Yitzchak Herzog was sworn in as Israel’s 11th president on Wednesday evening.
Herzog was sworn in on a 107-year-old Tanach on which his father, Chaim Herzog, was sworn in as president in 1983.
The Tanach was given as a present to Herzog’s grandmother, Rebbitzen Sora Herzog, by her father, Rav Shmuel Hillman, before her weddding to Rav Yitzchak Herzog, the first Chief Rabbi of Israel (1936-1959).
הנשיא ה 11 יצחק הרצוג יישבע היום אמונים על ספר תנ"ך בן מעל 107 שנה שעליו נשבע גם אביו ואשר שרד את מלחמות העולם הראשונה והשנייה. הספר ניתן במתנה לסבתו הרבנית שרה הרצוג על ידי אביה הרב הילמן שהיה רבה הראשי של גלזגו ערב חתונתה לרב אייזיק הרצוג pic.twitter.com/IHe65eCRYm
— Itamar Eichner (@itamareichner) July 7, 2021
"יחי יחי יחי" – @Isaac_Herzog נשבע אמונים לתפקיד נשיא המדינה ה-11 של מדינת ישראל. ידו השמאלית של הנשיא הנכנס הונחה על ספר תנ"ך בן למעלה מ-107 שנים, עליו נשבע גם אביו, הנשיא לשעבר חיים הרצוג ז"ל pic.twitter.com/k7TwjbpnbK
— ערוץ כנסת (@KnessetT) July 7, 2021
Herzog went to the Kosel on Tuesday evening, prior to his inauguration.
יצחק הרצוג ורעייתו ברחבת הכותל המערבי https://t.co/HWdUMvXeIH
— ישראל היום (@IsraelHayomHeb) July 6, 2021
Herzog pledged to heal deep divisions in Israeli society Wednesday as he took the oath of office . With one hand on a Bible before the Knesset, Herzog, 60, assumed the largely ceremonial position that is designed to serve as the country’s moral compass.
Herzog promised to be “the president of everyone,” adding that the “central expectation” of all Israelis “from me, from all of us, is to lower the tone, to lower the flames, to calm things down.”
The parliament chamber was festooned with large bouquets of white lilies for the inauguration. Military rabbis blew rams’ horns, followed by a performance by a children’s choir. Those assembled sang Israel’s national anthem. Amid applause, Herzog and outgoing president Reuven Rivlin stepped away from the dais together.
“The truth is that I am a little envious of you,” Rivlin said in a letter to Herzog published earlier on Twitter. He called it a “great and wonderful privilege” to be president of all of Israel’s communities — Jews and Arabs, religious and secular, young and old.
Herzog, whose father, Chaim, served as Israel’s president in the 1980s, is to hold office for a single seven-year term. Chaim Herzog also served as Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations.
The new president’s pedigree includes his grandfather, Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog, who was the country’s first chief rabbi. His uncle, Abba Eban, served as foreign minister and ambassador to the U.N. and United States.
Herzog was elected to the presidency by the Knesset last month. He had previously served as head of the Labor Party and head of the opposition in parliament. After leaving politics in 2018, he served as head of the Jewish Agency, a nonprofit organization that works closely with the Israeli government to promote Jewish immigration to Israel and to serve Jewish communities overseas.
Taking office at a time of deep divisions in Israeli society, Herzog said upon his election that he intends to be “the president of everyone” and work to preserve Israel’s democracy.
While most of the office’s function is to receive foreign dignitaries and other ceremonial roles, the president has the power to grant pardons. That could become part of the national agenda if former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is on trial for corruption charges, is ever convicted.
The president is also responsible for selecting a political party leader to form a governing coalition and serve as prime minister after parliamentary elections — a task Rivlin has done five times while in office, most recently after the March 23 parliamentary election.
Herzog’s inauguration comes less than a month after Israel swore in a new government under Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, who struck a coalition agreement with Foreign Minister Yair Lapid. Netanyahu was ousted from office after a 12-year stint as prime minister — the longest in Israel’s history — and now serves as opposition leader.
(YWN Israel Desk – Jerusalem & AP)
6 Responses
It’s interesting, I heard he was supposed to be sworn in next week but asked for it to be moved up a week so as not to be in the “9 days”.
Don’t traditional Jews affirm their intentions anymore?
The tziyonim disgrace a Tanach in order to copy the goyish “minhag” of “swearing in” with a Bible.
Their “Military Rabbis” blew shofaros for this? Yuck.
of course Rivlin is jealous, his hefty paycheck is coming to an end
All the announcements said it was a Tanach. From the pictures, it appears to be a Chumash Bereishis. As far as “affirm,” they don’t say nishba; they say mit-chayyev.