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Sonia Peres
Sonia Peres
from Wikipedia

Sonia Peres was the wife of President and Prime Minister of Israel, Shimon Peres. Sonia served in the British Army during World War II, and for many years volunteered anonymously for sick children and the disabled.[1]

Key Information

She married Shimon in May 1945. Together, they helped found kibbutz Alumot.[2] Sonia and Shimon had three children and eight grandchildren.[3]

Sonia rarely appeared in public eye, preferring to play a backstage role in her husband's six-decade political career.[1]

Early life

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Sonia Gelman was born in the town of Mizoch in Poland (nowadays in Ukraine) to Malka (Mamcha) and Yaakov Gelman. In 1927 she made Aliya to Mandatory Palestine with her parents, her older sister Batya and younger brother Itzik. The Gelman family was one of the first to leave the town, with the aim of making Aliya to the Land of Israel, and their departure caused great excitement. A farewell ceremony was held, which included a party and speeches attended by all the residents. The family settled in the Ben Shemen Youth Village, when Malka was employed as the housemother of the institution, and Yaakov served as a yardman and carpentry teacher.

Meeting her husband

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Sonia Gelman studied at the Ben Shemen youth village where she lived, and where she met Shimon Persky, later Shimon Peres. Peres joined the Gar'in that was founded by Kibbutz Alumot, and Sonia stayed in the village to complete her matriculation studies. Although their relationship continued after graduating, mainly through correspondence, during World War II the two separated, with Shimon remaining on the kibbutz, and Sonia enlisting to the British Army.

Nurse

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Sonia served as a practical nurse, in a field hospital in the Western Desert during the North African campaign. Her job was to assist the professional staff in everything needed to treat the wounded. Peres said that one day when the head nurse called her a "damn native," she slapped her in the face, and was subsequently expelled from the hospital, and was sent to a heavy vehicle driving course at the Mina camp near the pyramids.[4]

Israeli activist and married life

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In May 1945, after completing her service in the British Army and returning to Palestine, she married Shimon Peres. Sonia Peres was a housewife who chose to stay away from the media and fiercely maintained her privacy and the privacy of her family, despite her husband's extensive political career. Over the years, Peres has volunteered for various activities designed to help the needy in Israeli society. Among other things, she assisted in the distribution of food products to the needy, and also worked extensively for IDF widows. In one case, Peres adopted the children of one of the widows, upon her death, and even let them live for a period of time in the prime minister's official resident. However, her voluntary activity was under a heavy veil of secrecy, due to Peres' unwillingness to publicize her activity.[5]

Spouse of the Prime Minister of Israel

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1984 – 1986

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Shimon Peres took over as Israeli prime minister in September 1984, after many years of unsuccessful attempts to win it over. This softened Sonia Peres' hostility to her husband's public and political activities. Peres has fulfilled some of the symbolic roles of a prime minister's wife, mainly hosting leaders and women leaders abroad. For example, she attended the official reception at the Ben-Gurion Airport to Prime Minister of Denmark Poul Schlüter in September 1985 and accompanied a tour of US Vice President George Herbert Walker Bush and his wife Barbara in Israel in July 1986.[5] However, during the two years she served as the prime minister's wife, she continued to refuse to be interviewed, and as far as is known, even refrained from any involvement in political issues her husband engaged in as part of his job.[5]

1995 – 1996

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After the assassination of Prime Minister Rabin Sonia was the prime minister's wife for the second and final time in her life. This time, too, she refrained from appearing in the prime minister's office, and most of the office's staff did not even recognize her face.[6] During the elections to the Fourteenth Knesset and of the Prime Minister, she did not take any active role in her husband's election campaign, nor did she attend the debate between Peres and Benjamin Netanyahu, which was one of the highlights of the election.[7] In contrast, hours before the election results were published, family members and close friends gathered at Peres' house, where she hosted them.[8]

First Lady of Israel

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With the election of Shimon Peres as president, Sonia Peres announced that she would not move with him to the president's official residence and would stay in their private apartment in Neve Avivim. Ever since they lived separately, following her husband breaking his promise that being elected chairman of the Labor Party in 2002 would be his last public job. During this period she changed her name to Sonia Gal, an abbreviation of her maiden name Gelman.

