- Shimon Peres
Infobox President
name = Shimon Peres
שמעון פרס
order =President of Israel
primeminister =Ehud Olmert
vicepresident =
term_start =15 July 2007
term_end =
predecessor =Moshe Katsav
successor =
order2 =Prime Minister of Israel
president2 =Ezer Weizman
deputy2 =
term_start2 =04 November 1995
term_end2 =18 June 1996
Acting until22 November 1995
predecessor2 =Yitzhak Rabin
successor2 =Benjamin Netanyahu
president3 =Chaim Herzog
deputy3 =
term_start3 =14 September 1984
term_end3 =20 October 1986
predecessor3 =Yitzhak Shamir
president4 =Ephraim Katzir
deputy4 =
term_start4 =22 April 1977
term_end4 =21 June 1977
Acting
predecessor4 =Yitzhak Rabin
successor4 =Menachem Begin
birth_date = birth date and age|1923|08|02|df=y
birth_place = Wiszniew,Poland (nowBelarus )
party =Kadima
spouse = Sonya Peres
children = Zvia, Yoni, and Hemi Peres
religion =Judaism
Audio|He-Shimon_Peres.ogg|Shimon Peres ( _he. שמעון פרס, born "Szymon Perski" on
August 2 1923 , [citeweb | url=http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull&cid=1219218606207| title=President Shimon Peres celebrates 85th birthday | accessdate=2008-08-28 |date=2008-08-21|publisher=Jerusalem Post ] is the ninth President of the State of Israel. Peres served twice asPrime Minister of Israel and once asActing Prime Minister , and has been a member of 12 cabinets in a political career spanning over 66 years. [cite web| url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/870789.html | title=Presidency rounds off 66-year career| publisher = "Haaretz "| author = Amiram Barkat] Peres was elected to theKnesset in November 1959 and, except for a three-month-long hiatus in early 2006, served continuously until 2007, when he became President.Born in
Vishneva , in Poland in 1923, Peres moved with his family to Mandate Palestine in 1934. He held several diplomatic and military positions during and directly after the War for Independence in Israel. His first high level government position was as Deputy Director-General of Defense in 1952, and Director-General in 1953 through 1959.citeweb |url=http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1994/peres-bio.html |publisher=The Nobel Foundation |date=1995 |editor=Tore Frangsmyr |title=Shimon Peres, The Nobel Peace Prize 1994] During his career, he has represented five political parties in the Knesset:Mapai , Rafi, the Alignment, Labour andKadima , and has led Alignment and Labour. Peres won the 1994Nobel Peace Prize together withYitzhak Rabin andYasser Arafat for the peace talks which he participated in as Israeli Foreign Minister, producing theOslo Accords . Peres was nominated in early 2007 byKadima to run in that year's presidential election, being elected by theKnesset for the presidency onJune 13 ,2007 and sworn into office onJuly 15 ,2007 for a seven-year term. [citeweb | url=http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1181570258432&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull | title=Peres elected President | accessdate=2007-06-13 |date=2007-06-12|publisher=The Jerusalem Post ] Jim Teeple, [http://voanews.com/english/2007-07-15-voa14.cfm "Shimon Peres Sworn In as Israel's President"] , VOA News, July 15, 2007.]Biography
Early years
Shimon Peres was born on
August 2 ,1923 [citeweb | url=http://www.knesset.gov.il/mk/eng/mk_eng.asp?mk_individual_id_t=104 | title=Shimon Peres | accessdate=2008-08-28 |date=|publisher=TheKnesset 's internet site] [citeweb | url=http://www.pmo.gov.il/PMOEng/History/FormerPrimeMinister/ShimonPeres.htm| title=Shimon Peres | accessdate=2008-08-28 |date=|publisher=Prime Minister of Israel 's internet site] inWiszniew , Poland (now Višnieva,Belarus ), to Yitzhak (1896-1962) and Sara (b. 1905 née Meltzer) Perski. [ [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/] ] The family spoke Hebrew, Yiddish and Russian at home, and Peres learned Polish at school. He now speaks English and French in addition to Hebrew. [citeweb | url=http://www.knesset.gov.il/mk/eng/mk_eng.asp?mk_individual_id_t=104 |title=Knesset Member, Shimon Peres | publisher=Knesset | accessdate=2008-02-13] His father was a lumber merchant, later branching out into other commodities whilst his mother was a librarian. Peres has a younger brother, Gershon.citeweb | url=http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/per0bio-1 | title=Shimon Peres Biography | publisher=Academy of Achievement | date=2008-02-13]Peres's 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 great- 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 wasHaredi . At one point, I heard my parents listening to the radio on the Sabbath and I smashed it." citeweb |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 |publisher=Israel-Times |date=August 2, 2003]British Mandate
