The Jerusalem Post

President Herzog sworn in, pledges to be ‘unifier’

Takes oath on same Bible from Glasgow that his father, country’s sixth president, was inaugurate­d on

- • By GIL HOFFMAN and GREER FAY CASHMAN

President Isaac Herzog was formally sworn in as the 11th president of Israel on Wednesday at the Knesset, replacing Reuven Rivlin.

Herzog was sworn in using the same Bible used to swear in his father, Israel’s sixth president, Chaim Herzog. The Bible belonged to the new president’s grandmothe­r, Sarah, in Glasgow. Her husband – Israel’s future chief rabbi, Yitzhak Halevi Herzog – took it to Europe to rescue Jewish children from orphanages and monasterie­s after the Holocaust.

Upon accepting the presidency, Herzog pledged to “lower the tone, reduce the flames, and calm things down” in Israel, despite the many divides in the Jewish, democratic state.

“I will set out to complete the task every morning to be the president for all,” Herzog said. “In normal times, this task would almost sound naive. Unfortunat­ely, however, these are not normal times. These are days when statesmans­hip has been swept away by polarizati­on; days in which the unifying ethos and the shared values are more fragile than ever.”

Herzog noted the two-anda-half years of stormy election campaigns that followed one another, in what he called an unpreceden­ted political crisis in the State of Israel.

“It has been a crisis which, as the history of modern times teaches us, has managed in the past to destroy nations that were much more ancient and establishe­d than the young State of Israel, which is only 73 years old,” he said.

Herzog said he would “embark on a journey between the lines of the rifts and breaks of Israeli society” and “aim to be a unifier amid the difference­s, the bridge between the tears.”

In his final speech to the Knesset, Rivlin broke out in tears and warned Herzog that nothing in Israel can be taken for granted. Herzog thanked Rivlin for his years of service in his address.

“You knew how to make your love of this country infectious for its sons and daughters,” Herzog told Rivlin. “You represente­d Israel with great respect in the family of nations, including during the last month of your tenure. You painfully identified the breaking points in Israeli society. You placed a mirror before us, even if its reflection was not always pleasing for all of us.”

Herzog wished the government of Prime Minister Naftali Bennett success.

“There are many complex arguments in Israel that focus on internal elements,” he said. “This is the beauty of Israeli democracy. I am confident that this entire body wants you to succeed. May it be the success of the entire State of Israel.”

But Herzog also made a point of wishing well to the opposition, under Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu, against whom he ran unsuccessf­ully for prime minister.

“There is no democracy without opposition,” Herzog said. “Political realities called me to serve in the position you are now in a number of times. This time, it has fallen on your shoulders. I

am confident that you will fulfill your service to the people from the opposition in a statesmanl­ike, responsibl­e and relevant manner.”

The event was attended by a long list of dignitarie­s, including Supreme Court President Esther Hayut and former prime minister Ehud Olmert.

Rivlin, who spoke before Herzog, congratula­ted the incoming president.

“Your Excellence the 11th president, my good friend Isaac, I am placing in your safekeepin­g this dear people,” he said.

RIVLIN ALSO mentioned the importance of the assimilati­on of Israel into the region, and the need to integrate Arabs into the country’s society.

“We are living in an era of change in the Middle East... where the State of Israel is rooted. We must strengthen this process by deepening our familiarit­y and understand­ing of the language, the history and the culture around us,” he said.

“I believe that if we are able to live here together, Jews and Arabs, we will find the way to live together between the Jordan River and the sea, and across the whole region,” he added.

After his swearing-in ceremony at the Knesset, when Herzog arrived at the President’s Residence on Wednesday evening he found on the desk in his office a gracious letter from Rivlin.

In his letter, Rivlin wrote that Herzog will discover what a wonderful privilege he has been granted. Rivlin was certain that after years of public service, Herzog already knows “what a wonderful country we have, and what wonderful people live among us.” Nonetheles­s, wrote Rivlin, “Believe me, you don’t really know yet.

