Nachman Shai

Nachman Shai (Hebrew: נחמן שי; born Nachman Shaykevich on 28 November 1946) is an Israeli journalist and politician who served as a member of the Knesset and its Deputy Speaker. He previously worked as the IDF spokesman.

Nachman Shai
Date of birth (1946-11-28) 28 November 1946
Place of birthJerusalem, Mandatory Palestine
Knessets18, 19, 20
Faction represented in Knesset
2009–2013Kadima
2013–2015Labor Party
2015–2019Zionist Union
2019Labor Party

Biography

Born in Jerusalem, Shai gained a BA in history and political science and an MA in communications from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where he also studied in the School of Business Administration. He studied communications at the World Press Institute in Minnesota, and worked as a research fellow in the Shorenstein Center in the JFK School of Government at Harvard University. In 2009 Nachman obtained a Ph.D. in political science and communications from Bar Ilan University and his thesis, on "Public Diplomacy and Low Intensity Conflict",[1] was awarded the 2012 Tshetshik award for national Security research by Tel Aviv University's Institute for National Security Studies.

During his service in the Israel Defense Forces he served in a Nahal unit, worked in Israel Army Radio as its commander and chief editor, and served as the IDF spokesman between 1988 and 1991, reaching the rank of Brigadier-General. During the Gulf War of 1991, when Israel was targeted by Iraqi missiles, his job was to calm Israelis in sealed rooms.[2] He is remembered for instructing concerned citizens to "drink water".[3]

In 1979 he became press secretary for the Israeli delegation to the United Nations in New York, and in 1981 he was named press consultant to Israel's Washington embassy. In 1991 he founded The Second Authority for Television and Radio and served as its CEO. He was also chairman of the board of directors of the Israel Television News Company, chairman of the Israel Broadcasting Authority (IBA) and Director General of the Ministry of Science, Culture and Sport. He later served as Senior Vice-President of United Jewish Communities (UJC ) and Director-General of UJC Israel.[2]

Prior to the 2009 elections he joined Kadima, saying "I think there is a time to come down from the stands and enter the playing field. I know the field well and I have been involved in many ways, but I decided this time to become a player".[3] Kadima Chairwoman, Tzipi Livni, presented Shai at Kadima's Knesset faction, saying he was "part of the attractive face Kadima wants to show the electorate" and that he would be able to contribute to Kadima on issues pertaining to the Jewish world, Zionism and the Diaspora.[4] Shai was placed eighteenth on the party list and entered the Knesset as the party won 28 seats.[5]

Shai left to join the Labor Party prior to the January 2013 elections. Placed 14th on the party's list, he was re-elected as Labor won 15 seats.

In 2013 Shai published a book in Hebrew called Milḥamedia ("Media War")[6] dealing largely with the treatment by the media of the Second Intifada.

gollark: Hmm, this is a possible concern I guess.
gollark: There might be helpers for that in the standard library, which this would actually have.
gollark: I would probably also drop forms since their functionality is fairly easy to replicate with the scripting capabilities.
gollark: Oh, and in terms of arbitrary preferences, I'd probably make some of the web APIs more functional programming™️ instead of using objects; instead of `URL` objects, you would just have a `parseURL` function returning a table of URL components, and `serializeURL` function... unparsing it.
gollark: Well, also the web is gigantically complicated and there's no hope of dislodging it.

References

  1. "דיפלומטיה ציבורית ולחימה בעצימות נמוכה: ישראל 2005-2000", Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, 2009.
  2. Novis, Carol (2007-03-23). "The light at the end of the tunnel". Haaretz. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  3. Hoffman, Gil; Tovah Lazaroff (2008-11-03). "'Star Wars' among parties continue as Nachman Shai joins Kadima". Haaretz. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  4. Ilan, Shahar; Barak Ravid (2008-11-04). "Former IDF spokesman Nachman Shai joins Kadima". Haaretz. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  5. Mizroch, Amir (2009-02-11). "Too early? Kadima throws 'victory party'". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 2009-03-05.
  6. Nachman Shai (2013). מלחמדיה: ישראל, העולם והקרב על התודעה. ASIN B00BOPXRPK.
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