Stamps: February '98
Chaim Herzog (1918-1997)
Sixth President of Israel
 

    Issue: February 1997
    Designer: R. Beckman
    Size: 40mm x 25.7mm
    Plate #: 339
    Sheet of 15 stamps
    Tabs: 5
    Printers: Government Printers
    Printing Method: Offset

haim Herzog, the sixth President of Israel, was born the eldest son of Rabbi Isaac Halevy and Rabbanit Sara Herzog. His family emigrated to Palestine in 1935, where his father became Chief Rabbi. While pursuing Jewish studies in Jerusalem, he volunteered to serve in the Hagana, the Jewish defense organization. Later, during the Second World War, he joined the British Army. Serving as an officer in Europe, he not only participated in the fight against the Nazi terror, but both witnessed and assisted the liberation of concentration camps.

On his return to Palestine at the end of the war, Herzog held senior posts in the Jewish Agency, and with the establishment of the Israel Defense Forces again saw active service -- now as an officer in the War of Independence, where he was one of the founders and the first Commander of the Intelligence Corps. By the time of his release from the army with the rank of Aluf (General), he had held many senior positions, inter alia, Military Attache in Washington D.C., Head of the Jerusalem Brigade, Chief of Staff of the Southern Command and Director of Military Intelligence. Following the Six-Day War and the reunification of Jerusalem, he was called back to serve as the first Military Governor of Jerusalem and the West Bank.

Chaim Herzog's voice became well known to the Israeli public during the Six-Day War and the subsequent Yom Kippur War. As a military commentator, his reassuring words and descriptions of the military situation were avidly listened to and a genuine source of support at a time of grave concern for the safety of the country. They will long be remembered by all who heard them.

In 1975, Chaim Herzog was appointed Israel's Ambassador to the United Nations, where he represented Israel courageously and vigorously. He will be especially remembered for his speech opposing the UN resolution equating Zionism with racism, which he concluded by tearing up the resolution, and for his defense of the rescue of the Entebbe hostages.

He was elected to the Knesset as a Labor Party member in 1981 and was particularly active on the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee and the Constitution, Law and Judiciary Committee.

In May 1983, Chaim Herzog was elected the Sixth President of the State of Israel; in 1988 he was re-elected for a second five-year term. As president, he helped build internal unity and reconciliation; the day-to-day challenges facing the Israeli public, particularly social problems, were always uppermost in his mind, and he worked tirelessly to bridge the gap among the diverse groups and factions in the nation. He also maintained close contact with the Diaspora, emphasizing the centrality of the State of Israel, and played an active role in advancing Israel's foreign relations. As president he visited 31 countries and was the first to make state visits to Australia, New Zealand, Germany, Spain, Hungary, Poland, Czechoslovakia and China.

In both his personality and his life Chaim Herzog embodied the saga of the Jewish People in the twentieth century and Israel's first fifty years. He led a rich and varied life: soldier, statesman, public figure, diplomat, lawyer, commentator and a writer. His life was always imbued with a commitment to Jewish heritage, faith in the spirit of Zionism and pride the State of Israel. He firmly believed that statesmanship must be rooted in the principles of democracy and law.

On April 17 1997, Chaim Herzog was buried in Jerusalem at Mount Herzl National Cemetery among his fellow leaders of Israel.

Yad Chaim Herzog