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Jonathan Freedland

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Jonathan Freedland,

Jonathan Freedland

Opinion

Why Netanyahu was wrong over Mandela

December 24, 2013 08:11
2 min read

There is an idle habit I picked up in childhood which I have never quite shaken off. I suspect there are other JC readers who share it too. When confronted with any kind of list of the world’s nations, my eye runs an instinctive, involuntary check to see if Israel is among them. Flags flying outside a hotel or along a boulevard: I look for the blue and white. In the lobby of an airport, where ‘welcome’ is spelled out in dozens of different languages: I search for the distinctive script that says Baruch Habah. Those bars where the enterprising landlord has collected the world’s banknotes under glass: I won’t rest till I’ve spotted the head of Moshe Sharett or SY Agnon.

I’m not especially proud of such a parochial impulse, but there it is: put it down to my upbringing. But events in South Africa last week had me thinking of it in a new way.

The memorial service for Nelson Mandela turned out to be a shambolic affair – what with the rain, the half-empty stadium and the sign language interpreter who never was - but it was truly a global event. Television channels in every nation covered it and there were more current and former heads of government in one place than have gathered anywhere else in living memory. Not one US president or UK prime minister, but four of each.

I didn’t waste my time scouring the TV coverage looking for Israel’s president or PM because I knew they were not there. Shimon Peres was not well – a rare show of mortality from the 90 year old said to be planning his return to frontline politics when he vacates the presidency next year. Binyamin Netanyahu, however, was in perfect health. But he chose not to go, his office citing “the financial and logistic outlays” that sadly made the trip “impossible.”