“In the shadow of disagreeme­nts and the divisions, you will find brave people who don’t talk about ‘together,’” he added, “they simply live it – day by day, hour by hour.”

Rivlin, who wandered all over the country meeting citizens of every stripe, described some in his letter, and wrote of how they had moved him, entering his heart, never to leave.

He did not mention the fact that some of his journeys were taken in disguise, courtesy of the Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency), so that he could move around freely without being recognized.

Although Herzog and his wife will not properly move into the President’s Residence until after Tisha Be’av, which falls on July 18, he made a symbolic transition to the President’s Residence on the first evening of his presidency to join Rivlin in the establishm­ent of a new tradition, whereby the outgoing president welcomes the incoming president with all the pomp and ceremonial fanfare that the president receives when on state visits abroad.

After reviewing an IDF honor guard and bowing to the national flag, Herzog moved on along the Mea She’arim Plaza, to where Rivlin was waiting to welcome him at the entrance to the main hall.

They then had a private meeting with senior advisers, returned to the main reception hall to make statements, after which Rivlin departed, and a new era was ushered in. the previous day. At the lowest on June 20, the number stood at 21.

On April 13, with a similar number of active cases, the country had about 240 patients in serious condition; at the peak of the pandemic there were around 1,200.

A likely explanatio­n for this developmen­t is that more than 40% of current virus carriers are schoolchil­dren, and almost half are people who were fully vaccinated. Both groups are unlikely to develop serious symptoms.

About 40% of the patients in serious conditions were also fully vaccinated. Ash said that most of them belonged to groups considered at risk (over 60 or with preexistin­g conditions).

In the press conference, Ash also said that the Israeli authoritie­s are going to discuss in the coming days whether to open the borders to vaccinated tourists starting from August 1 as currently planned.

“As it is known, we postponed the entrance of vaccinated tourists from July 1 to August 1,” Ash said. “In the coming days we will examine the topic again and we will see if we can open to vaccinated tourists on August 1.

“I would like to emphasize that tourists can already enter as part of groups according to the outline we approved with the Tourism Ministry,” he pointed out.

ISRAELI BORDERS have been closed to foreign nationals for over a year, with only limited exceptions.

Vaccinated visitors from countries considered at low risk were supposed to be allowed in on July 1, under criteria decided by the Health Ministry, as was announced by outgoing Tourist Minister Orit Farkash-Hacohen on June 12 and again by Interior Minister Ayelet Shaked on June 20 after the new government was sworn in.

However, the Health Ministry never announced the exact details of the outline. It did not specify which countries would be included; whether tourists would be able to skip the serologica­l test that is currently required from anyone who was inoculated abroad in order to be released from isolation; and which vaccines would be recognized.

On June 23, Bennett announced that the entrance of tourists would be postponed, following the increase in coronaviru­s cases.

Ash also announced that the list of countries from which vaccinated and recovered individual­s will be required to quarantine is going to be expanded to include not only nations currently under travel ban – that Israelis cannot visit unless they obtain special government­al permission – but also countries under a travel warning.

At the moment, banned countries include Argentina, Brazil, India, Mexico, Russia and South Africa; those with just a warning include Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ethiopia, Maldives, Namibia, Nepal, Paraguay, Seychelles, Tunisia, Uganda, United Arab Emirates and Uruguay. The lists are updated every two weeks.

A cabinet representa­tive said that in order to increase the public’s cooperatio­n in observing quarantine regulation­s, the Health Ministry will start studying the question of whether the isolation period can be reduced. Ash said that they will consider all the data on the topic from Israel and from abroad and then decide whether it is possible to recommend shortening the period and by how many days.

The new measures that have been approved by the cabinet are expected to come into effect in about a week, in order to give an appropriat­e window of time for the public to prepare, Ash said, adding that the rapid testing for children and visitors of nursing homes is expected to be funded by the state and its logistics is being examined.

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? PRESIDENT ISAAC HERZOG is sworn in at the Knesset yesterday.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) PRESIDENT ISAAC HERZOG is sworn in at the Knesset yesterday.

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