In 1932, Peres' father immigrated to Palestine and settled in
Tel Aviv . The family followed him in 1934. He attended Balfour Elementary School and High School, and Geula Gymnasium (High School for Commerce) inTel Aviv . At 15, he transferred to Ben Shemen agricultural school and lived on Kibbutz Geva for several years. Peres was one of the founders ofKibbutz Alumot . In 1941 he was elected Secretary ofHanoar Haoved Vehalomed , a Labor Zionist youth movement, and in 1944 returned to Alumot, where he worked as a dairy farmer, shepherd and kibbutz secretary.Personal life
In 1945, Shimon Peres married Sonya (née Gelman), who has preferred to remain outside the public eye throughout his political career. They have three children: a daughter, Zvia Valdan, a linguist and professor at Beit Berl Teachers Training College; and two sons, Yoni (born 1952), director of Village Veterinary Center, a veterinary hospital on the campus of Kfar Hayarok Agricultural School near Tel Aviv, and Hemi, chairman of Pitango Venture Capital, one of Israel’s largest venture capital funds. [ [http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=920227&contrassID=2&subContrassID=4 Not like other murderers] Haaretz, 5 November 2007] Peres has 8 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Sonya Peres was unable to attend Shimon's inauguration ceremony due to ill health. [citeweb | url=http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3404483,00.html | title=Sonia Peres regains consciousness | accessdate=2007-05-25 | publisher=
Ynetnews |date=2007-05-25] Peres is a first cousin of actressLauren Bacall (born Betty Joan Perski). [citeweb | url=http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1131367066952&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull|date=2005-11-12 | title=Peres: Not such a bad record after all | accessdate=2007-05-31 | publisher=The Jerusalem Post ]Military and defense
In 1947, Peres joined the
Haganah , the predecessor of theIsrael 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 1953, at the age of 29, became the youngest ever Director General of the Ministry of Defense. He was involved in arms purchases and establishing strategic alliances that were of great importance for the young State of Israel. Thanks to Peres' mediation, Israel acquired the advancedDassault Mirage III French jet fighter, established the Dimona nuclear reactor and entered into a tri-national agreement with France and theUnited Kingdom during the 1956Suez Crisis .Political career
First steps in politics
Peres was first elected to the
Knesset in the 1959 elections, as a member of theMapai party. He was given the role of Deputy Defense Minister, which he fulfilled until 1965 when he was implicated in theLavon affair withMoshe Dayan . Peres and Dayan left Mapai withDavid Ben-Gurion to form a new party, Rafi which reconciled with Mapai and joined the Alignment (a left-wing alliance) in 1968.Political milestones in the 1970s
In 1969, Peres was appointed Minister of Immigrant Absorption and in 1970 became Minister of Transportation and Communications. 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 afterGolda Meir resigned in the aftermath of theYom Kippur War . 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.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. Peres led the Alignment to its first ever electoral defeat, when
Likud underMenachem 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.Political milestones in the 1980s
After turning back a comeback bid by Rabin in 1980 Peres led his party to another, narrower, loss in the 1981 elections.
In 1984, 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. Therefore, the Alignment and Likud agreed on an unusual "rotation" arrangement in which Peres would serve as Prime Minister and the Likud leader
Yitzhak Shamir would be Foreign Minister .A highlight of this time in office was a trip to
Morocco to confer with King Hassan II.In rotation with Shamir
After two years, Peres and Shamir traded places. In 1986 he 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 1988-1990, 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.