Death

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Sonia Peres' grave in the cemetery of the Ben Shemen Youth Village

Sonia died on January 20, 2011, in her apartment in Tel Aviv. At her request, she was buried in the cemetery of the Ben Shemen Youth Village and not in the place designated for her, next to her husband, in the Helkat Gedolei HaUma on Mount Herzl.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Sonia Peres (née Gelman; 1923–2011) was an Israeli woman best known as the longtime wife of statesman Shimon Peres, whom she married in 1945 and with whom she had three children, remaining married until her death despite his frequent absences due to political duties. Born in Ukraine, she immigrated with her family to Mandatory Palestine at the age of four and met her future husband while studying at the Ben Shemen Youth Village. In 1942, she enlisted in the British Army during World War II, initially serving as a nurse in a hospital near Cairo before becoming a truck driver transporting supplies across Europe. As the spouse of Israel's two-time prime minister and ninth president, Peres deliberately avoided the public eye and official first-lady trappings, rejecting perks such as a chauffeur, handling her own shopping, and focusing instead on private volunteer efforts supporting disadvantaged youth. She died peacefully in her sleep at her Tel Aviv apartment on 20 January 2011, at the age of 87.

Early Life and Background

Birth and Immigration to Palestine

Sonia Gelman, later Peres, was born in 1923 in Mizoch, a then within the borders of the Second Polish Republic (now in , ), to Yaakov and Malka Gelman, Jewish parents facing the socioeconomic challenges and rising prevalent in interwar . In 1927, at the age of four, Sonia immigrated with her family to British Mandate Palestine via , the organized Jewish migration driven by Zionist aspirations for national revival amid European pogroms and economic hardship; this wave included over 30,000 immigrants in the period, though her family's move aligned more closely with subsequent family-based relocations. The Gelman family settled at Ben Shemen, an experimental youth village and agricultural boarding school founded in 1927 by Zionist educator Siegfried Lehmann to instill and Hebrew culture in orphaned or immigrant children, where Yaakov and Malka found employment in farming and maintenance roles supporting the institution's communal ethos.

Education and Formative Years

Sonia Peres, née Gelman, immigrated to in 1927 at the age of four with her family, settling at the Ben Shemen Youth Village where her parents worked as laborers. She received her early education there, attending the village's , which emphasized agricultural training, , and Zionist ideals in a communal setting typical of pre-state Jewish youth institutions. During her high school years at Ben Shemen, she met , her future husband, forging early personal connections amid the shared environment of youthful pioneering. Following her graduation from school around 1941, Peres enlisted in the British Army's in , forgoing further formal academic pursuits in favor of practical vocational training. In this capacity, she underwent nurse training and served in an army hospital near , , during , experiences that instilled discipline, resilience, and a commitment to caregiving amid wartime exigencies. These formative military years, marked by roles as both nurse and truck driver, reinforced her preference for hands-on service over public prominence, shaping her lifelong reticence toward political life.

Marriage and Personal Life

Meeting and Marriage to Shimon Peres

Sonia Gelman first encountered at the Ben Shemen Youth Village in during the early 1940s, where Peres was a student and Gelman, the daughter of the village's carpentry teacher, was involved in communal activities including gardening. Peres later recalled noticing her distinctive appearance, with her hair braided while working outdoors, which sparked his initial interest. Their courtship unfolded amid the socialist ethos of the youth village, involving shared intellectual pursuits such as reading together, reflective of the era's ideological fervor among young Zionists. The couple married in in a modest ceremony at the Ben Shemen Youth Village's dining hall, shortly after Gelman's return from service as a nurse in the during . At the time, both were committed to the collective ideals of life, and their union exemplified the pioneering spirit of pre-state , with the wedding aligning with the sparse, communal practices of the period rather than extravagance. Following the marriage, they joined efforts to establish Alumot in northern , where they initially resided and contributed to agricultural and communal development.

Family and Children

Sonia Peres and had three children: daughter Tsvia (also spelled Tzvia) Walden and sons Yonatan (Yoni) Peres and Nehemia (also known as Chemi or Hemi) Peres. The couple's children were born during their early years together as founding members of Kibbutz Alumot in northern , where Sonia raised them in a communal setting amid the challenges of postwar settlement life. Sonia maintained a deliberate distance from her husband's public career, prioritizing family privacy and shielding her children from media scrutiny, which contributed to their relatively low-profile upbringings. Tsvia Walden pursued a career in medicine, becoming a physician, while her brothers engaged in business and philanthropy aligned with their father's legacy, including support for initiatives like the Shimon Peres Center for Peace. At the time of Sonia's death on January 20, 2011, the family included eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren, reflecting the growth of their lineage over six decades of marriage.

