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Sandy Rashty

BySandy Rashty, Sandy Rashty

Opinion

Shimon Peres, a true legend

May 18, 2015 17:26
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2 min read

Every year, communal organisations compete to secure the services of a top speaker who will bring in the crowds, and as a result, the big bucks.

On Sunday night, the Zionist Federation pulled in a 900-person crowd, who flocked to the central London Grosvenor Hotel (at £250 a head) to hear guest speaker Shimon Peres in conversation with Israeli Arab journalist Lucy Aharish.

The event, which is the ZF's largest fundraising dinner to date, turned into an outpouring of support for the former Israeli president. One guest told me: “I just had to come. I just had to hear him speak. He’s the most inspiring…” – and then she clasped her hand to her chest, and sighed. Another had heard Mr Peres speak in Israel. “I flew out there especially to see him. He spoke so well then, and so well now. I am so happy I have had the chance to hear him, twice!”

It is hard to think of many other 91-year-olds who could cultivate the same sense of celebrity that Mr Peres held on the night. At the end of the 30-minute on-stage interview – in which he called on guests to “dream more, remember less” – Mr Peres was ushered away by an entourage of security guards, who stood on either side of the stage throughout the interview. They went onto form a protective circle around him, to block-out iPhone-holding guests hoping to snap a selfie with the former Labour prime minister. Even outside the protective circle, another layer of high-alert agents eyeballed guests-turned-paps who clambered up the famous Grosvenor staircase to take a picture of Mr Peres.