+ | |term_start10 = September 1, 1970 | ||
+ | |term_end10 = March 10, 1974 | ||
+ | |predecessor10 = [[Ezer Weizman]] | ||
+ | |successor10 = [[Aharon Yariv]] | ||
+ | |office11 = Member of the [[Knesset]] | ||
+ | |term_start11 = 3 November 1959 | ||
+ | |term_end11 = 13 June 2007 | ||
+ | |birthname = Szymon Perski | ||
+ | |birth_date = {{birth date|1923|8|2}} | ||
+ | |birth_place = Wiszniew, [[Second Polish Republic|Poland]]<br>{{small|(now [[Vishnyeva]], [[Belarus]])}} | ||
+ | |death_date = {{nowrap|{{Death date and age|2016|9|28|1923|8|2}}}} | ||
+ | |death_place = [[Sheba Medical Center]], [[Tel HaShomer]], [[Ramat Gan]], [[Israel]] | ||
+ | |party = [[Mapai]] {{small|(1959–1965)}}<br>[[Rafi (political party)|Rafi]] {{small|(1965–1968)}}<br>[[Israeli Labor Party|Labor]] {{small|(1968–2005)}}<br>[[Kadima]] {{small|(2005–2016)}} | ||
+ | |otherparty = [[Alignment (political party)|Alignment]] {{small|(1965–1991)}} | ||
+ | |spouse = Sonya Gelman {{small|(1945–2011)}} | ||
+ | |children = [[Tsvia Walden|Zvia]]<br>Yoni<br>Chemi | ||
+ | |alma_mater = [[The New School]]<br>[[New York University]]<br>[[Harvard University]] | ||
+ | |allegiance={{flag|Israel}} | ||
+ | |branch=[[Haganah]]<br/>[[Israeli Defense Forces]] | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | |signature = Shimon Peres Signature.svg | ||
}} | }} | ||
+ | '''Shimon Peres''' ({{Audio|He-Shimon_Peres.ogg|listen}}; {{lang-he|שמעון פרס}}; born '''Szymon Perski'''; August 2, 1923 – September 28, 2016) was a [[Second Polish Republic|Polish]]-born [[Israel]]i statesman. He was the [[List of Presidents of Israel|ninth]] [[President of Israel]], serving from 2007 to 2014. Peres served twice as the [[Prime Minister of Israel]] and twice as [[Acting Prime Minister|Interim Prime Minister]], and he was a member of twelve [[Cabinet of Israel|cabinets]] in a political career spanning over 66 years.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/870789.html|title=Presidency rounds off 66-year career|work=[[Haaretz]]|author=Amiram Barkat}}</ref> Peres was elected to the [[Knesset]] in November 1959 and, except for a three-month-long hiatus in early 2006, served continuously until 2007, when he became President, serving in the role for another seven years. At the time of his retirement in 2014, he was the world's oldest head of state. He was considered the last link to Israel's founding generation.<ref>[http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2016/09/shimon-peres-the-last-link-to-israels-founding-fathers/499868 Shimon Peres: The Last Link to Israel's Founding Fathers] by DAVID A. GRAHAM SEP 27, 2016, ''The Atlantic''</ref> | ||
− | ' | + | From a young age, he was renowned for his oratorical brilliance, and was chosen as a protégé by [[David Ben Gurion]], Israel's founding father.<ref>[http://www.tabletmag.com/jewish-news-and-politics/40409/making-history MAKING HISTORY] By [[Benny Morris]] |
+ | July 26, 2010, Tablet Magazine</ref> He began his political career in the late 1940s, holding several diplomatic and military positions during and directly after the [[1948 Arab–Israeli War|Israeli war of independence]]. His first high-level government position was as Deputy Director-General of Defense in 1952 which he attained at the age of 28, and Director-General from 1953 until 1959.<ref name=Nobel>{{cite web|url=http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1994/peres-bio.html|publisher=The Nobel Foundation|year=1995|editor=Tore Frangsmyr|title=Shimon Peres, The Nobel Peace Prize 1994}}</ref> In 1956, he took part in the historic negotiations on the [[Protocol of Sèvres]]<ref>''[http://www.france5.fr/programmes/articles/histoire/734-affaire-de-suez-le-pacte-secret.php Affaire de Suez, Le Pacte Secret]'', Peter Hercombe and Arnaud Hamelin, France 5/Sunset Presse/Transparence, 2006</ref> described by British Prime Minister [[Anthony Eden]] as the "highest form of statesmanship".<ref>''Eden'', By Peter Wilby, Haus Publishing, 2006</ref> He held negotiations with U.S. President [[John F. Kennedy]], which concluded the sale of [[MIM-23 Hawk|Hawk anti-aircraft missiles]] to Israel, the first sale of US military equipment to Israel.<ref>''Political Leaders of the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa: A Biographical Dictionary'', by Bernard Reich, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1990, page 406</ref> On 26 October 1994, Jordan and Israel signed the [[Israel–Jordan peace treaty]]<ref name=Israel-Jordan_peace>[https://www.knesset.gov.il/process/docs/peace-jordan_eng.htm ''Treaty of Peace Between the State of Israel and the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan''] 26 October 1994. On the Knesset website</ref>, which had been initiated by Israeli Prime Minister [[Yitzhak Rabin]] and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres. Peres won the 1994 [[Nobel Peace Prize]] together with [[Yitzhak Rabin]] and [[Yasser Arafat]] for the peace talks that he participated in as Israeli [[Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Israel)|Foreign Minister]], producing the [[Oslo Accords]].<ref name=Nobel/> During his career, he represented five political parties in the Knesset: [[Mapai]], [[Rafi (political party)|Rafi]], the [[Alignment (political party)|Alignment]], [[Labor Party (Israel)|Labor]] and [[Kadima]], and led Alignment and Labor. | ||
− | + | Peres was polyglot, speaking Polish, French, English, Russian, Yiddish and Hebrew, although he never lost his Polish accent when speaking in Hebrew.<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/28/shimon-peres-obituary Shimon Peres obituary] by Lawrence Joffe, Wednesday 28 September 2016</ref> In his private life, he was a poet and songwriter, writing stanzas during cabinet meetings, with some of his poems later being recorded as songs in albums.<ref>[http://www.nbcnews.com/id/32453580/ns/world_news-wonderful_world/t/poems-turn-song-israeli-ex-leader-turns/#.V-ta_fl97IU Poems turn to song as ex-leader turns 86] AP, updated 8/17/2009 7:55:07 PM ET</ref> As a result of his deep literary interests, he could quote from [[Nevi'im|Old Testament prophets]], French literature and Chinese philosophy with equal ease.<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/28/shimon-peres-obituary Shimon Peres obituary] by Lawrence Joffe, Wednesday 28 September 2016</ref> | |
− | + | Following a massive [[stroke]], Peres died after two weeks of hospitalization at the [[Sheba Medical Center]] near [[Tel Aviv]] on September 28, 2016.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://heavy.com/news/2016/09/shimon-peres-dead-how-did-the-former-israeli-prime-minister-die-cause-of-death-president/|title=Shimon Peres Dead: How Did the Former Israeli Prime Minister Die?|last=Levine|first=Daniel S.|date=27 September 2016|website=Heavy|language=en-US|access-date=28 September 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.timesofisrael.com/shimon-peres-the-last-of-israels-founding-fathers-dies-at-93/|title=Shimon Peres, the last of Israel’s founding fathers, dies at 93|work=[[The Times of Israel]]|date=September 28, 2016|last=Wootliff|first=Raoul|accessdate=28 September 2016}}</ref> | |
− | |||
− | |||
− | Peres' | + | ==Early life== |
+ | Shimon Peres was born '''Szymon Perski''', on 2 August 1923,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.knesset.gov.il/mk/eng/mk_eng.asp?mk_individual_id_t=104|title=Shimon Peres|accessdate=28 August 2008|publisher=The [[Knesset]]'s internet site}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pmo.gov.il/English/History/PastPMM/Pages/ShimonPeres.aspx|title=Shimon Peres:The Eighth Prime Minister|accessdate=28 August 2008|publisher=[[Prime Minister of Israel]]'s internet site}}</ref> in Wiszniew, [[Second Polish Republic|Poland]] (now [[Vishnyeva]], Belarus), to Yitzhak (1896–1962) and Sara (1905–1969 née Meltzer) Perski.<ref name=Nobel/><ref>[http://www.jewishinstitute.org.pl/pl/gminy/miasto/41.html Location of Wiszniew on the map of the Second Polish Republic in the years 1921–1939, www.jewishinstitute.org.pl]</ref> The family spoke [[Hebrew language|Hebrew]], [[Yiddish language|Yiddish]] and [[Russian language|Russian]] at home, and Peres learned Polish at school. He then learned to speak English and French.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.knesset.gov.il/mk/eng/mk_eng.asp?mk_individual_id_t=104|title=Knesset Member, Shimon Peres|publisher=Knesset|accessdate=13 February 2008}}</ref> His father was a wealthy timber merchant, later branching out into other commodities; his mother was a librarian. Peres had a younger brother, Gershon,<ref name="achievement">{{cite web|url=http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/per0bio-1|title=Shimon Peres Biography|publisher=Academy of Achievement|date=13 February 2008}}</ref> and was a relative of American film star [[Lauren Bacall]] (born Betty Joan Persky).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jpost.com/Israel/Peres-Not-such-a-bad-record-after-all|date=10 November 2005|title=Peres: Not such a bad record after all|accessdate=13 August 2014|work=[[The Jerusalem Post]]}}</ref> | ||
− | === | + | [[File:Shimon Peres ca1930.jpg|thumb|left|Shimon Peres (standing, third from right) with his family, ca. 1930]] |
− | In 1932, Peres' father immigrated to [[British Mandate of Palestine|Palestine]] and settled in [[Tel Aviv]]. The family followed him in 1934.<ref name="achievement" /> He attended Balfour Elementary School and High School, and Geula Gymnasium (High School for Commerce) in Tel Aviv. At 15, he transferred to [[Ben Shemen Youth Village|Ben Shemen agricultural school]] and lived on [[Geva|Kibbutz Geva]] for several years.<ref name="achievement" /> Peres was one of the founders of [[Kibbutz]] [[Alumot]]. In 1941 he was elected Secretary of [[ | + | Peres told Rabbi [[Menachem Mendel Schneerson]] that he had been born as a result of a blessing his parents had received from a [[Rebbe|chassidic rebbe]] and that he was proud of it.<ref>Joseph Telushkin. [[Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History|''Rebbe'']]. Page 132. HarperCollins, 2014.</ref> Peres' grandfather, Rabbi Zvi Meltzer, a grandson of Rabbi [[Chaim Volozhin]], had a great impact on his life. In an interview, Peres said: "As a child, I grew up in my grandfather's home. … I was educated by him. … My grandfather taught me [[Talmud]]. It was not as easy as it sounds. My home was not an observant one. My parents were not Orthodox but I was [[Haredi]]. At one point, I heard my parents listening to the radio on the Sabbath and I smashed it."<ref name=IsraelTimes>{{cite web|url=http://www.israel-times.com/news/2003/08/shimon-peres-1994-nobel-peace-prize-1869|title=Shimon Peres, 1994 Nobel Peace Prize|author=Judy L. Beckham|work=Israel Times|date=2 August 2003}}</ref> When he was a child, Peres was taken by his father to [[Radun']] to receive a blessing from Rabbi [[Yisrael Meir Kagan]] (known as "the ''Chofetz Chaim''").<ref>{{cite news |last=Levi Julian |first=Hana |date=July 12, 2007 |title=President Shimon Peres Agrees to Keep Shabbat—Once |url=http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/124501 |publisher=Arutz Sheva |access-date=September 27, 2016 }}</ref> As a child, Peres would later say, "I did not dream of becoming president of Israel. My dream as a boy was to be a shepherd or a poet of stars."<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2007/jul/16/israel.comment It is true that we have erred, but a bright spring awaits] Shimon Peres, Monday 16 July 2007, ''The Guardian''</ref> He inherited his love of [[French literature]] from his maternal grandfather.<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/28/shimon-peres-obituary Shimon Peres obituary] by Lawrence Joffe, Wednesday 28 September 2016</ref> |
+ | {{Quote box|width=246px|bgcolor=#c6dbf7|align=left|quote="Israeli children should be taught to look to the future, not live in the | ||
+ | past. I would rather teach them to imagine than to remember."|source=Shimon Peres, 2000<ref>Jerusalem Post, | ||
+ | May 4, 2000</ref>}} | ||
+ | In 1932, Peres' father immigrated to [[British Mandate of Palestine|Mandatory Palestine]] and settled in [[Tel Aviv]]. The family followed him in 1934.<ref name="achievement" /> He attended [[Gymnasia Balfour|Balfour]] Elementary School and High School, and Geula Gymnasium (High School for Commerce) in [[Tel Aviv]]. At 15, he transferred to [[Ben Shemen Youth Village|Ben Shemen agricultural school]] and lived on [[Geva|Kibbutz Geva]] for several years.<ref name="achievement" /> Peres was one of the founders of [[Kibbutz]] [[Alumot]]. In 1941 he was elected Secretary of [[HaNoar HaOved VeHaLomed]], a [[Labor Zionism|Labor Zionist]] youth movement, and in 1944 returned to Alumot, where he worked as a dairy farmer, shepherd, and kibbutz secretary. | ||
+ | [[file:Flickr_-_Government_Press_Office_(GPO)_-_Teenage_Shimon_Peres.jpg|thumb|left|A picture of 13-year-old Shimon Peres taken in Poland.]] | ||
+ | At age 20, he was elected to the HaNoar HaOved VeHaLomed national secretariat, where he was only one of two [[Mapai]] party supporters, out of the 12 members. Three years later, he took over the movement and won a majority. The head of Mapai, [[David Ben-Gurion]], and [[Berl Katznelson]] began to take an interest in him, and appointed him to Mapai's secretariat.<ref name=seventy>[http://www.president.gov.il/english/thepresident/pages/cv.aspx President Shimon Peres - Seventy years of public service]</ref> | ||
