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Opinion

President Herzog writes for JC: Britain needs to stand with us against Iran

November 18, 2021 11:25
Herzog
Incoming Israeli president Isaac Herzog looks on during a press conference at the president's residence in Jerusalem, during a handover ceremony, on July 7, 2021. - Isaac Herzog, a veteran of Israel's Labor party, was sworn in before parliament today as the Jewish state's 11th president, replacing Reuvin Rivlin in the largely ceremonial post. (Photo by EMMANUEL DUNAND / AFP) (Photo by EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

"Man is but the imprint of his native landscape." So wrote the great Hebrew poet Saul Tchernichovsky, but I respectfully disagree. We are also made in the image of our families' landscapes. In my case: Britain. On Sunday, I shall land in London with my wife Michal for my first visit as the President of the State of Israel. In my diary are meetings with HRH Prince Charles, Prime Minister Boris Johnson, a cross-party delegation of MPs, and leaders of the Jewish community, as well as a Genesis Prize Foundation event paying tribute to the late Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks.

But for me, this visit also has a deeply personal dimension.

This visit to Britain is in many ways a homecoming, because my family’s story is interwoven with the story of Britain and its Jewish community. My father, the late Sixth President of the State of Israel, Chaim Herzog, was a British Army major, who helped to liberate Bergen-Belsen. His father, Isaac HaLevi Herzog, was the chief rabbi of Ireland; my great-grandfather, Joel Leib Herzog, was a rabbi in Leeds. My grandmother Sarah Hillman grew up in Glasgow. Her father, Dayan Shmuel Yitzhak Hillman, was the rabbi of Glasgow, served on the London Beth Din, and cared for Belgian-Jewish refugees during the First World War. My uncle Abba Eban, Israel's legendary first ambassador to the United Nations, also grew up in London and studied and taught at Cambridge. Another uncle, Dublin-born Yaakov Herzog, was our ambassador in Canada. I also have many family members from my mother Aura's side in Britain. I grew up on their stories and memories. Their history, and the gentle rhythms of this green and pleasant land, are with me every day. The Jewish world is one large, extended family, and for me, British Jewry is a first-degree branch. Tolerance, decency, civility, inclusivity, respectable discourse—these are fine British values, and I am working hard as Israel's President to promote them.

But I believe that these famously British values represent the best of the Jewish tradition: a tradition that champions healthy debate "for the sake of the heavens," celebrates the plurality of voices, and teaches us to love the stranger, to respect the other, however difficult this may be. Nobody expressed the best of the British and Jewish spirit more eloquently than the late, great Rabbi Sacks. His brilliance of mind enriched the Jewish world, and indeed the whole world. How I miss his magically soft and wise voice! Rabbi Sacks profoundly influenced the purpose of my Presidency.

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