The Process-Server Did Not Stay For Dinner
Monday, August 17th, 2009On a day in which we met personally and were photographed with the president of Israel, Shimon Peres, and the Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, Julie and I might fairly have expected to carry around something they said as the banner for the day. Not so.
Which is not to say that both leaders aren’t impressive, and extremely skilled at delivering their messages about the development arc of Israel and its place in the world.
Peres, in particular, exudes the sort of statesmanship that we crave in our leaders – and an energy level that is remarkable for an 85-year-old man. Though he is technically Israel’s head of state, he occupies what is largely a ceremonial position but it is clear that his influence as the last of Israel’s original generation of Israeli leaders (think Ben Gurion, Levi Eshkol, Golda) exceeds the power of his office.
He is introduced by Rick Perry, the Governor of Texas, who is not without his own atmosphere as a politician. A former air force pilot who is the longest-serving governor of the second-most populous state in the union, he draws interesting parallels between Israel and Texas: their spirit and resilient independence, their semi-arid climates and the security challenges both states face. Rick (as he is known to all of us on this tour) explains that Texas borders Mexico, where drug cartels are rampant and where 1,600 murders were committed in the state of Chihuahua (the capital of which is Juarez, the sister city of El Paso) alone last year.