Consulate
Opens Book of Condolences for the Late President Ezer Weizman
April
26 - 28 from 2:00 p.m to 4:30 p.m
Ezer Weizman, Israel's seventh president passed away Sunday April
24th at the age of 80.
President Weizman dedicated his entire life to serving Israel. As
one of Israel's best known Air Force pilots and commanders, Weizman
ensured the safety of Israel during some of our most challenging moments.
After his distinguished military career, Weizman entered politics,
serving Israel steadfastly and working unwaveringly towards achieving
peace in the Middle East.
In remembrance of President Weizman, the Consulate General of Israel
in Los Angeles will open a book of condolences to be forwarded to
the Weizman Family.
Receiving hours will be from 2:00 p.m to 4:30 p.m on April 26 - 28,
2005 at the Consulate General of Israel in Los Angeles, 6380 Wilshire
Blvd., Suite 1700.
EZER WEIZMAN
(1924-2005)
Seventh President of the State of
Israel (1993-2000)
Ezer Weizman - air force general and politician, nephew of Israel's
first President Professor Chaim Weizmann, and former President
of the State of Israel - was sworn into office on May 13, 1993.
Ezer Weizman was born in Tel Aviv in 1924, and raised in Haifa. He
began his long military career as a fighter pilot during World War
II, joining the Royal Air Force in 1942 at age 18. Returning to Mandatory
Palestine after the war, Weizman was one of a handful of pilots who
founded the "Air Service" of the Haganah. He served as a fighter pilot
during the War of Independence, commanded a squadron, and later (1958-66)
was O.C. of the Israel Air Force, in which capacity he introduced
the use of electronic warfare systems in aircraft. During the Six-Day
War he was Chief of Operations of the General Staff, and later Deputy
Chief of Staff. He retired in 1969 with the rank of major-general,
and turned to politics.
An outspoken individual with strong political views and a vivid personality,
Ezer Weizman maintained a high and at times highly-provocative public
profile, even while in the army. In the two and a half decades following
his retirement from the military, Weizman served in many key political
posts. He ran the election campaign that brought Likud leader Menachem
Begin to power in 1977, after nearly thirty years in opposition; served
as Minister of Defense; and was a member of the Israeli negotiating
team to the talks that culminated in the Camp David Accords. In 1980,
Weizman, who had gradually moderated his views, retired from politics
to pursue a business career. Returning to public life four years later,
he formed a small independent party and served as a government minister
for the next six years - first as Minister for Arab Affairs, then
as Minister of Science and Technology. In 1992 he retired from active
politics and a year later, he was elected as the seventh President
of the State of Israel.
Almost without actual powers, the Presidency is an institution that
relies heavily on style. Ezer Weizman's strong personality and unique
manner, which have pervaded every task he has undertaken - from air
force commander to government minister - have also colored his Presidency.
Weizman's down-to-earth manner has been quite different from the statesmanlike
image and "elevated status" that characterized most of his predecessors.
His unique character has endowed the Presidency with an informality
and lack of reserve that reflects the warm, dynamic and unstructured
nature of Israel's society. Thus, the office has in many ways come
to mirror the typical Israeli - direct, familial and unceremonious,
candid and spontaneous.
While President Weizman has conducted state visits to Great Britain,
India, South Africa and Turkey, meeting national and Jewish leaders
in his travels, he has focused more on Israel itself and its citizens
- Jews, Arabs and Druze - and on Israel's immediate neighbors.
In addition to planned visits to various communities and participation
in major public events, Weizman has adopted a Presidential schedule
that includes unplanned and spontaneous visits closely tied to unfolding
events, many of them tragic. Thus, during the July 1993 "Accountability"
campaign against Hizballah terrorism, the President demonstrated his
solidarity with Israeli citizens living on the northern border by
visiting them while their towns were still under shell-fire, staying
the night with the inhabitants and even sleeping in a bunker with
IDF soldiers. President Weizman also visits the wounded in hospitals
and the families of the fallen and of terror victims in their homes.
Weizman has applied the one real power of the Presidency - the right
to grant Presidential pardons - in his own way, by refusing to sign
some pardons recommended by the Ministry of Justice.
President Ezer Weizman renewed an institution established by one
of his predecessors - a monthly gathering of intellectuals and academics
entitled the "Bible and Jewish Sources Group", dedicated to examining
and discussing core Jewish issues. This rather exclusive and prestigious
circle had undergone a change of venue; it is now a "traveling forum."
Monthly deliberations are conducted each time in a different outlying
location, with former Supreme Court Justice Menachem Elon acting as
moderator.
Recently, Ezer Weizman has taken a more active role in political
developments than did Presidents in the past - first behind-the-scenes,
later publicly - and his actions have been a source of public controversy.
Political figures involved in the peace process have met with Weizman,
even though this is not part of diplomatic protocol. Moreover, the
President has openly criticized the government's performance and attempted
to prevent derailing of the peace process. His unique brand of personal
diplomacy, his charm and his personal ties have opened communication
lines between Israel and the Palestinian Authority and with Egypt.
Ezer Weizman was re-elected to a second term in May 1998, and resigned
from the Presidency in July 2000.