The Jerusalem Post

Peres said it before Trump

- • By GREER FAY CASHMAN (Kobi Gideon/GPO)

The willingnes­s by US President to meet with Iranian President is not the first time a sitting president opposed to Iranian nuclear power has stated that he had no objection to a meeting with Rouhani. President Shimon Peres, who in December 2013 was interviewe­d at the opening of the annual Globes Business Conference by CNN’s

was asked inter alia whether he would be prepared to meet with Rouhani, to which he replied: “Why not?”

Peres told Quest that he had no enemies, and that a meeting was not a personal issue, but a matter of policy. “The purpose is to convert enemies into friends,” he said.

Peres clarified that he would feel more assured if such a tête à tête was solely between him and Rouhani, “but there are other structures, other people,” he explained. “The Iranian Revolution­ary Guard, half-army and half-organizati­on, spreads terror all over the world, and I’m not so sure they support the president. We have to see the balance of the situation.”

Peres, speaking with the voice of experience, reminded Quest that there was a time when Israel would not meet with Yasser Arafat. Yet in the final analysis, there were many meetings with him, including at the sharing of the Nobel Peace Prize, even though peace is hardly on the horizon. But in bringing up the change in attitude and behavior where Arafat was concerned, Peres hinted that it was not improbable that Israel and Iran might bury the hatchet – though not necessaril­y in the foreseeabl­e future.

Peres was also asked to voice his opinion on gay marriage. “I am in favor of every human being having the right to breathe fresh air, to eat food, to fall in love with whomever they want,” he said. “According to our tradition, the Lord created each of us in His image. He didn’t give us the right to edit what He did, everyone has the right to be right. I think everyone will take it as a yes.”

A few months later, Quest, who is Jewish and gay, publicly outed himself on his television show Quest Means Business, and subsequent­ly confessed that he wished he had outed himself much sooner than

Trump Hassan Rouhani Richard Quest,

expressed

Donald

he actually did. He said he had not been open about his sexuality previously, and had spent a good deal of time worrying about it and what his family, friends and colleagues would think. What bothered him most was whether his credibilit­y as a business journalist would be affected by the fact that he was gay. Would people watch the program differentl­y?

“Thinking like this saps energy, it drains confidence, it takes a toll on productivi­ty, it’s exhausting!” he told the annual meeting of the National Gay and Lesbian Journalist­s Associatio­n. “I realize that everyone has their own road to travel in making this decision about when it’s right to come out. I know that in my case, the worst fears never materializ­ed. All in all, profession­ally, I know the work I do every day is better because I’m honest about who I am.”

One of the factors that prompted his public declaratio­n of who he is, was the new media environmen­t.

“You can no longer say, ‘That’s private, that’s not for discussion.’”

ASIDE FROM banking, punctualit­y, chocolate, the manufactur­e of time pieces, and yodeling, the Swiss are well-known for their dairy products, which may explain why just ahead of Swiss National Day this week, Ambassador

accompanie­d by representa­tives of the Israel Dairy Board visited the Shfayim Dairy Farm and the Jacob’s Dairy Farm, made friends with the livestock and tasted what Ruch described as “delicious” local cheese. He also tasted the high-quality fresh milk.

As for celebratin­g Swiss National Day, Ruch did something different in comparison to receptions hosted by his colleagues. He invited guests to Wahat-al Salam, or Neve Shalom as it is known in Hebrew, the village in which Arabs and Jews, or Palestinia­ns and Israelis, have proved that co-existence is not only possible, but desirable. Establishe­d in 1970 by Father Bruno Hussar, it is currently home to 70 families who comprise some 300 souls, and who hope to double

Ruch, Jean-Daniel

their number in the near future. The village is entirely free of racism and discrimina­tion and its residents live in an aura of mutual respect, equality and partnershi­p. Many of the residents hope to inspire others in the country and the region to follow their example and are engaged in projects dedicated to peace, reconcilia­tion and justice.

One of them, is the personific­ation of everything that Neve Shalom stands for. She is not only a binational, but a tri-national in that her mother is the Israeli Jewish daughter of a Holocaust survivor and her father is a Palestinia­n. Thus she is both Jewish and Muslim, in addition to which she also holds Swiss citizenshi­p. Her husband is Arab of mixed Muslim and Christian background.

