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Family Feud
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17653 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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6 / 1990 |
2,675 Words |
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Yo''av Karny Yo'av Karny is the senior U.S. correspondent for the Israeli
daily newspaper Ha'aretz. He has been a top political reporter
for more than fifteen years. |
Et Hazamir
(THE TIME OF TRIMMING)
Haim Be'er Tel Aviv: Am Oved, 1989
560 pp.
In March of this year, a political crisis that had been brewing in Israel for some months finally came to a head. The crisis was rooted in Israeli bickering over U.S. Secretary of State James Baker's plan for advancing Middle East peace talks - but it never would have boiled over had not an elderly rabbi instructed five members of the Knesset to abstain during a no-confidence motion.
In the middle of intense debate surrounding the no-confidence vote, Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir suddenly requested a two-hour recess. Accompanied by his top aides, the veteran Likud Party leader was whisked in his limousine to the home of Rabbi Ovadia Yosef. There they begged the former Sephardic chief rabbi of Israel not to topple the government. Hard on Shamir's heels came Labor Party leaders Shimon Peres and Yitzhak Rabin, both former prime ministers and leading powers in the fast-crumbling national unity government. Israel's three foremost political figures heard out the rabbi's ultimatum: If they all signed a compromise agreement, authored by the rabbi, he would spare the present government. Whoever refused to sign would risk his political life.
Shamir would not sign. Minutes later, the Knesset voted no confidence in Shamir's government. For the first time in history, an Israeli government fell as the result of a vote in Parliament.
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