− | + | In 1944, Peres led an illicit expedition into the [[Negev]], then a closed military zone requiring a permit to enter. The expedition, consisting of a group of teenagers, along with a [[Palmach]] scout, a zoologist, and an archaeologist, had been funded by Ben-Gurion and planned by Palmach head [[Yitzhak Sadeh]], as part of a plan for future Jewish settlement of the area so as to include it in the Jewish state.<ref name = NYTdeath /> The group was arrested by a [[Bedouin]] camel patrol led by a British officer, taken to [[Beersheba]] (then a small Arab town) and incarcerated in the local jail. All of the participants were sentenced to two weeks in prison, and as the leader, Peres was also heavily fined.<ref>Gilbert, Martin: ''Israel: A History'' (Pages 116–117)</ref> | |
− | In | ||
− | + | All of Peres' relatives who remained in Wiszniew in 1941 were murdered during the [[The Holocaust|Holocaust]],<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1145452.html|title=Peres to German MPs: Hunt down remaining Nazi war criminals|date=27 January 2010|work=[[Haaretz]]|accessdate=27 January 2010}}</ref> many of them (including Rabbi Meltzer) burned alive in the town's synagogue.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Government/Speeches+by+Israeli+leaders/2010/Address_President_Peres_German_Bundestag_27-Jan-2010.htm |title=Address by Peres to German Bundestag |publisher=Mfa.gov.il |date=27 January 2010 |accessdate=12 June 2014}}</ref> | |
− | [[ | ||
− | In 1947, Peres joined the [[Haganah]], the predecessor of the [[Israel Defense Forces]]. [[David Ben-Gurion]] made him responsible for personnel and arms purchases. In 1952, he was appointed Deputy Director General of the Ministry of Defense, and | + | In 1945, Peres married Sonya Gelman, who preferred to remain outside the public eye. They had three children.<ref name="Ynet2007">{{cite web|url=http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3404483,00.html|title=Sonia Peres regains consciousness|accessdate=25 May 2007|publisher=[[Ynetnews]]|date=25 May 2007}}</ref> |
+ | |||
+ | In 1946, Peres and [[Moshe Dayan]] were chosen as the two youth delegates in the Mapai delegation to the Zionist Congress in [[Basel]].<ref name=seventy/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 1947, Peres joined the [[Haganah]], the predecessor of the [[Israel Defense Forces]]. [[David Ben-Gurion]] made him responsible for personnel and arms purchases; he was appointed to head the naval service when Israel received independence in 1948.<ref name = NYTdeath /> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Peres was director of the Defense Ministry's delegation in the United States in the early 1950s. While in the U.S. he studied [[English language|English]], [[economics]], and [[philosophy]] at [[The New School]] and [[New York University]], and advanced [[management]] at [[Harvard University]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/printmember/per0bio-1 |title=Biography: Shimon Peres |publisher=American Academy of Achievement |access-date=14 March 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Man in the News: Israeli Model of Endurance; Shimon Peres |work=The New York Times |date=6 August 1984 |url=http://www.nytimes.com/1984/08/06/world/man-in-the-news-israeli-model-of-endurance-shimon-peres.html }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last= Bar-Zohar |first=Michael |date=2007 |title=Shimon Peres: The Biography |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BGUwAQAAIAAJ&q=%22shimon+peres%22+%22harvard%22&dq=%22shimon+peres%22+%22harvard%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=me0EVdvZL4mrNrLJgKgK&ved=0CDQQ6AEwBA |location=New York, NY |publisher=Random House |pages=75–76 |isbn=978-1-40-006292-8}}</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Ministry of Defense == | ||
+ | In 1952, he was appointed Deputy Director-General of the [[Ministry of Defense (Israel)|Ministry of Defense]], and the following year, he became Director-General.<ref name = NYTdeath /> At age 29, he was the youngest person to hold this position.<ref name = CV /> He was involved in arms purchases and establishing strategic alliances that were important for the State of Israel. He was instrumental in establishing close relations with France, securing massive amounts of quality arms that, in turn, helped to tip the balance of power in the region.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Ziv |first=Guy |title=Shimon Peres and the French-Israeli Alliance, 1954–9 |journal=Journal of Contemporary History |volume=45 |issue=2 |pages=406–429 |doi=10.1177/0022009409356915 }}</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Owing to Peres' mediation, Israel acquired the advanced [[Dassault Mirage III]] French jet fighter, established the [[Negev Nuclear Research Center|Dimona nuclear reactor]] and entered into a tri-national agreement with France and the United Kingdom, positioning Israel in what would become the 1956 [[Suez Crisis]]. Peres continued as a primary intermediary in the close French-Israeli alliance from the mid-1950s,<ref name = NYTdeath /> although from 1958, he was often involved in tense negotiations with [[Charles de Gaulle]] over the Dimona project.<ref>{{cite book|title = Israel and the Bomb|first = Avner|last = Cohen|chapter = The Road to Dimona|pages = 57-78|year = 2013|publisher = [[Columbia University Press]]|isbn = 9780231500098|url = https://books.google.com.au/books?id=JR0wCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA79}}</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | === 1956 Suez Crisis=== | ||
+ | {{main|Suez Crisis}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | From 1954, as Director-General of the Ministry of Defense, Peres was involved in the planning of the [[1956 Suez War]], in partnership with France and Britain. Peres was sent by David Ben-Gurion to Paris, where he held secret meetings with the French government.<ref>The Economic Diplomacy of the Suez Crisis, By Diane B. Kunz, Univ of North Carolina Press, 1991, page 108</ref> Peres was instrumental in negotiating the Franco-Israeli agreement for a military offensive.<ref>''Suez: Britain's End of Empire in the Middle East'', Keith Kyle, I.B.Tauris, 15 February 2011</ref> In November 1954, Peres visited Paris, where he was received by the French Defense Minister [[Marie-Pierre Kœnig]], who told him that France would sell Israel any weapons it wanted to buy.<ref name="Neff, Donald pp. 162">Neff, Donald ''Warriors at Suez'', pp. 162–163.</ref> By early 1955, France was shipping large amounts of weapons to Israel.<ref name="Neff, Donald pp. 162"/> In April 1956, following another visit to Paris by Peres, France agreed to disregard the [[Tripartite Declaration of 1950|Tripartite Declaration]], and supply more weapons to Israel.<ref>Neff, Donald ''Warriors at Suez'', pp. 234–236.</ref> During the same visit, Peres informed the French that Israel had decided upon war with Egypt in 1956.<ref name="Neff, Donald p. 235">Neff, Donald ''Warriors at Suez'', p. 235.</ref> Throughout the 1950s, an extraordinarily close relationship existed between France and Israel, characterised by unprecedented cooperation in the fields of defense and diplomacy. For his work as the architect of this relationship, Peres was awarded the highest medal of the French [[Legion of Honor]].<ref name = CV>{{cite web|url = http://www.president.gov.il/English/ThePresident/Pages/CV.aspx|title = President Shimon Peres – Seventy years of public service|year = 2010|accessdate = 28 September 2016|publisher = Office of the President of Israel}}</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:King of Nepal, Shimon Peres and Ezer Weizman 1958.jpg|thumb|left|Peres (center) with [[Ezer Weizman]] and [[Mahendra of Nepal|King Mahendra]] of [[Nepal]] in 1958]] | ||
+ | At [[Sèvres]], Peres took part in planning alongside [[Maurice Bourgès-Maunoury]], [[Christian Pineau]] and Chief of Staff of the French Armed Forces General [[Maurice Challe]], and British [[Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs|Foreign Secretary]] [[Selwyn Lloyd]] and his assistant Sir [[Patrick Dean]].<ref>''[http://www.france5.fr/programmes/articles/histoire/734-affaire-de-suez-le-pacte-secret.php Affaire de Suez, Le Pacte Secret]'', Peter Hercombe and Arnaud Hamelin, France 5/Sunset Presse/Transparence, 2006</ref> Britain and France enlisted Israeli support for an alliance against Egypt. The parties agreed that Israel would invade the Sinai. Britain and France would then intervene, purportedly to separate the warring Israeli and Egyptian forces, instructing both to withdraw to a distance of 16 kilometres from either side of the canal.<ref name="users.ox.ac.uk">[http://users.ox.ac.uk/~ssfc0005/The%20Protocol%20of%20Sevres%201956%20Anatomy%20of%20a%20War%20Plot.html The Protocol of Sevres 1956 Anatomy of a War Plot]. University of Oxford. Retrieved 8 September 2011.</ref> The British and French would then argue, according to the plan, that Egypt's control of such an important route was too tenuous, and that it needed be placed under Anglo-French management. The agreement at Sèvres was initially described by British Prime Minister [[Anthony Eden]] as the "highest form of statesmanship".<ref>''Eden'', By Peter Wilby, Haus Publishing, 2006</ref> The three allies, especially Israel, were mainly successful in attaining their immediate military objectives. However, the extremely hostile reaction to the [[Suez Crisis]] from both the United States and the [[USSR]] forced them to withdraw, resulting in a failure of Britain and France's political and strategic aims of controlling the Suez Canal. | ||
==Political career== | ==Political career== | ||
− | + | Peres was first elected to the [[Knesset]] in the [[Israeli legislative election, 1959|1959 elections]],<ref name = NYTdeath /> as a member of the [[Mapai]] party.<ref name = CV /> He was given the role of Deputy Defense Minister, which he filled until 1965. Peres and Moshe Dayan left Mapai with [[David Ben-Gurion]] to form a new party, [[Rafi (political party)|Rafi]], which reconciled with Mapai and joined the [[Alignment (political party)|Alignment]] (a left-wing alliance) in 1968.<ref name = CV /> He held negotiations with [[John F. Kennedy]], which concluded with the sale of Hawk anti-aircraft missiles to Israel, the first sale of US military equipment to Israel.<ref>''Political Leaders of the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa: A Biographical Dictionary'', by Bernard Reich, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1990, page 406</ref> | |
− | Peres was first elected to the [[Knesset]] in the [[Israeli legislative election, 1959|1959 elections]], as a member of the [[Mapai]] party. He was given the role of Deputy Defense Minister, which he | + | |
+ | [[File:Flickr - Government Press Office (GPO) - ETHIOPIAN IMMIGRANTS DEMONSTRATING.jpg|thumb|Prime Minister Peres delivers a speech in front of [[Ethiopian Jews in Israel|Ethiopian Jewish]] immigrants, 2 October 1985]] | ||
+ | In 1969, Peres was appointed [[Immigrant Absorption Minister of Israel|Minister of Immigrant Absorption]] and in 1970 he became [[Transportation Minister of Israel|Minister of Transportation]] and Communications.<ref name = CV /> In 1974, after a period as [[Information Minister of Israel|Information Minister]], he was appointed Minister of Defense in the [[Yitzhak Rabin]] government, having been Rabin's chief rival for the post of Prime Minister after [[Golda Meir]] resigned in the aftermath of the [[Yom Kippur War]].<ref name = NYTdeath /><ref name = CV /> During this time, Peres continued to challenge Rabin for the chairmanship of the party, but in 1977, he again lost to Rabin in the party elections.<ref name = NYTdeath /> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Peres succeeded Rabin as party leader prior to the [[Israeli legislative election, 1977|1977 elections]] when Rabin stepped down in the wake of a foreign currency scandal involving his wife. As Rabin could not legally resign from the transition government, he officially remained Prime Minister, while Peres became the unofficial acting Prime Minister.<ref name = CV /> Peres led the Alignment to its first ever electoral defeat, when [[Likud]] under [[Menachem Begin]] won sufficient seats to form a coalition that excluded the left. After only a month on top, Peres assumed the role of opposition leader. After turning back a comeback bid by Rabin in 1980, Peres led his party to another, narrower, loss in the [[Israeli legislative election, 1981|1981 elections]]. In the [[Israeli legislative election, 1984|1984 elections]], the Alignment won more seats than any other party but failed to muster the majority of 61 mandates needed to form a left-wing coalition. Alignment and Likud agreed to an unusual "rotation" arrangement, or [[Twenty-first government of Israel|unity government]],<ref name = CV /> in which Peres would serve as Prime Minister and the Likud leader [[Yitzhak Shamir]] would be Foreign Minister, swapping positions mid-way through the term.<ref name = NYTdeath /> A highlight of this time in office was a trip to [[Morocco]] to confer with [[Hassan II of Morocco|King Hassan II]].<ref>{{cite book|chapter = Introduction|last = Mahler|first = Gregory S.|title = Israel after Begin|pages = 9-10|editor-first = Gregory S.|editor-last = Mahler|url = https://books.google.com.au/books?id=_6s2rogqCgMC&pg=PA10|publisher = [[SUNY Press]]|year = 2012|isbn = 9781438411699}}</ref> | ||
+ | {{Quote box|width=246px|bgcolor=#c6dbf7|align=right|quote="Peace is not the pursuit of war by other means. Peace consists of putting | ||
+ | an end to the red ink of past history and starting anew in a different color."|source=Shimon Peres, 1996<ref>''“Why We Need a Palestinian State”'', Le Monde, August 22, 1999</ref>}} | ||
+ | |||
