Netanyahu stuns Israelis by describing ‘personal cost’ of postponing son’s wedding

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"Netanyahu Faces Criticism for Comments on Family Wedding Amid Ongoing Conflict"

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently expressed the personal toll his family has faced due to the ongoing conflict in the region, particularly highlighting the second postponement of his son Avner's wedding. Speaking against the backdrop of a missile-damaged hospital in Be'er Sheva, Netanyahu drew parallels to London during the Blitz, emphasizing that his family is not exempt from the hardships affecting ordinary Israelis. He lamented the emotional strain caused by the wedding delays, which were initially scheduled for November and then again for Monday, citing missile threats as the reason for the cancellations. This personal anecdote was aimed at illustrating the shared suffering of Israeli families amid the ongoing violence, which has reportedly resulted in civilian casualties on both sides, including 24 Israeli deaths and an estimated 263 Iranian civilian deaths, according to human rights activists.

However, Netanyahu's remarks were met with immediate backlash from various quarters, with critics arguing that he appears increasingly disconnected from the realities faced by many Israelis. Families like that of Anat Angrest, who has a son currently held hostage, expressed outrage, pointing out that their suffering was not acknowledged. Knesset member Gilad Kariv criticized Netanyahu's comments as self-centered, asserting that the real heroes are those in the community who continue to perform their duties under duress, such as doctors and teachers. Journalists and public figures echoed this sentiment, suggesting that true leaders would not draw attention to their personal grievances, especially in times of widespread tragedy. The controversy surrounding Netanyahu's statements raises questions about his emotional connection to the Israeli populace and the implications of his leadership during a time of crisis.

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Benjamin Netanyahuhas evoked the spirit of London under the Blitz, and pointed to his own family’s sacrifice amid the blood, toil, tears and sweat of his nation: the second postponement of his son’s wedding.

The Israeli prime minister’s remarks, solemnly delivered to the cameras against the backdrop of a missile-struck hospital building in the southern city of Be’er Sheva, set off a howl of derision that echoed around the Hebrew-language internet, at the height of a war that Netanyahu unleashed on Friday.

The stunning comments also added grist to the arguments of his critics that the prime minister is increasingly cut off emotionally from the daily realities of Israel and the region, after more than 17 years in office.

Seeking to underline his family’s shared hardship with ordinary Israelis, Netanyahu adopted a Churchillian tone when pointing out that this was not the first time his son Avner’s wedding had needed to be postponed, and that Avner’s fiancee was also disappointed, not to mention the thwarted mother of the groom, Netanyahu’s wife, Sara.

“It really reminds me of the British people during the Blitz. We are going through a Blitz,” Netanyahu said, referring to the wartime Nazi bombing of Britain in which 43,000 civilians died.

“There are people who were killed, families who grieved loved ones, I really appreciate that,” he went on. The Israeli authorities say that 24 Israeli civilians have so far been killed. Washington-based human rights activists have estimated the Iranian civilian death toll to be 263.

“Each of us bears a personal cost, and my family has not been exempt,” Netanyahu said at the Soroka hospital, which was struck on Thursday morning by an Iranian missile, causing light injuries. “This is the second time that my son Avner has canceled a wedding due to missile threats. It is a personal cost for his fiancee as well, and I must say that my dear wife is a hero, and she bears a personal cost.”

Avner Netanyahu’s wedding was first scheduled in November and had to be postponed for security reasons. Then it was due to take place on Monday, despite threat of opposition protests. Reports that the prime minister was going to take a few days off for the event may have contributed to Iran’s complacency on Friday morning when the leadership was taken unawares by Israel’s aerial attack.

The Israeli backlash to Netanyahu’s nuptial comments was instant and furious. Anat Angrest, whose son Matan has been held hostage since the Hamas attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, observed that the suffering “didn’t go unnoticed by my family either”.

“I have been in the hellish dungeons of Gaza for 622 days now,” Angrest said in a post on the social media platform X.

Gilad Kariv, a Knesset member for the Democrats, called Netanyahu a “borderless narcissist”.

“I know many families who were not forced to postpone a wedding, but who will now never celebrate the weddings that were once meant to take place,” Kariv said. He was contemptuous of Netanyahu’s claim that his wife, Sara, notorious in Israeli for her expensive tastes, was a hero.

“The doctors who leave home for night shifts are the heroes,” Kariv said. “The teachers who keep our children together on Zoom and phone calls are the heroes.”

Amir Tibon, an Israeli journalist, argued that public figures whose children had been killed in combat would never draw attention to the fact.

“But there are no surprises with Netanyahu,” Tibon said. “Even in moments when a personal example is most needed, he is first and foremost concerned with himself.”

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Source: The Guardian