Professional and Military Service

Service in the British Army

Sonia Peres, born Sonia Gelman, enlisted in the British Army in 1942 at the age of 18, volunteering to contribute to the Allied war effort against Nazi Germany during World War II. She served in the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS), the women's auxiliary branch of the British Army, alongside approximately 4,000 other Jewish women from Mandatory Palestine who joined the British forces. Deployed to , Peres initially worked as a nurse in an army hospital near , providing medical care to wounded soldiers. Following a dispute with a supervisor, she was reassigned to a , where she transitioned to driving trucks, transporting supplies and personnel across desert routes in support of British operations in . Her service exemplified the practical roles taken by ATS members in logistics and medical support amid the wartime demands of the Mediterranean theater. Peres completed her military duties by the war's end and returned to in 1945, shortly before her marriage to that May. Her wartime experience in the marked an early demonstration of her commitment to service, predating her later career and volunteer efforts in .

Career as a Nurse

In 1942, Sonia Peres enlisted in the British Army's Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS), the women's branch, where she trained and served as a practical nurse. She was deployed to Egypt, assisting professional nurses in an army hospital near Cairo during the North African campaign of World War II. Her duties involved supporting medical care for wounded soldiers in field hospitals in the Western Desert, fulfilling her expressed aspiration to work as a nurse in a hospital setting, as she later recalled requesting this role specifically. Approximately 100 women from Mandatory Palestine served in similar nursing capacities with British forces in the region at the time. Peres's nursing service combined frontline medical assistance with logistical support, as she also trained as a for the army, transporting supplies across and later . This dual role highlighted the practical demands of wartime service for ATS personnel, though her primary motivation and initial assignment centered on . She continued these duties until the war's end in 1945, after which she married and shifted focus to family life, with no public record of further professional practice.

Activism and Private Contributions

Volunteer Work for Vulnerable Populations

Sonia Peres engaged in volunteer work supporting war widows and their children in , contributing to social causes aimed at aiding families affected by conflict losses. She also dedicated years to volunteering with Micha, the Deaf Children's Association, focusing on services for hearing-impaired youth. Beyond these efforts, Peres acted as a surrogate mother to disadvantaged youth, providing personal support to vulnerable of guidance and stability, a role recognized within Israeli communities despite her preference for . Her involvement extended to numerous other organizations, where she quietly offered assistance without seeking public acknowledgment, reflecting her commitment to direct aid over visibility.

Approach to Philanthropy

Sonia Peres' philanthropic efforts were marked by a commitment to and hands-on assistance for vulnerable populations, reflecting a preference for private action over public recognition. Despite her position as the wife of a prominent political figure, she eschewed ceremonial roles and media attention, focusing instead on direct support for those in need, including the distribution of food to impoverished families and aid to widows of Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers. This approach aligned with her lifelong modesty, as noted by contemporaries who described her contributions as quietly noble and apolitical, often extending help irrespective of ideological divides. Her work extended to serving as a surrogate for disadvantaged youth, providing emotional and material support to children from marginalized backgrounds, including during politically charged periods. In the , amid protests by radical right-wing groups outside the prime minister's residence, Peres personally fed the protesters' children and assisted their mothers with supplies, demonstrating a humanitarian stance that transcended partisan loyalties. She also volunteered extensively for organizations aiding sick children and the disabled, drawing from her background as a nurse to offer practical care rather than financial patronage alone. This emphasis on personal involvement underscored a causal focus on immediate relief, prioritizing empirical impact over institutional affiliations or donor visibility. Peres' method avoided the trappings of high-profile , such as galas or named endowments, in favor of sustained, low-key engagement that persisted through her husband's decades in public office. Much of her volunteerism remained obscured during her lifetime, with details emerging posthumously in , highlighting a deliberate choice to insulate her charitable pursuits from political scrutiny or acclaim. Her efforts thus embodied a first-principles dedication to alleviating suffering through unpublicized service, unswayed by the expectations of her spousal role.

Roles in Israeli Public Life

Support During Husband's Prime Ministerships

Sonia Peres offered her husband primarily personal and domestic support during his nonconsecutive terms as , from 13 September 1984 to 20 October 1986 and from 4 November 1995 to 18 June 1996, while steadfastly avoiding the public and ceremonial obligations often expected of a prime minister's . Residing in the couple's modest apartment in northern rather than official residences, she managed household responsibilities and provided emotional stability amid the intense political pressures of his leadership roles. Her approach emphasized discretion, with contemporaries describing her contributions as operating "backstage" to sustain his focus on governance without drawing attention to herself. Rejecting privileges such as a government-provided chauffeur, Sonia Peres handled her own shopping and errands, embodying an "anti-first lady" stance that prioritized independence over protocol. This reticence extended to minimal participation in official events; she rarely accompanied him to state functions or hosted dignitaries in a formal capacity, differing markedly from spouses who embraced visibility. Her support thus manifested in quiet endurance of the strains imposed by his rotational premiership in the 1984–1986 National Unity Government and his interim leadership following Yitzhak Rabin's assassination in 1995, periods marked by economic stabilization efforts, security challenges, and peace process advancements.

