New | Obama notes unfinished business of peace as Peres is buried in Israel

US President Barack Obama called on the next generation of leaders to complete Shimon Peres’s vision of peace between Israelis and Palestinians, as dignitaries from around the world gathered in Jerusalem to bury the former Israeli president and Nobel Peace Prize winner.
In the final and most political speech of a long programme Friday at the national cemetery on Mount Herzl, Obama said Peres had told him Jews shouldn’t rule over another people and that Palestinians were entitled to dignity and self-determination.
“Just as he understood the practical necessity of peace, Shimon believed that Israel’s exceptionalism was rooted not only in fidelity to the Jewish people, but to the moral and ethical vision, the precepts of his Jewish faith,” Obama said. “‘From the very first day we are against slaves and masters,’“ he quoted Peres, the last of Israel’s founding generation of leaders, as having told him.
The subtle criticism came as Obama winds down an eight-year tenure marked by continuous friction with Israel’s conservative prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, whom he sat next to at Friday’s service. Obama has repeatedly characterised Israeli settlement-building in the West Bank as an obstacle to peace, while Netanyahu contends that Palestinian rejection of a Jewish state, not settlements, is the core of the conflict.
Obama’s remarks also showed an evolution in his portrayal of Israel during his two terms in office. Criticised in Israel for a pivotal Cairo speech early in his tenure in which he appeared to describe the nation in narrow terms as a reaction to the Holocaust, Obama said on Friday that Peres demonstrated that “justice and hope are at the heart of the Zionist idea. A free life, in a homeland regained.”

Peres, who served as president, prime minister, finance minister and other senior posts during a career that spanned Israel’s entire history, died Wednesday at age 93 after suffering a stroke September 13. Obama compared him to Nelson Mandela, contrasting Peres with politicians who he said think in sound bites or pander to public whim.