+ | As part of the deal, after two years Peres and Shamir traded places, and in 1986 Peres became foreign minister. In 1988 the Alignment, led by Peres, suffered another [[Israeli legislative election, 1988|narrow defeat]]. He agreed to renew the coalition with the Likud, this time conceding the premiership to Shamir for the entire term. In the [[national unity government]] of 1988–90, Peres served as Vice Premier and [[Finance Minister of Israel|Minister of Finance]]. He and the Alignment finally left the government in 1990, after "[[The dirty trick (Israel)|the dirty trick]]" – a failed bid to form a narrow government based on a coalition of the Alignment, small leftist factions and [[Haredi Judaism|ultra-orthodox]] parties.<ref>{{cite book|title = Political Transformations and Political Entrepreneurs: Israel in Comparative Perspective|first = Assaf|last = Meydani|year = 2009|isbn = 9780230103979|chapter = Political Entrepreneurs and Institutional Change: The Case of Basic Law: The Government (1992)|pages = 41-104 (esp.75-76 and 85-85)|publisher = [[Springer Publishing]]}}</ref> | ||
− | === | + | ===Oslo Accords, Peace with Jordan, and Nobel Peace Prize=== |
− | + | [[File:Flickr_-_Government_Press_Office_(GPO)_-_Foreign_Min._Peres_and_King_Hussein.jpg|thumb|Shimon Peres (left) with [[Yitzhak Rabin]] (center) and [[King Hussein of Jordan]] (right), prior to signing the [[Israel–Jordan peace treaty]].]] | |
+ | [[File:Flickr - Government Press Office (GPO) - THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE LAUREATES FOR 1994 IN OSLO..jpg|thumb|[[Yitzhak Rabin]], Shimon Peres and [[Yasser Arafat]] receiving the [[Nobel Peace Prize]] following the [[Oslo Accords]].]] | ||
+ | From 1990 Peres led the opposition in the [[Knesset]] until, in early 1992, he was defeated in the first primary elections of the new [[Labor Party (Israel)|Israeli Labor Party]] (which had been formed by the consolidation of the Alignment into a single unitary party) by Yitzhak Rabin, whom he had replaced fifteen years earlier.<ref name = NYTdeath /> Peres remained active in politics, however, serving as Rabin's foreign minister from 1992.<ref name = NYTdeath /> Secret negotiations with [[Yasser Arafat]]'s [[PLO]] organization led to the [[Oslo Accords]], which won Peres, Rabin and Arafat the [[Nobel Peace Prize]]. After Rabin's assassination in 1995, Peres served as Acting Prime Minister and Acting Defense Minister for seven months until the [[Israeli prime ministerial and legislative election, 1996|1996 elections]], during which he attempted to maintain the momentum of the peace process.<ref>[http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.com/jsource/biograhphy/peres.html Jewish Virtual Library], {{dead link|date=June 2016|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref><ref name = CV /> | ||
− | + | On 26 October 1994, Jordan and Israel signed the [[Israel–Jordan peace treaty]]<ref name=Israel-Jordan_peace>[https://www.knesset.gov.il/process/docs/peace-jordan_eng.htm ''Treaty of Peace Between the State of Israel and the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan''] 26 October 1994. On the Knesset website</ref>, which had been initiated by Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres. The ceremony was held in the Arava valley of Israel, north of [[Eilat]] and near the Jordanian border. Prime Minister Rabin and Prime Minister Abdelsalam al-Majali signed the treaty and the [[President of Israel]] [[Ezer Weizman]] shook hands with [[Hussein of Jordan|King Hussein]]. US President [[Bill Clinton]] observed, accompanied by US Secretary of State [[Warren Christopher]]. The treaty brought an end to 46 years of official war between Israel and [[Jordan]]. | |
− | + | {{rquote|right|"Peace is very much like love. It is a romantic process — you have to be living it, you have to invest in it, you have to trust it. As you cannot impose love, so you cannot impose peace."|Shimon Peres, 1997<ref>San Diego Union-Tribune, August 29, 1997</ref>}} | |
− | + | On April 11, 1996, Prime Minister Peres initiated [[Operation Grapes of Wrath]],<ref>"[http://america.aljazeera.com/opinions/2014/7/israel-palestinianconflictgazawarpoliticsnetanyahu.html Israel's wars of choice push its politics further to the right]". [[Al Jazeera]]. July 22, 2014.</ref> which was triggered by Hezbollah Katyusha rockets fired into Israel in response to the killing of two Lebanese by an IDF missile. Israel conducted massive air raids and extensive shelling in southern Lebanon. 106 Lebanese civilians died in the [[1996 shelling of Qana|shelling of Qana]], when a UN compound was hit in an Israeli shelling.<ref>Lazar Berman,[http://www.timesofisrael.com/bennett-defends-actions-during-1996-lebanon-operation/ 'Bennett defends actions during 1996 Lebanon operation,'] [[The Times of Israel]] 5 January 2015.</ref> | |
− | + | [[File:Flickr_-_Government_Press_Office_(GPO)_-_Peres_and_Clinton.jpg|thumb|Shimon Peres with U.S. President [[Bill Clinton]] at the White House, April 1996.]] | |
+ | During his term, Peres promoted the use of the Internet in Israel and created the first website of an Israeli prime minister. However, he was narrowly defeated by [[Benjamin Netanyahu]] in the [[Israeli prime ministerial election, 1996|first direct elections for Prime Minister]] in 1996. In 1997 he did not seek re-election as Labor Party leader and was replaced by [[Ehud Barak]]. Barak rebuffed Peres's attempt to secure the position of party president and upon forming a government in 1999 appointed Peres to the minor post of [[Regional Development Minister of Israel|Minister of Regional Co-operation]].<ref>[http://www.timesofisrael.com/beloved-abroad-polarizing-at-home-peres-was-the-peace-making-face-of-israel/ "Beloved abroad, polarizing at home, Peres was the peace-making face of Israel"], ''The Times of Israel'', Sept. 28, 2016</ref> | ||
− | + | In 2000, Peres ran for a seven-year term as Israel's [[President of Israel|President]], a ceremonial head of state position which usually authorizes the selection of Prime Minister. Had he won, as was expected, he would have been the first ex-Prime Minister to be elected President. However, he [[Israeli presidential election, 2000|lost]] to Likud candidate [[Moshe Katsav]]. Katsav's victory was attributed in part to evidence that Peres planned to use the position to support the increasingly unpopular peace processes of the government of [[Ehud Barak]].<ref>{{cite book|url = https://books.google.com.au/books?id=Mz-fXRsedPMC&pg=PA247&dq=Katsav+president+peres&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi8ot60nbHPAhVCHpQKHY3nDEEQ6AEIJTAC#v=onepage&q=Katsav%20president%20peres&f=false|pages = 247-251|chapter = Israel|title = Profiles of People in Power: The World's Government Leaders|first1 = Roger|last1 = East|first2 = Richard|last2 = Thomas|publisher = [[Psychology Press]]|isbn = 9781857431261|edition = 1st|year = 2003}}</ref> | |
− | + | Following Ehud Barak's defeat by [[Ariel Sharon]] in the [[Israeli prime ministerial election, 2001|2001 direct election for Prime Minister]], Peres made yet another comeback. He led Labor into a national unity government with Sharon's Likud and secured the post of Foreign Minister.<ref name = CV /> The formal leadership of the party passed to [[Binyamin Ben-Eliezer]], and in 2002 to [[Haifa]] mayor [[Amram Mitzna]]. Peres was much criticized on the left for clinging to his position as Foreign Minister in a government that was not seen as advancing the peace process, despite his own dovish stance. He left office only when Labor resigned from the government in advance of the 2003 elections. After the party under the leadership of Mitzna suffered a crushing defeat, Peres again emerged as interim leader. He led the party into a coalition with Sharon once more at the end of 2004 when the latter's support of "disengagement" from Gaza presented a diplomatic program Labor could support.<ref name = CV /> | |
− | |||
− | + | Peres won the chairmanship of the Labor Party in 2005, in advance of the [[Israeli legislative election, 2006|2006 elections]]. As party leader, he favored pushing off the elections for as long as possible. He claimed that an early election would jeopardize both the September 2005 Gaza withdrawal plan and the standing of the party in a national unity government with Sharon. However, the majority pushed for an earlier date, as younger members of the party, among them [[Ophir Pines-Paz]] and [[Isaac Herzog]], overtook established leaders such as [[Binyamin Ben-Eliezer]] and [[Haim Ramon]] in the party ballot to divide up government portfolios. Peres continually led in the polls, defying predictions that rivals would overtake him. Peres lost the leadership election with 40% to Peretz's 42.4%.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/4423676.stm |title=Israel Labour head to meet Sharon|accessdate=13 June 2007|date=10 November 2005 |publisher=BBC News }}</ref> | |
− | |||
− | + | {{rquote|left|Optimists and pessimists die the same way. They just live differently. I prefer to live as an optimist.|Shimon Peres, 2005<ref>{{cite news| publisher=Newsweek Europe| date=12 December 2005| title=Serving 60 Years to Life}}</ref>}} | |
+ | {{Clear}} | ||
− | + | ===Support for Sharon and joining Kadima=== | |
+ | On November 30, 2005 Peres announced that he was leaving the Labor Party to support Ariel Sharon and his new [[Kadima]] party.<ref name = CV /> In the immediate aftermath of [[Illnesses of Ariel Sharon|Sharon's debilitating stroke]], there was speculation that Peres might take over as leader of the party; most senior Kadima leaders, however, were former members of [[Likud]] and indicated their support for [[Ehud Olmert]] as Sharon's successor.<ref>{{cite web | last = Verter | first = Yossi | title = Under Peres, Kadima would win 42 seats; under Olmert – 40 | work=Haaretz | date = 6 January 2006 | url = http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/667051.html | accessdate =21 July 2007 |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20060113043619/http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/667051.html |archivedate = 13 January 2006}}</ref> | ||
− | + | Labor reportedly tried to woo Peres back to the fold.<ref>{{cite web |author1=Mazal Mualem |author2=Yossi Verter |author3=Nir Hasson |last-author-amp=yes | title = Shimon Peres calls on his supporters to vote Kadima | work=Haaretz | date = 9 January 2006 | url = http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/667313.html | accessdate =21 July 2007 |archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20060113042519/http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/667313.html|archivedate=13 January 2006}}</ref> However, he announced that he supported Olmert and would remain with Kadima. Peres had previously announced his intention not to run in the [[Israeli legislative election, 2006|March elections]]. Following Kadima's win in the election, Peres was given the role of [[Israeli Vice Prime Minister|Vice Prime Minister]] and [[Development of the Negev and Galilee Minister of Israel|Minister for the Development of the Negev, Galilee and Regional Economy]].<ref name = CV /> | |
− | === | + | ==Presidency: 2007–2014== |
− | + | {{main|Presidency of Shimon Peres}} | |
+ | [[File:Shimon Peres to David Shankbone on his Presidency and future plans.ogg|thumb|Shimon Peres in December 2007 (audio)]] | ||
+ | [[File:Shimon Peres - World Economic Forum on the Middle East 2009.jpg|thumb|Shimon Peres at the [[World Economic Forum]] on the Middle East (2009)]] | ||
+ | [[File:Barack Obama welcomes Shimon Peres in the Oval Office.jpg|thumb|Shimon Peres meeting with U.S. President [[Barack Obama]] in the [[Oval Office]], 5 May 2009.]] | ||
+ | [[File:AmorimPeres.jpg|thumb|Shimon Peres and the [[Ministry of External Relations (Brazil)|Foreign Minister]] of [[Brazil]], [[Celso Amorim]], meet in [[Brasília]], 11 November 2009]] | ||
+ | [[File:Shimon Peres - World Jewish Congress - September 2010.jpg|thumb|Shimon Peres addressing a gathering of the [[World Jewish Congress]] in Jerusalem (2010)]] | ||
+ | On June 13, 2007, Peres was [[Israeli presidential election, 2007|elected President of the State of Israel]] by the Knesset. 58 of 120 members of the Knesset voted for him in the first round (whereas 38 voted for [[Reuven Rivlin]], and 21 for [[Colette Avital]]). His opponents then backed Peres in the second round and 86 members of the Knesset voted in his favor,<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6747517.stm|title=Peres elected Israel's president|date=13 June 2007|publisher=BBC News |accessdate=13 June 2007}}</ref> while 23 objected. He resigned from his role as a Member of the Knesset the same day, having been a member since November 1959 (except for a three-month period in early 2006), the longest serving in Israeli political history. Peres was sworn in as President on July 15, 2007.<ref name=VOA>Jim Teeple, [http://voanews.com/english/2007-07-15-voa14.cfm "Shimon Peres Sworn In as Israel's President"], VOA News, 15 July 2007.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{quote|Israel must not only be an asset but a value. A moral, cultural and scientific call for the promotion of man, every man. It must be a good and warm home for Jews who are not Israelis, as well as for Israelis who are not Jews. And it must create equal opportunities for all, without discriminating between religion, nationality, community or sex... I have seen Israel in its most difficult hours and also in moments of achievement and spiritual uplifting. My years place me at an observation point from which can be viewed the scene of our reviving nation, spread out in all its glory... Permit me to remain an optimist. Permit me to be a dreamer of his people. If sometimes the atmosphere is autumnal, and also if today, the day seems suddenly grey, the president Israel has chosen will never tire of encouraging, awakening and reminding - because spring is waiting for us. The spring will definitely come.|Shimon Peres, President's inaugural address, July 2007<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2007/jul/16/israel.comment It is true that we have erred, but a bright spring awaits] Shimon Peres, Monday 16 July 2007, ''The Guardian''</ref>}} | ||