Political milestones in the 1990s
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.
Peres remained active in politics, however, serving as Rabin's foreign minister from 1992 and without Rabin's knowledge, began illegal secret negotiations with
Yasser Arafat 'sPLO organization. When Rabin found out, he let them continue. The negotiations led to theOslo Accords , which would win Peres, Rabin and Arafat theNobel Peace Prize .After Rabin's assassination in 1995, Peres again became Prime Minister. 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 byBenjamin 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 for Regional Development. Peres played little role in the Barak government.Political milestones in the 2000s
In 2000 Peres ran for a seven-year term as Israel's President, a ceremonial head of state position. Had he won, as was expected, he would have been the first ex-Prime Minister to be elected President. He lost however, to Likud candidate
Moshe Katsav .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. The formal leadership of the party passed toBinyamin Ben-Eliezer , and in 2002 toHaifa 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 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 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.Peres won the chairmanship of the Labor Party in 2005, in advance of the 2006 elections. As party leader, Peres 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 andIsaac Herzog , overtook established leaders likeBinyamin Ben-Eliezer andHaim Ramon , in the party ballot to divide up government portfolios. It turned out that elections could not be held in June, as planned, when a scandal erupted over possible fraud in registering party members. The investigation of this scandal delayed elections untilNovember 9 2005 .Irrespective of before or after the delay, Peres continually led in the polls, defying predictions that rivals would overtake him. His bitter exchanges with opponents began when former Prime Minister Barak began backing the holding of primaries early that year, as
Amir Peretz and Haim Ramon, two staunch anti-Barak Knesset members vowed to support Peres at any cost to defeat Barak. In a bizarre change of events, Peretz soon declared his own candidacy, a move viewed by Peres as the greatest betrayal.Though Peres continued to trade nasty barbs with Barak in the newspapers, his feud with Peretz soon superseded that, especially when Barak pulled out of the race in early October. One of Peretz's main charges against Peres was that he neglected socio-economic affairs as a member of the Sharon government, and did not fulfill his statement that Labor had joined the coalition with only the intent of seeing through the Gaza Withdrawal. Peres lost the leadership election with 40% to Peretz's 42.4%. [cite web |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/4423676.stm |title=Israel Labour head to meet Sharon|accessdate=2007-06-13|date=2005-11-10 |format= |work=
BBC News ]Joining Kadima
On
November 30 2005 Peres announced that he was leaving the Labor Party to support Ariel Sharon and his newKadima party. In the immediate aftermath of Sharon's debilitating stroke there was speculation that Peres might take over as leader of the party but most senior Kadima leaders, however, were former members ofLikud and indicated their support forEhud Olmert as Sharon's successor. [cite web | last = Verter | first = Yossi | title = Under Peres, Kadima would win 42 seats; under Olmert - 40 | publisher = Haaretz | date = 2006-01-06 | url = http://web.archive.org/web/20060113043619/http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/667051.html | accessdate = 2007-07-21 ]Labor reportedly tried to woo Peres back to the fold. [cite web | coauthors = Mazal Mualem, Yossi Verter, and Nir Hasson | title = Shimon Peres calls on his supporters to vote Kadima | publisher = Haaretz | date = 2006-01-09 | url = http://web.archive.org/web/20060113042519/http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/667313.html | accessdate = 2007-07-21 ] Peres announced, however, that he supported Olmert and would remain with "Kadima". Media reports suggested that
Ehud Olmert offered Peres the second slot on the Kadima list, but inferior cabinet positions to the ones that were reportedly offered toTzipi Livni . 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.President of Israel
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, [cite web| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6747517.stm |title=Peres elected Israel's president|date=2007-06-13|work=BBC News |accessdate=2007-06-13] 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. On November 13, 2007, he became the first Israeli president to speak before the legislature of a Muslim country when he addressed theGrand National Assembly of Turkey .citeweb |url=http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1192380806626&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull |title=Shimon Peres becomes 1st Israeli president to address a Muslim parliament |publisher=Jerusalem Post |date=13 November 2007]Actions as President
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