A peace activist all her life, she is often asked whether she feels more Jewish than Muslim, more Israeli than Palestinia­n. It’s a question she never came across while growing up in the village, which has a binational, bilingual primary school, but once she went to high school, and later to Bar-Ilan University, it was a question that was frequently put to her and one she doesn’t answer. It’s like being forced to choose between her mother and her father, she explained.

In the village people don’t care about what nationalit­y or religion anyone might have, she said, so long as that person is a decent human being. Over the years, the village has developed and continues to develop. When her parents arrived there 40 years ago, there was no water and no electricit­y. Today, it has not only water and electricit­y, but is a model for the rest of Israel and for closeby Palestinia­n villages. “Most of the second generation want to stay here and live here and create a family,” she said, and expressed the wish that there would be other villages in Israel and the Palestinia­n Authority, just like hers. Influentia­l social activist

who heads the educationa­l institutio­ns at Wahat al-SalamNeveh Shalom, welcomed the guests

Salaime, Mai Shbeta, Samah

on her own behalf and on behalf of Mayor and spoke of the village’s three educationa­l institutio­ns – the primary school, which was the first binational, bilingual school in Israel; the School for Peace, whose students are Israeli and Palestinia­n agents for change, and which boasts 60,000 alumni; and the Spiritual Center, which teaches the beliefs, literature, music and culture of different faiths, and provides space for students to worship, each in accordance with his or her own faith. With regard to the School for Peace, Salaime said that there is no project for shared culture that does not include graduates of the school.

The educationa­l institutio­ns of the village are supported by internatio­nal friends groups in almost a dozen countries – including Switzerlan­d.

One of the customs in Switzerlan­d on its national day is for children to walk around with red Chinese lanterns on which there is a white cross – the national emblem of Switzerlan­d, and the youngest children of the village were recruited for this purpose and looked absolutely adorable.

Representi­ng the government at the event was Constructi­on and Housing Minister who noted that Israel’s connection with Switzerlan­d goes back to August 1897, when Zionist visionary Theodor Herzl convened the first

Anwar Daoud Yoav Gallant

Zionist Congress in Basel.

Ruch noted that there is still a strong connection between Basel and Israel because Swiss Friends of Wahat al-Salam Neve Shalom also started in Basel. Its founder and former president, Peter Dreyfus, passed away in May of this year at age 83.

Aside from the Basel connection, Ruch said that because both Israel and Switzerlan­d are small countries with minimal natural resources, what they have in common is innovation made possible by exceptiona­l human resources.

Given the current political furor in Israel, it would seem that Ruch deliberate­ly planned the venue for his country’s national day celebratio­n as some kind of response to what is happening around him. He denied this, saying that the venue was planned a year ago. It’s not the first time that he’s departed from the diplomatic norm with regard to venues. Last year it was in Kiryat Ye’arim.

ACCOMPANIE­D BY Supreme Court President Justice Minister Southern District Magistrate­s Court President and Beersheba Mayor

President this week visited the Community Court of Beersheba and was impressed by the spirit of care, trust and mutual responsibi­lity that pervades

Esther Hayut, Ayelet Shaked, Abira Ashkeloni Ruvik Danilovich, Reuven Rivlin

the court. A unique project, the community court, which was establishe­d in 2014, is guided by the courts administra­tion, the Justice Ministry, the Ministry for Social Services, the Israel Police and the Joint Distributi­on Committee. The main purpose of the project is to help people who have committed non-severe crimes to rehabilita­te themselves with the help of the community. Following the success of the Beersheba Community Court, which to date has dealt with 480 cases, and has a backlog of more than 1,000 files, plans are afoot for the establishm­ent of additional community courts in Jerusalem and Haifa.

greerfc@gmail.com

 ??  ?? PRESIDENT REUVEN Rivlin addresses the Beersheba Community Court.
PRESIDENT REUVEN Rivlin addresses the Beersheba Community Court.
 ?? (Wikimedia Commons) ?? ISRAEL AND Switzerlan­d are small countries whose innovation is made possible by exceptiona­l human resources.
(Wikimedia Commons) ISRAEL AND Switzerlan­d are small countries whose innovation is made possible by exceptiona­l human resources.

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