− | + | In November 2008, Peres received an honorary knighthood, [[Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George]] from [[Queen Elizabeth II]] in Buckingham Palace in London.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1039485.html|title=Shimon Peres: State president, Nobel laureate and now – knight|date=23 November 2008|work=[[Haaretz]]|accessdate=8 July 2009}}</ref> | |
− | [[ | + | In June 2011, he was awarded the honorary title of ''[[sheikh]]'' by Bedouin dignitaries in [[Hura]] for his efforts to achieve Middle East peace. Peres thanks his hosts by saying "This visit has been a pleasure. I am deeply impressed by Hura. You have done more for yourselves than anyone else could have". He told the Mayor of Hura, [[Dr. Muhammad Al-Nabari]], and members of Hura's governing council, that they were "part of the Negev. It cannot be developed without developing the Bedouin community, so that it may keep its traditions while joining the modern world."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4082248,00.html|title=Peres becomes Sheikh|date=14 June 2011}}</ref> |
− | Peres | + | ==Political views== |
+ | Peres described himself as a "Ben-Gurionist", after his mentor Ben-Gurion.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://forward.com/articles/147083/secrets-of-ben-gurions-leadership/?p=all |title=Secrets of Ben-Gurion's Leadership |work=Forward |accessdate=12 June 2014}}</ref> | ||
− | + | As a younger man, Peres was once considered a "[[war hawk|hawk]]".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vision.org/visionmedia/article.aspx?id=591|title=Shimon Peres: From Hawk to Dove|accessdate=13 June 2007|publisher=Vision.org|date=Winter 2000}}</ref> He was a protégé of Ben-Gurion and Dayan and an early supporter of the West Bank settlers during the 1970s. However, after becoming the leader of his party his stance evolved. Subsequently he was seen as a dove, and a strong supporter of peace through economic cooperation. While still opposed, like all mainstream Israeli leaders in the 1970s and early 1980s, to talks with the [[PLO]], he distanced himself from settlers and spoke of the need for "territorial compromise" over the West Bank and Gaza. For a time he hoped that [[Hussein of Jordan|King Hussein]] of Jordan could be Israel's Arab negotiating partner rather than [[Yasser Arafat]]. Peres met secretly with Hussein in London in 1987 and reached a framework [[Peres-Hussein London Agreement|agreement]] with him, but this was rejected by Israel's then Prime Minister, [[Yitzhak Shamir]]. Shortly afterward the [[First Intifada]] erupted, and whatever plausibility King Hussein had as a potential Israeli partner in resolving the fate of the West Bank evaporated. Subsequently, Peres gradually moved closer to support for talks with the PLO, although he avoided making an outright commitment to this policy until 1993. | |
− | + | Peres was perhaps more closely associated with the [[Oslo Accords]] than any other Israeli politician (Rabin included) with the possible exception of his own protégé, [[Yossi Beilin]]. He remained an adamant supporter of the [[Oslo Accords]] and the [[Palestinian Authority]] since their inception despite the [[First Intifada]] and the [[Second Intifada|al-Aqsa Intifada (Second Intifada)]]. However, Peres supported [[Ariel Sharon]]'s military policy of operating the [[Israeli Defense Forces]] to thwart [[suicide bombing]]s. | |
− | + | Peres' foreign policy outlook was markedly realist. To placate Turkey,<ref>[http://www.middleeasteye.net/columns/israels-denials-armenian-genocide-are-hard-swallow-346187719 "Israel's denials of the Armenian Genocide are hard to swallow"], ''Middle East Eye'', 23 April, 2015</ref> Peres allegedly downplayed the [[Armenian genocide]].<ref name="The Banality of Denial, p 127"/> Peres stated: "We reject attempts to create a similarity between the Holocaust and the Armenian allegations. Nothing similar to the Holocaust occurred. It is a tragedy what the Armenians went through but not a genocide."<ref>[http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20010418/ai_n14382462 "Peres stands accused over denial of 'meaningless' Armenian Holocaust"], by [[Robert Fisk]]</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.anca.org/action_alerts/actionalerts.php?aaid=23 |title=Protest [against] Israeli foreign minister's remarks dismissing Armenian genocide as "meaningless" |publisher=Anca.org |accessdate=12 June 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Ravid |first=Barak |url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/897273.html |title=Peres to Turks: "Our stance on Armenian issue hasn't changed" |work=Haaretz |date=26 August 2007 |accessdate=12 June 2014}}</ref> Although Peres himself did not retract the statement, the Israeli Foreign Ministry later issued a cable to its missions which stated that "The minister absolutely did not say, as the Turkish news agency alleged, 'What the Armenians underwent was a tragedy, not a genocide.'"<ref name="The Banality of Denial, p 127">{{Cite book | last = Yair| first = Auron | title = The Banality of Denial: Israel and the Armenian Genocide | edition = 1st | year = 2003 | publisher=Transaction Publishers | location = New Brunswick (U.S.A.) | isbn = 0-7658-0191-4 | page = 127 | chapter = Chapter 5 – The Armenian Genocide's Recognition by States: The Israeli Aspect}}</ref> However, according to Armenian news agencies, the statement released by the Israeli consulate in Los Angeles did not include any mention that Peres had not said that the events were not genocide.<ref name="The Banality of Denial, p 127"/> | |
− | |||
− | + | On the issue of the [[nuclear program of Iran]] and the supposed existential threat this poses for Israel, Peres stated, "I am not in favor of a military attack on Iran, but we must quickly and decisively establish a strong, aggressive coalition of nations that will impose painful economic [[sanctions against Iran|sanctions on Iran]]", adding "Iran's efforts to achieve nuclear weapons should keep the entire world from sleeping soundly." In the same speech, Peres compared [[Iranian President]] [[Mahmoud Ahmadinejad]] and his [[Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Israel#Wiped off the map" controversy|call to "wipe Israel off the map"]] to the genocidal threats to European Jewry made by [[Adolf Hitler]] in the years prior to [[the Holocaust]].<ref>Pfeffer, Anshel. [http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/980926.html "Peres: 'Fight terror – reduce global dependence on oil'"], ''[[Haaretz]]''. 5 May 2008.</ref> In an interview with Army Radio on 8 May 2006 he remarked that "the president of Iran should remember that Iran can also be wiped off the map."<ref>[http://www.dominicantoday.com/dr/world/2006/5/8/13207/Peres-says-that-Iran-can-also-be-wiped-off-the-map "Peres says that Iran 'can also be wiped off the map'"], ''Dominican Today''. 8 May 2006</ref> Peres was a proponent of [[Middle East economic integration]].<ref>[http://www.arts.uwaterloo.ca/~bmomani/WE-%20MEFTA.pdf Speech by Peres at Waterloo University, Canada] {{wayback|url=http://www.arts.uwaterloo.ca/~bmomani/WE-%20MEFTA.pdf |date=20120311234338 |df=y }}</ref> | |
− | == | + | == Post-presidency == |
− | + | {{Quote box|width=246px|bgcolor=#c6dbf7|align=right|quote="Sometimes people ask me, ‘What is the greatest achievement you have reached in your lifetime?’ So I reply that there was a great painter named Mordecai Ardon, who was asked which picture was the most beautiful he had ever painted. Ardon replied, ‘The picture I will paint tomorrow.’ That is also my answer."|source=Shimon Peres, 2011 <ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/09/28/world/middleeast/shimon-peres-quotes.html|title=Shimon Peres's Reflections | |
− | + | on War, Peace and Life |work=The New York Times |language=en |accessdate=28 September 2016}}</ref>}} | |
− | + | Peres announced in April 2013 that he would not seek to extend his tenure beyond 2014. His successor, [[Reuven Rivlin]], was elected on 10 June 2014 and took office on July 24, 2014. | |
− | |||
− | Peres was | + | === Death === |
− | === | + | On September 13, 2016, Peres, aged 93, suffered a "massive [[stroke]]" and was hospitalized at the [[Sheba Medical Center]] in Israel.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/14/world/middleeast/shimon-peres-israel.html|title=Shimon Peres, Former Prime Minister of Israel, Suffers a Stroke|last=Baker|first=Peter|date=13 September 2016|newspaper=The New York Times|issn=0362-4331|access-date=28 September 2016|via=}}</ref> His condition stabilized, but on September 27, 2016 it was reported that he had suffered [[irreversible brain damage]] and [[organ failure]]<ref name = JPdeath>{{Cite web|url=http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Former-President-Peres-dies-at-93-467659|title=Shimon Peres, former president and veteran Israeli statesman, dies at 93|last=Wohlgelernter|first=Elli|date=28 September 2016|website=[[The Jerusalem Post]]|access-date=28 September 2016}}</ref> and was reportedly in terminal condition.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Siegel-Itzkovich|first1=Judy|date=27 September 2016|title=Peres's condition dramatically declines; family urged to say last goodbyes|url=http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Report-Peress-condition-worsens-468813|newspaper=[[The Jerusalem Post]]|access-date=27 September 2016}}</ref> He died the following day in hospital.<ref name = JPdeath /><ref name="death">{{cite news|url = https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/28/shimon-peres-former-israeli-leader-dies|date = 28 September 2016|accessdate = 28 September 2016|newspaper = [[The Guardian]]|title = Former Israeli leader Shimon Peres dies aged 93|first = Peter|last = Beaumont}}</ref> Peres was described by ''[[The New York Times]]'' as having done "more than anyone to build up his country’s formidable military might, then [having] worked as hard to establish a lasting peace with Israel’s Arab neighbors."<ref name = NYTdeath>{{cite news|url = http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/28/world/middleeast/shimon-peres-dies-israel.html|title = Shimon Peres Dies at 93; Built Up Israel’s Defense and Sought Peace|first = Marilyn|last = Bergersept|date = 27 September 2016|accessdate = 28 September 2016|newspaper = [[The New York Times]]}}</ref> |
− | |||
− | + | On his death, tributes were paid to him from leaders across the world. The President of Russia, [[Vladimir Putin]] said: "I was extremely lucky to have met this extraordinary man many times. And every time I admired his courage, patriotism, wisdom, vision and ability to get down to the essence of the most difficult issues."<ref>[http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/52976 Condolences on the death of Shimon Peres]September 28, 2016 10:55</ref> The President of the United States, [[Barack Obama]] said: "I will always be grateful that I was able to call Shimon my friend... He was guided by a vision of the human dignity and progress that he knew people of goodwill could advance together."<ref>[https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2016/09/27/statement-president-death-former-israeli-president-shimon-peres-0 Statement by the President on the Death of Former Israeli President Shimon Peres] September 27, 2016</ref> The President of China, [[Xi Jinping]] said: "His death is the loss of an old friend for China."<ref>[http://french.xinhuanet.com/2016-09/28/c_135720668.htm Chinese President Xi Jinping expressed condolences to Israeli President following the death of Shimon Peres] French.xinhuanet.com, Posted on 2016-09-28</ref> | |
− | + | ||
+ | ==Personal life and family== | ||
+ | {{Quote box|width=246px|bgcolor=#c6dbf7|quote="Every woman is civilization itself."|source=Shimon Peres, December 2015<ref>[http://saloona.co.il/blog/%D7%A4%D7%A8%D7%A1-%D7%9B%D7%9C-%D7%90%D7%99%D7%A9%D7%94-%D7%94%D7%99%D7%90-%D7%A6%D7%99%D7%95%D7%95%D7%99%D7%9C%D7%99%D7%96%D7%A6%D7%99%D7%94 Peres: 'Every woman is civilisation itself'] Saloona,28/09/2016 | ||
+ | </ref>}} | ||
− | Peres | + | In May 1945 Peres married Sonya Gelman, whom he had met in the [[Ben Shemen Youth Village]], where her father served as a carpentry teacher. The couple married after Sonya finished her military service as a truck driver in the [[British Army]] during World War II. Through the years Sonya chose to stay away from the media and keep her privacy and the privacy of her family, despite her husband's extensive political career.<ref name="JPostGelman"/> Sonya Peres was unable to attend Shimon's 2007 presidential inauguration ceremony because of ill health.<ref name="Ynet2007"/> With the election of Peres for president, Sonya Peres, who had not wanted her husband to accept the position, announced that she would stay in the couple's apartment in Tel Aviv and not join her husband in Jerusalem. The couple thereafter lived separately.<ref name="JPostGelman">{{cite web |last=Fay |first=Greer |url= http://www.jpost.com/NationalNews/Article.aspx?id=204511 |title=Jerusalem Post article on Sonya Gelman |work=The Jerusalem Post |date=20 January 2011 |accessdate=12 June 2014}}</ref> She died on January 20, 2011, aged 87, from [[heart failure]] at her apartment in [[Tel Aviv]].<ref name=av20jan>{{cite news|last=Cebedo|first=Earl|title=Wife of Israeli President Shimon Peres dies|url=http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/7947329-wife-of-israeli-president-shimon-peres-dies|accessdate=26 June 2013|newspaper=All Voices|date=20 January 2011}}</ref> |
