Politics

In Memoriam: Shimon Peres, 1923 – 2016

The life and work of Nobel Prize winner, former Israeli President Shimon Peres

Magnum Photographers

Micha Bar Am Press Party at Dan Hotel. Shimon Peres. Tel Aviv, Israel. 1977. © Micha Bar Am | Magnum Photos
Micha Bar Am Shimon Peres after being elected as head of Labor Party. Jerusalem, Israel. 1980. © Micha Bar Am | Magnum Photos
Micha Bar Am Shimon Peres at Maarakh party towards 1981 elections. Israel. 1981. © Micha Bar Am | Magnum Photos
Micha Bar Am Shimon Peres visiting soldiers. Ramat HaGolem, Israel. 1981. © Micha Bar Am | Magnum Photos
Micha Bar Am Shimon Peres at Ha'Maarakh party alignment. Kings of Israel square, Tel Aviv, Israel. 1981. © Micha Bar Am | Magnum Photos
A. Abbas After Sabra and Chatila Massacres. Beirut. The Israeli politician Shimon Peres in front of a portrait of David Ben Gourion. Israel. 1982. © A. Abbas | Magnum Photos
Micha Bar Am Rally against the 1982 First Lebanon War. Singing the national anthem. In the center: Shimon Peres. Israel. 1982. © Micha Bar Am | Magnum Photos
Micha Bar Am Prime Minister Shimon Peres in a helicopter on way to Lebanon. Israel. 1984. © Micha Bar Am | Magnum Photos
Micha Bar Am Then-Minister of Defense Itzhak Rabin and Prime Minister Shimon Peres aboard a flight during Israeli withdrawl from Lebanon. Lebanon. 1984. © Micha Bar Am | Magnum Photos
Micha Bar Am Signing ceremony for grand coalition. Yitzhak Rabin, Shimon Peres & Yitzhak Shamir. Israel. 1988. © Micha Bar Am | Magnum Photos
Micha Bar Am Labor party conference.

Shimon Peres & Yitzhak Rabin. Israel. 1990. © Micha Bar Am | Magnum Photos
Micha Bar Am Defense Minister Itzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres in the Knesset, the Israeli Parliament building. Jerusalem, Israel. 1990. © Micha Bar Am | Magnum Photos
A. Abbas Ceremony of the Houphouet-Boigny Peace Prize. From left to right: Yasser Arafat, Shimon Peres, Federico Mayor (Director General of UNESCO), Yitzhak Rabin, Henry Kissinger (President of the Jury). P (...)
A. Abbas Acting Prime Minister Shimon Peres in his office day after Yitzhak Rabin funeral. Jerusalem, Israel. November 7th, 1995. © A. Abbas | Magnum Photos
A. Abbas Acting Prime Minister Shimon Peres in his offfice in Jerusalem upon taking up his new appointment. Israel. 1995. © A. Abbas | Magnum Photos
Bruno Barbey Mitterrand's requiem.

Shimon Peres, Member of the Knesset, Israel. Paris.Notre-Dame de Paris, Paris, France. 1996. © Bruno Barbey | Magnum Photos
Bruno Barbey Shimon Peres. Member of the Knesset. Israel. 1999. © Bruno Barbey | Magnum Photos
Richard Kalvar Amre Moussa (Secretary-General, League of Arab States), Shimon Peres and Klaus Schwab (Founder and Executive Chairman, World Economic Forum). Annual Meeting of the World Economic. Davos, Switzerlan (...)

Former President (and Prime Minister) of Israel, Shimon Peres, after two weeks of hospitalization following a stroke, passed away this morning, 28th September, 2016.

Aged 93, the Polish-born Peres had served twice as Prime Minister and was President of Israel from 2007 to 2014. The statesman was named a Nobel Peace Prize laureate in 1994 alongside Yasser Arafat and Itzhak Rabin, and will be remembered as one the strongest propellers for peace talks, having introduced the Oslo Peace Accords – triggering unprecedented motion for peaceful cohabitation and brotherhood in the Middle East.

First elected to the Israeli parliament in 1959, his cabinet roles included defence, finance and foreign affairs before he served two brief periods as prime minister.

Even after his presidential term ended, Peres has remained a high-profile figure who has continued to make interventions in the country’s political directions. As recently as last year, he strongly criticised the direction of the government of Israel’s rightwing prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. Peres remained active in his work, particularly through events related to his Peres Centre for Peace.

Peres said he believed the values he and Rabin – who was assassinated in 1995 – had inherited from Israel’s founding father, David Ben-Gurion, were in jeopardy as he defended a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict: “Israel should implement the two-state solution for her own sake, because if we should lose our majority, and today we are almost equal, we cannot remain a Jewish state or a democratic state.”

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