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Lecture

Philip Rubenstein
Israel’s Prime Ministers, Part 7: The Soldier and The Dreamer

Wednesday 10.06.2026

How to watch

This lecture starts on 10 June at 5:00pm (UK).

Summary

The story of Yitzhak Rabin (1922–95) and Shimon Peres (1923–2016) is also the story of modern Israel. Reserved, disciplined, and deeply sceptical, Rabin represented the Israel forged through siege, war, and sacrifice. Urbane, ambitious, and future-oriented, Peres represented another Israel—one that sought legitimacy not only through military strength, but through regional transformation and peace. From the battlefields of 1948 to the bitter internal struggles that shattered Labour’s political supremacy, their rivalry became one of the defining dramas of Israeli public life. This lecture—the first of two in which they feature—traces their parallel journeys, from the founding generation of the state, through war, political upheaval in the 1970s, and uneasy cohabitation with Likud in the 1980s, before Oslo brought them together one final time in the 1990s for the dramatic gamble of peace.

Philip Rubenstein

an image of Philip Rubenstein
Philip Rubenstein was director of the Parliamentary War Crimes Group, which, in the mid-to-late 1980s, campaigned to bring Nazi war criminals living in the UK to justice. Philip was also the founder-director of the Holocaust Educational Trust and played a role in getting the study of the Shoah onto the national school’s curriculum in the UK. These days, he works with family businesses, advising on governance and continuity from one generation to the next.