− | + | Shimon and Sonya Peres had three children: | |
+ | * A daughter, Dr. [[Tsvia Walden|Tsvia ("Tsiki") Walden]], a linguist and professor at [[Beit Berl]] Academic College; | ||
+ | * An elder son, Yoni, director of Village Veterinary Center, a veterinary hospital on the campus of [[Kfar Hayarok]] Agricultural School near Tel Aviv. He specializes in the treatment of [[guide dog]]s; | ||
+ | * A younger son, Nehemia ("Chemi"), co-founder and Managing General Partner of [[Pitango|Pitango Venture Capital]], one of Israel's largest venture capital funds.<ref>[http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=920227&contrassID=2&subContrassID=4 "Not like other murderers"], ''Haaretz'', 5 November 2007</ref> Chemi Peres is a former helicopter pilot in the IAF. | ||
− | Peres | + | Peres was a cousin of actress [[Lauren Bacall]] (born Betty Joan Persky), although the two only discovered this in the 1950s. He said: "In 1952 or 1953 I came to New York... Lauren Bacall called me, said that she wanted to meet, and we did. We sat and talked about where our families came from, and discovered that we were from the same family".<ref name=haaretz>{{cite news| url=http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/culture/television/.premium-1.610399 | title=Shimon Peres remembers 'very strong, very beautiful' relative Lauren Bacall| work=[[Haaretz]]| first=Nirit| last=Anderman| date=August 13, 2014| location=[[Tel Aviv]]}}</ref> |
− | + | ===Poetry=== | |
+ | Peres was a life-long writer of poetry and songs. He wrote his first song when he was 8, during his childhood in Poland. He was inspired to write, including during cabinet meetings.<ref>[http://www.nbcnews.com/id/32453580/ns/world_news-wonderful_world/t/poems-turn-song-israeli-ex-leader-turns/#.V-ta_fl97IU Poems turn to song as ex-leader turns 86] AP, updated 8/17/2009 7:55:07 PM ET</ref> Many of his poems were turned into songs, with the proceedings of the albums going to charity.<ref>[http://www.nbcnews.com/id/32453580/ns/world_news-wonderful_world/t/poems-turn-song-israeli-ex-leader-turns/#.V-ta_fl97IU Poems turn to song as ex-leader turns 86] AP, updated 8/17/2009 7:55:07 PM ET</ref> The most recent of his songs was "Chinese Melody" (recorded with Chinese and Israeli musicians), released in February 2016, which he wrote to celebrate the [[Monkey (zodiac)|Year of the Monkey]].<ref>[http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/videos/1.702095 Shimon Peres Writes a Song to Celebrate Chinese New Year] Reuters, Haaretz, Feb 08, 2016</ref> | ||
− | == | + | ==Published works== |
− | Shimon Peres is the author of | + | [[File:65th Anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising (6).jpg|thumb|right|Peres at the 65th Anniversary of the [[Warsaw Ghetto Uprising]] ceremony with Polish president [[Lech Kaczyński]], 2008]] |
+ | Shimon Peres is the author of 11 books, including: | ||
*''The Next Step'' (1965) | *''The Next Step'' (1965) | ||
*''David's Sling'' (1970) (ISBN 0-297-00083-7) | *''David's Sling'' (1970) (ISBN 0-297-00083-7) | ||
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*''Battling for Peace: a memoir'' (1995) (ISBN 0-679-43617-0) | *''Battling for Peace: a memoir'' (1995) (ISBN 0-679-43617-0) | ||
*''For the Future of Israel'' (1998) (ISBN 0-8018-5928-X) | *''For the Future of Israel'' (1998) (ISBN 0-8018-5928-X) | ||
− | *''The Imaginary Voyage : With Theodor Herzl in Israel'' (1999) (ISBN 1-55970-468-3) | + | *''The Imaginary Voyage: With [[Theodor Herzl]] in Israel'' (1999) (ISBN 1-55970-468-3) |
+ | *''Ben Gurion: A Political Life'' (2011) (ISBN 978-0-8052-4282-9) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Awards and recognition== | ||
+ | {{Portal|Israel|Biography|Politics}} | ||
+ | * 1994 – [[Nobel Peace Prize]] together with [[Yitzhak Rabin]] and [[Yasser Arafat]]<ref name=Nobel /> | ||
+ | * 2008 – Honorary doctorate of Law from King's College London <ref>King's Awards Honorary Doctorate to Head of State, 18 November 2008 [http://www.kcl.ac.uk/newsevents/news/news-archive/2008/nov/Kings-Awards-Honorary-Doctorate-to-Head-of-State.aspx]</ref> | ||
+ | * 2008 – Honorarily appointed Knight Grand Cross of the [[Order of St Michael and St George]].<ref>[http://www.fco.gov.uk/resources/en/protocol/honours/2008-honoraries Foreign and Commonwealth Office] {{wayback|url=http://www.fco.gov.uk/resources/en/protocol/honours/2008-honoraries |date=20120925225259 |df=y }}</ref> | ||
+ | * 2012, June – [[Presidential Medal of Freedom]] from [[President of the United States|US President]] [[Barack Obama]]<ref name=2939sum /> | ||
+ | * 2014, 19 May – The [[United States House of Representatives]] voted on {{USBill|113|HR|2939}}, a bill to award Peres the [[Congressional Gold Medal]].<ref name=2939sum>{{cite web|title=H.R. 2939 – Summary|url=http://beta.congress.gov/bill/113th-congress/house-bill/2939|publisher=United States Congress|accessdate=20 May 2014}}</ref> The bill said that "Congress proclaims its unbreakable bond with Israel."<ref name=MarcosHouseVotes>{{cite news|last=Marcos|first=Cristina|title=House votes to award medal to Israeli president|url=http://thehill.com/blogs/floor-action/house/206560-house-votes-to-award-medal-to-israeli-president|accessdate=20 May 2014|newspaper=The Hill|date=19 May 2014}}</ref> | ||
− | == | + | ==See also== |
− | + | *[[List of Jewish Nobel laureates]] | |
− | + | {{clear}} | |
+ | ==References== | ||
+ | {{Reflist|30em}} | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
− | *[http://www.president.gov.il/ | + | {{Commons|Shimon Peres}} |
− | *[http://www. | + | {{Wikiquote}} |
− | *[http://www.peres-center.org Peres Center for Peace | + | *[http://www.president.gov.il/English/Pages/english.aspx Official Israeli Presidency website] |
− | *[http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9059215/Shimon-Peres | + | *{{MKlink|id=104}} |
− | *[http:// | + | *[http://www.youtube.com/Peres Official channel] on YouTube |
− | + | *[http://www.parsine.com/fa/news/62558 The day Peres became a Sheikh!]{{fa}} | |
− | *[ | + | *[http://www.peres-center.org Peres Center for Peace] |
− | *[http://www. | + | *[http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9059215/Shimon-Peres Biography] at the [[Encyclopædia Britannica]] |
− | *[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/4134419.stm BBC] | + | *[http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1994/peres-lecture.html Lecture] at [[NobelPrize.org]] |
− | *[http:// | + | *[https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/peres.html Shimon Peres biography] at the [[Jewish Virtual Library]] |
− | *[http://www.isracast.com/transcripts/291105a_trans.htm Former Labor Leader Shimon Peres Heading For Sharon's new party] | + | *{{C-SPAN|shimonperes}} |
− | *[http://uc.princeton.edu/main/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=608&Itemid=11/ Shimon Peres speaks at the Council on Foreign Relations about the Israel/Lebanon conflict] on July | + | *{{Charlie Rose view|144}} |
− | *[http://www.cornell.edu/video/viewer/peres.cfmv Shimon Peres speaks at Cornell University | + | *[http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/shimon-peres Column archive] at ''[[The Guardian]]'' |
+ | *{{Haaretztopic|Shimon_Peres}} | ||
+ | *{{JPosttopic|Shimon_Peres}} | ||
+ | *{{NYTtopic|people/p/shimon_peres}} | ||
+ | *{{Worldcat id|lccn-n79-138880}} | ||
+ | *[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/4134419.stm BBC] – Sharon seals new Israel coalition | ||
+ | *[http://fr.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1131367067166&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull Peres's metaphysical propensity to lose] by Matthew Wagner, published in the [[Jerusalem Post]], 10 November 2005. | ||
+ | *[http://www.isracast.com/transcripts/291105a_trans.htm Former Labor Leader Shimon Peres Heading For Sharon's new party] – recorded Report from IsraCast. | ||
+ | *[http://uc.princeton.edu/main/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=608&Itemid=11/ Shimon Peres speaks at the Council on Foreign Relations about the Israel/Lebanon conflict] on 31 July 2006 | ||
+ | *[http://www.cornell.edu/video/viewer/peres.cfmv Shimon Peres speaks at Cornell University – "A Conversation with Shimon Peres"] | ||
*[http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArtStEngPE.jhtml?itemNo=870789&contrassID=2&subContrassID=1&title=%27Presidency%20rounds%20off%2066-year%20career%20%27&dyn_server=172.20.5.5 "Presidency rounds off 66-year career"] by Amiram Barkat, [[Haaretz]] | *[http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArtStEngPE.jhtml?itemNo=870789&contrassID=2&subContrassID=1&title=%27Presidency%20rounds%20off%2066-year%20career%20%27&dyn_server=172.20.5.5 "Presidency rounds off 66-year career"] by Amiram Barkat, [[Haaretz]] | ||
− | *[http://www.un.org/ga/63/generaldebate/israel.shtml President Peres' address to the 63rd session of the United Nations General Assembly], September | + | *[http://www.un.org/ga/63/generaldebate/israel.shtml President Peres' address to the 63rd session of the United Nations General Assembly], 24 September 2008 |
+ | *{{YouTube|b8Nv7L7Gl9I|Segment Interview}} by [[Leon Charney]] on The Leon Charney Report | ||
+ | *{{YouTube|AfTTI2A-Lf0|Full Interview}} by [[Leon Charney]] on The Leon Charney Report | ||
− | {{start | + | {{s-start}} |
− | {{ | + | {{s-ppo}} |
− | {{ | + | {{s-bef|rows=2|before=[[Yitzhak Rabin]]}} |
− | {{ | + | {{s-ttl|title=Leader of the [[Alignment (political party)|Alignment]]|years=1977–1992}} |
− | {{end | + | {{s-aft|after=[[Yitzhak Rabin]]}} |
+ | |- | ||
+ | {{s-ttl|title=Leader of the [[Israeli Labor Party|Labor Party]]|years=1995–1996}} | ||
+ | {{s-aft|after=[[Ehud Barak]]}} | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | {{s-bef|before=[[Amram Mitzna]]}} | ||
+ | {{s-ttl|title=Leader of the [[Israeli Labor Party|Labor Party]]|years=2003–2005}} | ||
+ | {{s-aft|after=[[Amir Peretz]]}} | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | {{s-off}} | ||
+ | {{s-bef|before=[[Yitzhak Rabin]]}} | ||
+ | {{s-ttl|title=[[Prime Minister of Israel]]<br>{{small|Acting}}|years=1977}} | ||
+ | {{s-aft|after=[[Menachem Begin]]}} | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | {{s-bef|before=[[Yitzhak Shamir]]}} | ||
+ | {{s-ttl|title=[[Prime Minister of Israel]]|years=1984–1986}} | ||
+ | {{s-aft|after=[[Yitzhak Shamir]]}} | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | {{s-bef|before=[[Yitzhak Rabin]]}} | ||
+ | {{s-ttl|title=[[Prime Minister of Israel]]|years=1995–1996}} | ||
+ | {{s-aft|after={{nowrap|[[Benjamin Netanyahu]]}}}} | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | {{s-bef|before=[[Moshe Katsav]]}} | ||
+ | {{s-ttl|title=[[President of Israel]]|years=2007–2014}} | ||
+ | {{s-aft|after=[[Reuven Rivlin]]}} | ||
+ | {{s-end}} | ||
+ | {{Israeli Nobel Laureates}} | ||
+ | {{Nobel Peace Prize Laureates 1976-2000}} | ||
+ | {{1994 Nobel Prize winners}} | ||
+ | {{Navboxes|list1= | ||
{{Israelpres}} | {{Israelpres}} | ||
{{IsraelPMS}} | {{IsraelPMS}} | ||
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{{Israeli Religious Services Ministers}} | {{Israeli Religious Services Ministers}} | ||
{{Israeli Ministers of Transportation}} | {{Israeli Ministers of Transportation}} | ||
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+ | }} | ||
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+ | [[Category:Politicians and reformers]] | ||
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Revision as of 21:23, 28 September 2016
Template:Use dmy dates
Template:Recentdeath Template:Infobox president Shimon Peres (listen ▶; Hebrew: שמעון פרס; born Szymon Perski; August 2, 1923 – September 28, 2016) was a Polish-born Israeli statesman. He was the ninth President of Israel, serving from 2007 to 2014. Peres served twice as the Prime Minister of Israel and twice as Interim Prime Minister, and he was a member of twelve cabinets in a political career spanning over 66 years.[1] Peres was elected to the Knesset in November 1959 and, except for a three-month-long hiatus in early 2006, served continuously until 2007, when he became President, serving in the role for another seven years. At the time of his retirement in 2014, he was the world's oldest head of state. He was considered the last link to Israel's founding generation.[2]
From a young age, he was renowned for his oratorical brilliance, and was chosen as a protégé by David Ben Gurion, Israel's founding father.[3] He began his political career in the late 1940s, holding several diplomatic and military positions during and directly after the Israeli war of independence. His first high-level government position was as Deputy Director-General of Defense in 1952 which he attained at the age of 28, and Director-General from 1953 until 1959.[4] In 1956, he took part in the historic negotiations on the Protocol of Sèvres[5] described by British Prime Minister Anthony Eden as the "highest form of statesmanship".[6] He held negotiations with U.S. President John F. Kennedy, which concluded the sale of Hawk anti-aircraft missiles to Israel, the first sale of US military equipment to Israel.[7] On 26 October 1994, Jordan and Israel signed the Israel–Jordan peace treaty[8], which had been initiated by Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres. Peres won the 1994 Nobel Peace Prize together with Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat for the peace talks that he participated in as Israeli Foreign Minister, producing the Oslo Accords.[4] During his career, he represented five political parties in the Knesset: Mapai, Rafi, the Alignment, Labor and Kadima, and led Alignment and Labor.
