Ben-Gurion likeness on Tel Aviv beach

Iconic statue badly burned in attack

Police later said that a 34-year-old homeless man had been arrested in connection with the vandalism.

The damaged statue on the beach in Tel Aviv. Photo: Flash90
The damaged statue on the beach in Tel Aviv. Photo: Flash90

(TIMES OF ISRAEL) – An iconic statue of Israel’s first prime minister David Ben-Gurion was badly damaged in an attack on a Tel Aviv beach in the early hours last Saturday morning.

The statue of Ben-Gurion on Frishman Beach is a re-creation of a famous image by photographer Paul Goldman, who captured the former premier performing a headstand on the beach in 1957.

CCTV footage showed an individual approaching the statue at around 5.25am.

Police later said that a 34-year-old homeless man had been arrested in connection with the vandalism.

The motive behind the arson attack was unclear. Some Hebrew media reports said the suspect has mental health issues.

In a statement before the arrest, Tel Aviv mayor Ron Huldai vowed the statue would be repaired quickly.

“It is very sad that at the beginning of the new year someone decided to damage one of the most beloved sculptures in the city,” Huldai wrote on Facebook.

“It will be restored as soon as possible, to make the residents of the city happy, especially the children.”

The statue was initially cordoned off by municipal workers, before it was removed from the scene by a bulldozer.

The municipality filed a complaint with police.

Security has been increased at Ben-Gurion’s nearby former home, which has been converted into a museum.

In a statement cited by the Walla news site, also before the arrest, the Ben-Gurion House said the arson came amid increasing vitriol toward those who had founded the country and written the Declaration of Independence.

“A statue can be restored, but a society that loses respect for its past is a society whose future will be shrouded in fog, and it will be very difficult to rebuild,” the organisation said.

The statue was targeted days after the lawyer representing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government dismissed Israel’s foundational Declaration of Independence as a “hasty” document endorsed by unelected signatories that cannot be a source of legal authority.

The comment by Ilan Bombach during a high-stakes High Court of Justice hearing on Tuesday on the petitions against the reasonableness law, the first piece of judicial overhaul legislation, sparked an uproar.

The Declaration of Independence has become a key symbol used by protesters against the hardline government’s contentious judicial overhaul.

 

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