1984–1986 Term

In Shimon Peres's initial premiership under the power-sharing agreement with , Sonia Peres maintained her low-profile routine, offering private counsel and stability as he navigated coalition dynamics and initiatives like the 1985 economic stabilization plan that curbed from over 400% annually. No records indicate her involvement in or receptions during this era, aligning with her established aversion to political exposure established decades earlier.

1995–1996 Term

Following Rabin's murder on 4 November 1995, Sonia Peres supported her husband through the ensuing national mourning and electoral turbulence, which culminated in his narrow defeat to in May 1996. At age 72, she continued prioritizing personal rather than official duties, shunning the spotlight amid heightened security threats and the ' controversies, thereby allowing him to concentrate on interim governance without added public obligations on her part.

1984–1986 Term


During Shimon Peres's first term as Prime Minister from July 13, 1984, to October 20, 1986, Sonia Peres relocated from the family home in Tel Aviv to the official residence in Jerusalem to be with her husband, marking a rare exception to her preference for privacy. In this capacity, she provided direct support to families of prisoners by engaging daily with demonstrators—wives and children of Jewish Underground members—protesting outside the residence. She ensured the children were bathed and fed, frequently inviting them into the house for these needs and occasionally driving wives who lacked personal vehicles.
Despite this localized humanitarian involvement, Sonia Peres withdrew from broader political activities and declined to accompany on official trips abroad, consistent with her longstanding aversion to public political exposure. Her presence at the prime minister's side was limited, as evidenced by occasional photographed appearances, such as in October 1984, but she otherwise shunned the limelight associated with the role. This approach underscored her support for her husband's leadership through private familial stability rather than ceremonial public duties.

1995–1996 Term

During Shimon Peres's interim term as Prime Minister, which began on 22 November 1995 following the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin and ended after the May 1996 elections, Sonia Peres continued to eschew public engagements and official first-lady roles. As during his prior premiership, she rejected state-provided luxuries like a chauffeured car, opting instead to handle her own errands and shopping. Her support remained personal and low-profile, aligning with a lifelong aversion to media exposure and the politicization of family life, even amid the national trauma of Rabin's death and the ensuing electoral defeat. Sonia Peres prioritized independent volunteer efforts, such as hands-on aid at facilities for children with special needs—washing floors and serving meals—rather than assuming nominal patronage of such groups in her husband's capacity. This stance underscored her role as a stabilizing private presence for Peres during a period of heightened political instability, without seeking or accepting public acclaim.

Tenure as First Lady of Israel

Sonia Peres served as First Lady of Israel from July 15, 2007, when her husband Shimon Peres was inaugurated as president, until her death on January 20, 2011. Unlike many predecessors, she declined to relocate to the official President's Residence in Jerusalem, choosing instead to remain in the couple's long-time apartment in Tel Aviv. This decision underscored her preference for a private life, even as her husband carried out state functions from the capital. Throughout her tenure, Peres maintained an exceptionally low public profile, rarely attending official events or ceremonies associated with the . She eschewed typical first lady perks, such as a chauffeured , and continued handling her own shopping and carrying her bags, embodying an "anti-" stance that prioritized personal independence over ceremonial visibility. Her approach aligned with a lifelong pattern of avoiding political exposure, focusing instead on supporting her husband from behind the scenes without assuming a prominent public role. No major initiatives or patronage projects were publicly associated with her during this period, reflecting her deliberate withdrawal from the formal duties often expected of the position.