Peres was polyglot, speaking Polish, French, English, Russian, Yiddish and Hebrew, although he never lost his Polish accent when speaking in Hebrew.[9] In his private life, he was a poet and songwriter, writing stanzas during cabinet meetings, with some of his poems later being recorded as songs in albums.[10] As a result of his deep literary interests, he could quote from Old Testament prophets, French literature and Chinese philosophy with equal ease.[11]
Following a massive stroke, Peres died after two weeks of hospitalization at the Sheba Medical Center near Tel Aviv on September 28, 2016.[12][13]
Early life
Shimon Peres was born Szymon Perski, on 2 August 1923,[14][15] in Wiszniew, Poland (now Vishnyeva, Belarus), to Yitzhak (1896–1962) and Sara (1905–1969 née Meltzer) Perski.[4][16] The family spoke Hebrew, Yiddish and Russian at home, and Peres learned Polish at school. He then learned to speak English and French.[17] His father was a wealthy timber merchant, later branching out into other commodities; his mother was a librarian. Peres had a younger brother, Gershon,[18] and was a relative of American film star Lauren Bacall (born Betty Joan Persky).[19]
Peres told Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson that he had been born as a result of a blessing his parents had received from a chassidic rebbe and that he was proud of it.[20] Peres' grandfather, Rabbi Zvi Meltzer, a grandson of Rabbi Chaim Volozhin, had a great impact on his life. In an interview, Peres said: "As a child, I grew up in my grandfather's home. … I was educated by him. … My grandfather taught me Talmud. It was not as easy as it sounds. My home was not an observant one. My parents were not Orthodox but I was Haredi. At one point, I heard my parents listening to the radio on the Sabbath and I smashed it."[21] When he was a child, Peres was taken by his father to Radun' to receive a blessing from Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan (known as "the Chofetz Chaim").[22] As a child, Peres would later say, "I did not dream of becoming president of Israel. My dream as a boy was to be a shepherd or a poet of stars."[23] He inherited his love of French literature from his maternal grandfather.[24]
<left>
"Israeli children should be taught to look to the future, not live in the
past. I would rather teach them to imagine than to remember." |
In 1932, Peres' father immigrated to Mandatory Palestine and settled in Tel Aviv. The family followed him in 1934.[18] He attended Balfour Elementary School and High School, and Geula Gymnasium (High School for Commerce) in Tel Aviv. At 15, he transferred to Ben Shemen agricultural school and lived on Kibbutz Geva for several years.[18] Peres was one of the founders of Kibbutz Alumot. In 1941 he was elected Secretary of HaNoar HaOved VeHaLomed, a Labor Zionist youth movement, and in 1944 returned to Alumot, where he worked as a dairy farmer, shepherd, and kibbutz secretary.
At age 20, he was elected to the HaNoar HaOved VeHaLomed national secretariat, where he was only one of two Mapai party supporters, out of the 12 members. Three years later, he took over the movement and won a majority. The head of Mapai, David Ben-Gurion, and Berl Katznelson began to take an interest in him, and appointed him to Mapai's secretariat.[26]
In 1944, Peres led an illicit expedition into the Negev, then a closed military zone requiring a permit to enter. The expedition, consisting of a group of teenagers, along with a Palmach scout, a zoologist, and an archaeologist, had been funded by Ben-Gurion and planned by Palmach head Yitzhak Sadeh, as part of a plan for future Jewish settlement of the area so as to include it in the Jewish state.[27] The group was arrested by a Bedouin camel patrol led by a British officer, taken to Beersheba (then a small Arab town) and incarcerated in the local jail. All of the participants were sentenced to two weeks in prison, and as the leader, Peres was also heavily fined.[28]
All of Peres' relatives who remained in Wiszniew in 1941 were murdered during the Holocaust,[29] many of them (including Rabbi Meltzer) burned alive in the town's synagogue.[30]
In 1945, Peres married Sonya Gelman, who preferred to remain outside the public eye. They had three children.[31]
In 1946, Peres and Moshe Dayan were chosen as the two youth delegates in the Mapai delegation to the Zionist Congress in Basel.[26]
In 1947, Peres joined the Haganah, the predecessor of the Israel Defense Forces. David Ben-Gurion made him responsible for personnel and arms purchases; he was appointed to head the naval service when Israel received independence in 1948.[27]
Peres was director of the Defense Ministry's delegation in the United States in the early 1950s. While in the U.S. he studied English, economics, and philosophy at The New School and New York University, and advanced management at Harvard University.[32][33][34]
Ministry of Defense
In 1952, he was appointed Deputy Director-General of the Ministry of Defense, and the following year, he became Director-General.[27] At age 29, he was the youngest person to hold this position.[35] He was involved in arms purchases and establishing strategic alliances that were important for the State of Israel. He was instrumental in establishing close relations with France, securing massive amounts of quality arms that, in turn, helped to tip the balance of power in the region.[36]
Owing to Peres' mediation, Israel acquired the advanced Dassault Mirage III French jet fighter, established the Dimona nuclear reactor and entered into a tri-national agreement with France and the United Kingdom, positioning Israel in what would become the 1956 Suez Crisis. Peres continued as a primary intermediary in the close French-Israeli alliance from the mid-1950s,[27] although from 1958, he was often involved in tense negotiations with Charles de Gaulle over the Dimona project.[37]
1956 Suez Crisis
From 1954, as Director-General of the Ministry of Defense, Peres was involved in the planning of the 1956 Suez War, in partnership with France and Britain. Peres was sent by David Ben-Gurion to Paris, where he held secret meetings with the French government.[38] Peres was instrumental in negotiating the Franco-Israeli agreement for a military offensive.[39] In November 1954, Peres visited Paris, where he was received by the French Defense Minister Marie-Pierre Kœnig, who told him that France would sell Israel any weapons it wanted to buy.[40] By early 1955, France was shipping large amounts of weapons to Israel.[40] In April 1956, following another visit to Paris by Peres, France agreed to disregard the Tripartite Declaration, and supply more weapons to Israel.[41] During the same visit, Peres informed the French that Israel had decided upon war with Egypt in 1956.[42] Throughout the 1950s, an extraordinarily close relationship existed between France and Israel, characterised by unprecedented cooperation in the fields of defense and diplomacy. For his work as the architect of this relationship, Peres was awarded the highest medal of the French Legion of Honor.[35]
At Sèvres, Peres took part in planning alongside Maurice Bourgès-Maunoury, Christian Pineau and Chief of Staff of the French Armed Forces General Maurice Challe, and British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd and his assistant Sir Patrick Dean.[43] Britain and France enlisted Israeli support for an alliance against Egypt. The parties agreed that Israel would invade the Sinai. Britain and France would then intervene, purportedly to separate the warring Israeli and Egyptian forces, instructing both to withdraw to a distance of 16 kilometres from either side of the canal.[44] The British and French would then argue, according to the plan, that Egypt's control of such an important route was too tenuous, and that it needed be placed under Anglo-French management. The agreement at Sèvres was initially described by British Prime Minister Anthony Eden as the "highest form of statesmanship".[45] The three allies, especially Israel, were mainly successful in attaining their immediate military objectives. However, the extremely hostile reaction to the Suez Crisis from both the United States and the USSR forced them to withdraw, resulting in a failure of Britain and France's political and strategic aims of controlling the Suez Canal.
Political career
Peres was first elected to the Knesset in the 1959 elections,[27] as a member of the Mapai party.[35] He was given the role of Deputy Defense Minister, which he filled until 1965. Peres and Moshe Dayan left Mapai with David Ben-Gurion to form a new party, Rafi, which reconciled with Mapai and joined the Alignment (a left-wing alliance) in 1968.[35] He held negotiations with John F. Kennedy, which concluded with the sale of Hawk anti-aircraft missiles to Israel, the first sale of US military equipment to Israel.[46]
In 1969, Peres was appointed Minister of Immigrant Absorption and in 1970 he became Minister of Transportation and Communications.[35] In 1974, after a period as Information Minister, he was appointed Minister of Defense in the Yitzhak Rabin government, having been Rabin's chief rival for the post of Prime Minister after Golda Meir resigned in the aftermath of the Yom Kippur War.[27][35] During this time, Peres continued to challenge Rabin for the chairmanship of the party, but in 1977, he again lost to Rabin in the party elections.[27]
Peres succeeded Rabin as party leader prior to the 1977 elections when Rabin stepped down in the wake of a foreign currency scandal involving his wife. As Rabin could not legally resign from the transition government, he officially remained Prime Minister, while Peres became the unofficial acting Prime Minister.[35] Peres led the Alignment to its first ever electoral defeat, when Likud under Menachem Begin won sufficient seats to form a coalition that excluded the left. After only a month on top, Peres assumed the role of opposition leader. After turning back a comeback bid by Rabin in 1980, Peres led his party to another, narrower, loss in the 1981 elections. In the 1984 elections, the Alignment won more seats than any other party but failed to muster the majority of 61 mandates needed to form a left-wing coalition. Alignment and Likud agreed to an unusual "rotation" arrangement, or unity government,[35] in which Peres would serve as Prime Minister and the Likud leader Yitzhak Shamir would be Foreign Minister, swapping positions mid-way through the term.[27] A highlight of this time in office was a trip to Morocco to confer with King Hassan II.[47]
"Peace is not the pursuit of war by other means. Peace consists of putting
an end to the red ink of past history and starting anew in a different color." |
As part of the deal, after two years Peres and Shamir traded places, and in 1986 Peres became foreign minister. In 1988 the Alignment, led by Peres, suffered another narrow defeat. He agreed to renew the coalition with the Likud, this time conceding the premiership to Shamir for the entire term. In the national unity government of 1988–90, Peres served as Vice Premier and Minister of Finance. He and the Alignment finally left the government in 1990, after "the dirty trick" – a failed bid to form a narrow government based on a coalition of the Alignment, small leftist factions and ultra-orthodox parties.[49]
Oslo Accords, Peace with Jordan, and Nobel Peace Prize
From 1990 Peres led the opposition in the Knesset until, in early 1992, he was defeated in the first primary elections of the new Israeli Labor Party (which had been formed by the consolidation of the Alignment into a single unitary party) by Yitzhak Rabin, whom he had replaced fifteen years earlier.[27] Peres remained active in politics, however, serving as Rabin's foreign minister from 1992.[27] Secret negotiations with Yasser Arafat's PLO organization led to the Oslo Accords, which won Peres, Rabin and Arafat the Nobel Peace Prize. After Rabin's assassination in 1995, Peres served as Acting Prime Minister and Acting Defense Minister for seven months until the 1996 elections, during which he attempted to maintain the momentum of the peace process.[50][35]
On 26 October 1994, Jordan and Israel signed the Israel–Jordan peace treaty[8], which had been initiated by Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Foreign Minister Shimon Peres. The ceremony was held in the Arava valley of Israel, north of Eilat and near the Jordanian border. Prime Minister Rabin and Prime Minister Abdelsalam al-Majali signed the treaty and the President of Israel Ezer Weizman shook hands with King Hussein. US President Bill Clinton observed, accompanied by US Secretary of State Warren Christopher. The treaty brought an end to 46 years of official war between Israel and Jordan.
