Waterloo Region Record

Israel loses a lion

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This editorial appeared in the Washington Post (excerpted)

With the passing of Shimon Peres, who died Wednesday at age 93, Israel suffers the loss of a lion, the last of the founding generation of leaders. Peres came to Palestine from a village in what is now Belarus when he was 12. He became a young kibbutznik, a lieutenant to founding father David Ben-Gurion, a Knesset member, a deputy defense minister, an acting prime minister, and minister of defense, foreign affairs, transporta­tion, communicat­ions, immigrant absorption, informatio­n and finance. He was twice prime minister and, near the end, the nation’s president. Through a career that spanned this tumultuous period - through years of siege, bloodshed and building a nation - Peres never abandoned hope that, with enough sweat and tears, Israel would live in peace.

Peres did not fight in the trenches in Israel’s war of independen­ce, but rather scoured the world for arms, often working in an office separated only by a sheet of plywood from BenGurion. Later, he helped found Israel’s aircraft industry and, using tortuous and sometimes illegal methods - because no one would sell weapons to Israel openly - he snapped up tanks, aircraft, torpedo boats and spare parts. He opened the doors for Israel to the French arms industry in the 1950s. This was followed by an even more spectacula­r and secret achievemen­t, the creation of the Israeli atomic bomb, an unstated but powerful deterrent.

The dynamic changed somewhat after Israel made peace with Egypt in the Camp David Accords of 1979. When the Palestinia­n uprising broke out in 1987, Peres realized that, while the Palestinia­ns were not an existentia­l threat, Israel would never live in peace without settling with them. Peres had been shrewd, secretive and scheming in politics, but he and his longtime rival, Yitzhak Rabin, made a fateful decision to work together upon returning to power in 1992. The next year, a surprising back-channel negotiatio­n with the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on led to the Oslo Accords, offering the Palestinia­ns limited self-rule in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. It was a crowning triumph for Peres, for which he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize along with Rabin and Yasser Arafat.

It also marked a metamorpho­sis for Peres, who spoke of peace fervently and with no less eloquence than in his school days. He found great respect as Israel’s president, his final stop in a long journey, but his dream of Israel at peace, pursued with such determinat­ion and vision, eluded him to the last.

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