Controversies and Personal Conflicts

Reluctance Toward Political Exposure

Sonia Peres consistently avoided the public spotlight during her husband Shimon Peres's extensive political career, which spanned over six decades and included terms as and . She rarely participated in official events or media appearances, opting instead for a backstage supportive role that kept her personal life shielded from scrutiny. This reticence extended to her tenure as from 2007 to 2011, when she declined to relocate to the official presidential residence in , choosing to remain in their family home in . When questioned about her aversion to public exposure, Peres remarked, "I married a dairy farmer," alluding to her husband's early agrarian before his rise in and underscoring her preference for a simpler, private existence unentangled with governmental pomp. Her approach contrasted sharply with the expectations often placed on spouses of high-ranking officials, as she asserted her without obligation to fulfill ceremonial duties. This stance allowed her to focus on discreet volunteer work and family matters, away from political theater, even as her husband's prominence drew inevitable attention to their marriage. Peres's reluctance was not merely personal but a deliberate boundary that preserved her autonomy amid the demands of Israeli public life. She lived and died privately—passing away in her sleep on January 20, 2011, at age 87 in their home—mirroring the low-profile life she had cultivated despite proximity to national leadership. Her example highlighted tensions between private integrity and public expectation in political families, influencing perceptions of the role as optional rather than obligatory.

Strain on Marriage Due to Public Duties

Sonia Peres's preference for privacy clashed with 's extensive political career, which demanded frequent absences and prioritization of national duties over family life, leading to significant marital tension. acknowledged in a 2014 interview that "politics broke up my marriage," explaining that while their union had been happy and loving, his wife ultimately could not accept taking precedence. This strain manifested in her opposition to his 2007 presidential candidacy, where she urged him to decline despite his decision to serve the state, viewing it as a final encroachment on their private life. The couple's physical separation intensified the rift; upon Shimon's inauguration as president on July 15, 2007, Sonia remained in their residence rather than relocating to the in , marking a separation while they remained legally married. Her absence from his swearing-in ceremony underscored her rejection of his public role, a stance rooted in decades of resentment over the personal sacrifices required by his positions as director-general of the Defense Ministry (1953–1959), multiple ministerial roles, and prime ministerships in 1984–1986 and 1995–1996. Sonia's reluctance extended to avoiding political events altogether, contrasting sharply with the expectations placed on spouses in Israel's and eliciting criticism that her withdrawal reflected selfishness amid her husband's service. Despite the enduring length of their 67-year marriage, from 1945 until Sonia's death on January 20, 2011, the public duties exacerbated underlying conflicts, with Shimon later reflecting that his commitment to state responsibilities came at the cost of domestic harmony. This dynamic highlighted a broader pattern in their relationship, where Shimon's peripatetic career—often involving late-night work and international travel—left Sonia managing the household and raising their three children largely alone, fostering her long-held view that had intruded excessively into their family.

Death and Legacy

Final Years and Death

In her later years, Sonia Peres resided independently in a modest apartment in the Ramat Aviv neighborhood of northern Tel Aviv, estranged from her husband Shimon Peres and eschewing the public life associated with his presidency. She had long preferred privacy, avoiding the presidential residence and maintaining a low profile amid ongoing personal strains from decades of political exposure. Peres suffered from heart problems in the period leading up to her death. On January 20, 2011, she died in her sleep at the age of 87 in her apartment, apparently from . She was discovered by a grandchild, who alerted emergency services; paramedics responded but were unable to revive her. At her explicit request, Peres was buried in the cemetery of the Ben Shemen Youth Village rather than the national cemetery on , for which she qualified as the spouse of a president.

Posthumous Recognition and Assessment

Sonia Peres died on January 20, 2011, at age 87 in , and her funeral the following day at Ben-Shemen youth village drew hundreds, including Israel's political and social elite, to honor a woman who had consistently shunned public accolades during her lifetime. President eulogized her as the love of his life, recounting their meeting as "" and affirming that his affection would endure until his own death. Posthumous tributes consistently portrayed Peres as intensely private, having resided separately from her husband in to maintain distance from Jerusalem's official residence and its demands, a choice reflective of her discomfort with political exposure. Assessments in Israeli media highlighted her role as a steadfast supporter of Shimon Peres's career amid personal strains from his public duties, yet noted her preference for obscurity over ceremonial honors typically afforded to spouses of leaders. No major awards, institutions, or public memorials have been established in her name since her death, aligning with her lifelong aversion to prominence. Her legacy is assessed as emblematic of traditional spousal devotion in Israel's founding elite, where private endurance underpinned public figures' achievements, though some observers, like Dr. Ilan Ben-Ami, suggested underlying complexities to her reclusive beyond the public of quiet . These evaluations draw from contemporary accounts rather than later institutional reevaluations, underscoring the limited formal recognition for a figure who eschewed the spotlight.

References

  1. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flickr_-_Government_Press_Office_%28GPO%29_-_Sonia_and_Shimon_Peres.jpg
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