“ | "Peace is very much like love. It is a romantic process — you have to be living it, you have to invest in it, you have to trust it. As you cannot impose love, so you cannot impose peace." | ” |
—Shimon Peres, 1997[51] |
On April 11, 1996, Prime Minister Peres initiated Operation Grapes of Wrath,[52] which was triggered by Hezbollah Katyusha rockets fired into Israel in response to the killing of two Lebanese by an IDF missile. Israel conducted massive air raids and extensive shelling in southern Lebanon. 106 Lebanese civilians died in the shelling of Qana, when a UN compound was hit in an Israeli shelling.[53]
During his term, Peres promoted the use of the Internet in Israel and created the first website of an Israeli prime minister. However, he was narrowly defeated by Benjamin Netanyahu in the first direct elections for Prime Minister in 1996. In 1997 he did not seek re-election as Labor Party leader and was replaced by Ehud Barak. Barak rebuffed Peres's attempt to secure the position of party president and upon forming a government in 1999 appointed Peres to the minor post of Minister of Regional Co-operation.[54]
In 2000, Peres ran for a seven-year term as Israel's President, a ceremonial head of state position which usually authorizes the selection of Prime Minister. Had he won, as was expected, he would have been the first ex-Prime Minister to be elected President. However, he lost to Likud candidate Moshe Katsav. Katsav's victory was attributed in part to evidence that Peres planned to use the position to support the increasingly unpopular peace processes of the government of Ehud Barak.[55]
Following Ehud Barak's defeat by Ariel Sharon in the 2001 direct election for Prime Minister, Peres made yet another comeback. He led Labor into a national unity government with Sharon's Likud and secured the post of Foreign Minister.[35] The formal leadership of the party passed to Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, and in 2002 to Haifa mayor Amram Mitzna. Peres was much criticized on the left for clinging to his position as Foreign Minister in a government that was not seen as advancing the peace process, despite his own dovish stance. He left office only when Labor resigned from the government in advance of the 2003 elections. After the party under the leadership of Mitzna suffered a crushing defeat, Peres again emerged as interim leader. He led the party into a coalition with Sharon once more at the end of 2004 when the latter's support of "disengagement" from Gaza presented a diplomatic program Labor could support.[35]
Peres won the chairmanship of the Labor Party in 2005, in advance of the 2006 elections. As party leader, he favored pushing off the elections for as long as possible. He claimed that an early election would jeopardize both the September 2005 Gaza withdrawal plan and the standing of the party in a national unity government with Sharon. However, the majority pushed for an earlier date, as younger members of the party, among them Ophir Pines-Paz and Isaac Herzog, overtook established leaders such as Binyamin Ben-Eliezer and Haim Ramon in the party ballot to divide up government portfolios. Peres continually led in the polls, defying predictions that rivals would overtake him. Peres lost the leadership election with 40% to Peretz's 42.4%.[56]
“ | Optimists and pessimists die the same way. They just live differently. I prefer to live as an optimist. | ” |
—Shimon Peres, 2005[57] |
Support for Sharon and joining Kadima
On November 30, 2005 Peres announced that he was leaving the Labor Party to support Ariel Sharon and his new Kadima party.[35] In the immediate aftermath of Sharon's debilitating stroke, there was speculation that Peres might take over as leader of the party; most senior Kadima leaders, however, were former members of Likud and indicated their support for Ehud Olmert as Sharon's successor.[58]
Labor reportedly tried to woo Peres back to the fold.[59] However, he announced that he supported Olmert and would remain with Kadima. Peres had previously announced his intention not to run in the March elections. Following Kadima's win in the election, Peres was given the role of Vice Prime Minister and Minister for the Development of the Negev, Galilee and Regional Economy.[35]
Presidency: 2007–2014
On June 13, 2007, Peres was elected President of the State of Israel by the Knesset. 58 of 120 members of the Knesset voted for him in the first round (whereas 38 voted for Reuven Rivlin, and 21 for Colette Avital). His opponents then backed Peres in the second round and 86 members of the Knesset voted in his favor,[60] while 23 objected. He resigned from his role as a Member of the Knesset the same day, having been a member since November 1959 (except for a three-month period in early 2006), the longest serving in Israeli political history. Peres was sworn in as President on July 15, 2007.[61]
Israel must not only be an asset but a value. A moral, cultural and scientific call for the promotion of man, every man. It must be a good and warm home for Jews who are not Israelis, as well as for Israelis who are not Jews. And it must create equal opportunities for all, without discriminating between religion, nationality, community or sex... I have seen Israel in its most difficult hours and also in moments of achievement and spiritual uplifting. My years place me at an observation point from which can be viewed the scene of our reviving nation, spread out in all its glory... Permit me to remain an optimist. Permit me to be a dreamer of his people. If sometimes the atmosphere is autumnal, and also if today, the day seems suddenly grey, the president Israel has chosen will never tire of encouraging, awakening and reminding - because spring is waiting for us. The spring will definitely come.
Shimon Peres, President's inaugural address, July 2007[62]
In November 2008, Peres received an honorary knighthood, Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George from Queen Elizabeth II in Buckingham Palace in London.[63]
In June 2011, he was awarded the honorary title of sheikh by Bedouin dignitaries in Hura for his efforts to achieve Middle East peace. Peres thanks his hosts by saying "This visit has been a pleasure. I am deeply impressed by Hura. You have done more for yourselves than anyone else could have". He told the Mayor of Hura, Dr. Muhammad Al-Nabari, and members of Hura's governing council, that they were "part of the Negev. It cannot be developed without developing the Bedouin community, so that it may keep its traditions while joining the modern world."[64]
Political views
Peres described himself as a "Ben-Gurionist", after his mentor Ben-Gurion.[65]
As a younger man, Peres was once considered a "hawk".[66] He was a protégé of Ben-Gurion and Dayan and an early supporter of the West Bank settlers during the 1970s. However, after becoming the leader of his party his stance evolved. Subsequently he was seen as a dove, and a strong supporter of peace through economic cooperation. While still opposed, like all mainstream Israeli leaders in the 1970s and early 1980s, to talks with the PLO, he distanced himself from settlers and spoke of the need for "territorial compromise" over the West Bank and Gaza. For a time he hoped that King Hussein of Jordan could be Israel's Arab negotiating partner rather than Yasser Arafat. Peres met secretly with Hussein in London in 1987 and reached a framework agreement with him, but this was rejected by Israel's then Prime Minister, Yitzhak Shamir. Shortly afterward the First Intifada erupted, and whatever plausibility King Hussein had as a potential Israeli partner in resolving the fate of the West Bank evaporated. Subsequently, Peres gradually moved closer to support for talks with the PLO, although he avoided making an outright commitment to this policy until 1993.
Peres was perhaps more closely associated with the Oslo Accords than any other Israeli politician (Rabin included) with the possible exception of his own protégé, Yossi Beilin. He remained an adamant supporter of the Oslo Accords and the Palestinian Authority since their inception despite the First Intifada and the al-Aqsa Intifada (Second Intifada). However, Peres supported Ariel Sharon's military policy of operating the Israeli Defense Forces to thwart suicide bombings.
Peres' foreign policy outlook was markedly realist. To placate Turkey,[67] Peres allegedly downplayed the Armenian genocide.[68] Peres stated: "We reject attempts to create a similarity between the Holocaust and the Armenian allegations. Nothing similar to the Holocaust occurred. It is a tragedy what the Armenians went through but not a genocide."[69][70][71] Although Peres himself did not retract the statement, the Israeli Foreign Ministry later issued a cable to its missions which stated that "The minister absolutely did not say, as the Turkish news agency alleged, 'What the Armenians underwent was a tragedy, not a genocide.'"[68] However, according to Armenian news agencies, the statement released by the Israeli consulate in Los Angeles did not include any mention that Peres had not said that the events were not genocide.[68]
On the issue of the nuclear program of Iran and the supposed existential threat this poses for Israel, Peres stated, "I am not in favor of a military attack on Iran, but we must quickly and decisively establish a strong, aggressive coalition of nations that will impose painful economic sanctions on Iran", adding "Iran's efforts to achieve nuclear weapons should keep the entire world from sleeping soundly." In the same speech, Peres compared Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his call to "wipe Israel off the map" to the genocidal threats to European Jewry made by Adolf Hitler in the years prior to the Holocaust.[72] In an interview with Army Radio on 8 May 2006 he remarked that "the president of Iran should remember that Iran can also be wiped off the map."[73] Peres was a proponent of Middle East economic integration.[74]
Post-presidency
"Sometimes people ask me, ‘What is the greatest achievement you have reached in your lifetime?’ So I reply that there was a great painter named Mordecai Ardon, who was asked which picture was the most beautiful he had ever painted. Ardon replied, ‘The picture I will paint tomorrow.’ That is also my answer." —Shimon Peres, 2011 [75] |
Peres announced in April 2013 that he would not seek to extend his tenure beyond 2014. His successor, Reuven Rivlin, was elected on 10 June 2014 and took office on July 24, 2014.
Death
On September 13, 2016, Peres, aged 93, suffered a "massive stroke" and was hospitalized at the Sheba Medical Center in Israel.[76] His condition stabilized, but on September 27, 2016 it was reported that he had suffered irreversible brain damage and organ failure[77] and was reportedly in terminal condition.[78] He died the following day in hospital.[77][79] Peres was described by The New York Times as having done "more than anyone to build up his country’s formidable military might, then [having] worked as hard to establish a lasting peace with Israel’s Arab neighbors."[27]
On his death, tributes were paid to him from leaders across the world. The President of Russia, Vladimir Putin said: "I was extremely lucky to have met this extraordinary man many times. And every time I admired his courage, patriotism, wisdom, vision and ability to get down to the essence of the most difficult issues."[80] The President of the United States, Barack Obama said: "I will always be grateful that I was able to call Shimon my friend... He was guided by a vision of the human dignity and progress that he knew people of goodwill could advance together."[81] The President of China, Xi Jinping said: "His death is the loss of an old friend for China."[82]
Personal life and family
"Every woman is civilization itself." —Shimon Peres, December 2015[83] |
In May 1945 Peres married Sonya Gelman, whom he had met in the Ben Shemen Youth Village, where her father served as a carpentry teacher. The couple married after Sonya finished her military service as a truck driver in the British Army during World War II. Through the years Sonya chose to stay away from the media and keep her privacy and the privacy of her family, despite her husband's extensive political career.[84] Sonya Peres was unable to attend Shimon's 2007 presidential inauguration ceremony because of ill health.[31] With the election of Peres for president, Sonya Peres, who had not wanted her husband to accept the position, announced that she would stay in the couple's apartment in Tel Aviv and not join her husband in Jerusalem. The couple thereafter lived separately.[84] She died on January 20, 2011, aged 87, from heart failure at her apartment in Tel Aviv.[85]
Shimon and Sonya Peres had three children:
- A daughter, Dr. Tsvia ("Tsiki") Walden, a linguist and professor at Beit Berl Academic College;
- An elder son, Yoni, director of Village Veterinary Center, a veterinary hospital on the campus of Kfar Hayarok Agricultural School near Tel Aviv. He specializes in the treatment of guide dogs;
- A younger son, Nehemia ("Chemi"), co-founder and Managing General Partner of Pitango Venture Capital, one of Israel's largest venture capital funds.[86] Chemi Peres is a former helicopter pilot in the IAF.
Peres was a cousin of actress Lauren Bacall (born Betty Joan Persky), although the two only discovered this in the 1950s. He said: "In 1952 or 1953 I came to New York... Lauren Bacall called me, said that she wanted to meet, and we did. We sat and talked about where our families came from, and discovered that we were from the same family".[87]
Poetry
Peres was a life-long writer of poetry and songs. He wrote his first song when he was 8, during his childhood in Poland. He was inspired to write, including during cabinet meetings.[88] Many of his poems were turned into songs, with the proceedings of the albums going to charity.[89] The most recent of his songs was "Chinese Melody" (recorded with Chinese and Israeli musicians), released in February 2016, which he wrote to celebrate the Year of the Monkey.[90]
Published works
Shimon Peres is the author of 11 books, including:
- The Next Step (1965)
- David's Sling (1970) (ISBN 0-297-00083-7)
- And Now Tomorrow (1978)
- From These Men: seven founders of the State of Israel (1979) (ISBN 0-671-61016-3)
- Entebbe Diary (1991) (ISBN 965-248-111-4)
- The New Middle East (1993) (ISBN 0-8050-3323-8)
- Battling for Peace: a memoir (1995) (ISBN 0-679-43617-0)
- For the Future of Israel (1998) (ISBN 0-8018-5928-X)
- The Imaginary Voyage: With Theodor Herzl in Israel (1999) (ISBN 1-55970-468-3)
- Ben Gurion: A Political Life (2011) (ISBN 978-0-8052-4282-9)
Awards and recognition
- 1994 – Nobel Peace Prize together with Yitzhak Rabin and Yasser Arafat[4]
- 2008 – Honorary doctorate of Law from King's College London [91]
- 2008 – Honorarily appointed Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George.[92]
- 2012, June – Presidential Medal of Freedom from US President Barack Obama[93]
- 2014, 19 May – The United States House of Representatives voted on H.R. 2939, a bill to award Peres the Congressional Gold Medal.[93] The bill said that "Congress proclaims its unbreakable bond with Israel."[94]
See also
- List of Jewish Nobel laureates
ReferencesISBN links support NWE through referral fees
- ↑ Amiram Barkat. Presidency rounds off 66-year career. Haaretz.
- ↑ Shimon Peres: The Last Link to Israel's Founding Fathers by DAVID A. GRAHAM SEP 27, 2016, The Atlantic
- ↑ MAKING HISTORY By Benny Morris July 26, 2010, Tablet Magazine
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Shimon Peres, The Nobel Peace Prize 1994. The Nobel Foundation (1995).
- ↑ Affaire de Suez, Le Pacte Secret, Peter Hercombe and Arnaud Hamelin, France 5/Sunset Presse/Transparence, 2006
- ↑ Eden, By Peter Wilby, Haus Publishing, 2006
- ↑ Political Leaders of the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa: A Biographical Dictionary, by Bernard Reich, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1990, page 406
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Treaty of Peace Between the State of Israel and the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan 26 October 1994. On the Knesset website
- ↑ Shimon Peres obituary by Lawrence Joffe, Wednesday 28 September 2016
- ↑ Poems turn to song as ex-leader turns 86 AP, updated 8/17/2009 7:55:07 PM ET
- ↑ Shimon Peres obituary by Lawrence Joffe, Wednesday 28 September 2016
- ↑ Levine, Daniel S. (27 September 2016). Shimon Peres Dead: How Did the Former Israeli Prime Minister Die? (in en-US).
- ↑ Wootliff, Raoul, "Shimon Peres, the last of Israel’s founding fathers, dies at 93", The Times of Israel, September 28, 2016. Retrieved 28 September 2016.
- ↑ Shimon Peres. The Knesset's internet site. Retrieved 28 August 2008.
- ↑ Shimon Peres:The Eighth Prime Minister. Prime Minister of Israel's internet site. Retrieved 28 August 2008.
- ↑ Location of Wiszniew on the map of the Second Polish Republic in the years 1921–1939, www.jewishinstitute.org.pl
- ↑ Knesset Member, Shimon Peres. Knesset. Retrieved 13 February 2008.
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 18.2 Shimon Peres Biography. Academy of Achievement (13 February 2008).
- ↑ Peres: Not such a bad record after all. The Jerusalem Post (10 November 2005). Retrieved 13 August 2014.
- ↑ Joseph Telushkin. Rebbe. Page 132. HarperCollins, 2014.
- ↑ Judy L. Beckham (2 August 2003). Shimon Peres, 1994 Nobel Peace Prize. Israel Times.
- ↑ Levi Julian, Hana, "President Shimon Peres Agrees to Keep Shabbat—Once", Arutz Sheva, July 12, 2007.
- ↑ It is true that we have erred, but a bright spring awaits Shimon Peres, Monday 16 July 2007, The Guardian
- ↑ Shimon Peres obituary by Lawrence Joffe, Wednesday 28 September 2016
- ↑ Jerusalem Post, May 4, 2000
- ↑ 26.0 26.1 President Shimon Peres - Seventy years of public service
- ↑ 27.00 27.01 27.02 27.03 27.04 27.05 27.06 27.07 27.08 27.09 27.10 Bergersept, Marilyn, "Shimon Peres Dies at 93; Built Up Israel’s Defense and Sought Peace", 27 September 2016. Retrieved 28 September 2016.
- ↑ Gilbert, Martin: Israel: A History (Pages 116–117)
- ↑ Peres to German MPs: Hunt down remaining Nazi war criminals. Haaretz (27 January 2010). Retrieved 27 January 2010.
- ↑ Address by Peres to German Bundestag. Mfa.gov.il (27 January 2010). Retrieved 12 June 2014.
- ↑ 31.0 31.1 Sonia Peres regains consciousness. Ynetnews (25 May 2007). Retrieved 25 May 2007.
- ↑ Biography: Shimon Peres. American Academy of Achievement.
- ↑ "Man in the News: Israeli Model of Endurance; Shimon Peres", The New York Times, 6 August 1984.
- ↑ Bar-Zohar, Michael (2007). Shimon Peres: The Biography. New York, NY: Random House, 75–76. ISBN 978-1-40-006292-8.
- ↑ 35.00 35.01 35.02 35.03 35.04 35.05 35.06 35.07 35.08 35.09 35.10 35.11 35.12 President Shimon Peres – Seventy years of public service. Office of the President of Israel (2010). Retrieved 28 September 2016.
- ↑ Ziv, Guy. Shimon Peres and the French-Israeli Alliance, 1954–9. Journal of Contemporary History 45 (2): 406–429.
- ↑ Cohen, Avner (2013). "The Road to Dimona", Israel and the Bomb. Columbia University Press, 57-78. ISBN 9780231500098.
- ↑ The Economic Diplomacy of the Suez Crisis, By Diane B. Kunz, Univ of North Carolina Press, 1991, page 108
- ↑ Suez: Britain's End of Empire in the Middle East, Keith Kyle, I.B.Tauris, 15 February 2011
- ↑ 40.0 40.1 Neff, Donald Warriors at Suez, pp. 162–163.
- ↑ Neff, Donald Warriors at Suez, pp. 234–236.
- ↑ Neff, Donald Warriors at Suez, p. 235.
- ↑ Affaire de Suez, Le Pacte Secret, Peter Hercombe and Arnaud Hamelin, France 5/Sunset Presse/Transparence, 2006
- ↑ The Protocol of Sevres 1956 Anatomy of a War Plot. University of Oxford. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
- ↑ Eden, By Peter Wilby, Haus Publishing, 2006
- ↑ Political Leaders of the Contemporary Middle East and North Africa: A Biographical Dictionary, by Bernard Reich, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1990, page 406
- ↑ Mahler, Gregory S. (2012). "Introduction", Israel after Begin. SUNY Press, 9-10. ISBN 9781438411699.
- ↑ “Why We Need a Palestinian State”, Le Monde, August 22, 1999
- ↑ Meydani, Assaf (2009). "Political Entrepreneurs and Institutional Change: The Case of Basic Law: The Government (1992)", Political Transformations and Political Entrepreneurs: Israel in Comparative Perspective. Springer Publishing, 41-104 (esp.75-76 and 85-85). ISBN 9780230103979.
- ↑ Jewish Virtual Library,
- ↑ San Diego Union-Tribune, August 29, 1997
- ↑ "Israel's wars of choice push its politics further to the right". Al Jazeera. July 22, 2014.
- ↑ Lazar Berman,'Bennett defends actions during 1996 Lebanon operation,' The Times of Israel 5 January 2015.
- ↑ "Beloved abroad, polarizing at home, Peres was the peace-making face of Israel", The Times of Israel, Sept. 28, 2016
- ↑ (2003) "Israel", Profiles of People in Power: The World's Government Leaders, 1st, Psychology Press, 247-251. ISBN 9781857431261.
- ↑ "Israel Labour head to meet Sharon", BBC News, 10 November 2005. Retrieved 13 June 2007.
- ↑ "Serving 60 Years to Life", Newsweek Europe, 12 December 2005.
- ↑ Verter, Yossi (6 January 2006). Under Peres, Kadima would win 42 seats; under Olmert – 40. Haaretz. Archived from the original on 13 January 2006. Retrieved 21 July 2007.
- ↑ Shimon Peres calls on his supporters to vote Kadima. Haaretz (9 January 2006). Archived from the original on 13 January 2006. Retrieved 21 July 2007.
- ↑ "Peres elected Israel's president", BBC News, 13 June 2007. Retrieved 13 June 2007.
- ↑ Jim Teeple, "Shimon Peres Sworn In as Israel's President", VOA News, 15 July 2007.
- ↑ It is true that we have erred, but a bright spring awaits Shimon Peres, Monday 16 July 2007, The Guardian
- ↑ Shimon Peres: State president, Nobel laureate and now – knight. Haaretz (23 November 2008). Retrieved 8 July 2009.
- ↑ Peres becomes Sheikh (14 June 2011).
- ↑ Secrets of Ben-Gurion's Leadership. Forward. Retrieved 12 June 2014.
- ↑ Shimon Peres: From Hawk to Dove. Vision.org (Winter 2000). Retrieved 13 June 2007.
- ↑ "Israel's denials of the Armenian Genocide are hard to swallow", Middle East Eye, 23 April, 2015
- ↑ 68.0 68.1 68.2 Yair, Auron (2003). "Chapter 5 – The Armenian Genocide's Recognition by States: The Israeli Aspect", The Banality of Denial: Israel and the Armenian Genocide, 1st, New Brunswick (U.S.A.): Transaction Publishers. ISBN 0-7658-0191-4.
- ↑ "Peres stands accused over denial of 'meaningless' Armenian Holocaust", by Robert Fisk
- ↑ Protest [against] Israeli foreign minister's remarks dismissing Armenian genocide as "meaningless". Anca.org. Retrieved 12 June 2014.
- ↑ Ravid, Barak (26 August 2007). Peres to Turks: "Our stance on Armenian issue hasn't changed". Haaretz. Retrieved 12 June 2014.
- ↑ Pfeffer, Anshel. "Peres: 'Fight terror – reduce global dependence on oil'", Haaretz. 5 May 2008.
- ↑ "Peres says that Iran 'can also be wiped off the map'", Dominican Today. 8 May 2006
- ↑ Speech by Peres at Waterloo University, Canada Archive copy at the Internet Archive
- ↑ [http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2016/09/28/world/middleeast/shimon-peres-quotes.html Shimon Peres's Reflections on War, Peace and Life] (in en). The New York Times. Retrieved 28 September 2016.
- ↑ Baker, Peter, "Shimon Peres, Former Prime Minister of Israel, Suffers a Stroke", 13 September 2016.
- ↑ 77.0 77.1 Wohlgelernter, Elli (28 September 2016). Shimon Peres, former president and veteran Israeli statesman, dies at 93.
- ↑ "Peres's condition dramatically declines; family urged to say last goodbyes", 27 September 2016.
- ↑ Beaumont, Peter, "Former Israeli leader Shimon Peres dies aged 93", 28 September 2016. Retrieved 28 September 2016.
- ↑ Condolences on the death of Shimon PeresSeptember 28, 2016 10:55
- ↑ Statement by the President on the Death of Former Israeli President Shimon Peres September 27, 2016
- ↑ Chinese President Xi Jinping expressed condolences to Israeli President following the death of Shimon Peres French.xinhuanet.com, Posted on 2016-09-28
- ↑ Peres: 'Every woman is civilisation itself' Saloona,28/09/2016
- ↑ 84.0 84.1 Fay, Greer (20 January 2011). Jerusalem Post article on Sonya Gelman. The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 12 June 2014.
- ↑ Cebedo, Earl, "Wife of Israeli President Shimon Peres dies", 20 January 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2013.
- ↑ "Not like other murderers", Haaretz, 5 November 2007
- ↑ Anderman, Nirit, "Shimon Peres remembers 'very strong, very beautiful' relative Lauren Bacall", Haaretz, August 13, 2014.
- ↑ Poems turn to song as ex-leader turns 86 AP, updated 8/17/2009 7:55:07 PM ET
- ↑ Poems turn to song as ex-leader turns 86 AP, updated 8/17/2009 7:55:07 PM ET
- ↑ Shimon Peres Writes a Song to Celebrate Chinese New Year Reuters, Haaretz, Feb 08, 2016
- ↑ King's Awards Honorary Doctorate to Head of State, 18 November 2008 [1]
- ↑ Foreign and Commonwealth Office Archive copy at the Internet Archive
- ↑ 93.0 93.1 H.R. 2939 – Summary. United States Congress. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
- ↑ Marcos, Cristina, "House votes to award medal to Israeli president", 19 May 2014. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
External links
- Official Israeli Presidency website
- Shimon Peres Knesset website (English)
- Official channel on YouTube
- The day Peres became a Sheikh!Template:Fa
- Peres Center for Peace
- Biography at the Encyclopædia Britannica
- Lecture at NobelPrize.org
- Shimon Peres biography at the Jewish Virtual Library
- Template:C-SPAN
- Template:Charlie Rose view
- Column archive at The Guardian
- Template:Haaretztopic
- Template:JPosttopic
- Template:NYTtopic
- Works by or about Shimon Peres in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- BBC – Sharon seals new Israel coalition
- Peres's metaphysical propensity to lose by Matthew Wagner, published in the Jerusalem Post, 10 November 2005.
- Former Labor Leader Shimon Peres Heading For Sharon's new party – recorded Report from IsraCast.
- Shimon Peres speaks at the Council on Foreign Relations about the Israel/Lebanon conflict on 31 July 2006
- Shimon Peres speaks at Cornell University – "A Conversation with Shimon Peres"
- "Presidency rounds off 66-year career" by Amiram Barkat, Haaretz
- President Peres' address to the 63rd session of the United Nations General Assembly, 24 September 2008
- Segment Interview at YouTube by Leon Charney on The Leon Charney Report
- Full Interview at YouTube by Leon Charney on The Leon Charney Report
Party Political Offices | ||
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Preceded by: Yitzhak Rabin |
Leader of the Alignment 1977–1992 |
Succeeded by: Yitzhak Rabin |
Leader of the Labor Party 1995–1996 |
Succeeded by: Ehud Barak | |
Preceded by: Amram Mitzna |
Leader of the Labor Party 2003–2005 |
Succeeded by: Amir Peretz |
Political offices | ||
Preceded by: Yitzhak Rabin |
Prime Minister of Israel Acting 1977 |
Succeeded by: Menachem Begin |
Preceded by: Yitzhak Shamir |
Prime Minister of Israel 1984–1986 |
Succeeded by: Yitzhak Shamir |
Preceded by: Yitzhak Rabin |
Prime Minister of Israel 1995–1996 |
Succeeded by: Benjamin Netanyahu |
Preceded by: Moshe Katsav |
President of Israel 2007–2014 |
Succeeded by: Reuven Rivlin |
Template:Israeli Nobel Laureates
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Template:1994 Nobel Prize winners
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