Tel Aviv - Abie Nathan, a maverick Israeli peace campaigner
who was flew solo to Egypt in an attempt to meet then-Egyptian
president Gamal Abdul Nasser and founded The Voice of Peace radio
station which attracted tens of millions of listeners, died Wednesday
night in a Tel Aviv hospital. He was 81.
Nathan had suffered a stroke in 1996 and was hospitalized five
days before his death, Israel Radio reporter.
Born in Iran, Nathan grew up in India and immigrated to Israel in
1948. He joined the nascent Israel Air Force and after the 1948-49
Arab-Israeli war worked for El Al, Israel's national airline, before
opening a restaurant.
After an unsuccessful bid to be elected to the Knesset in 1965 as
the head of a small party, he burst into Israel public consciousness
in February 1966. Flying a small plane named Peace 1, he took off
from a small airfield north of Tel Aviv and headed for Egypt, with
whom Israel was still formally at war.
Landing in Port Said, he asked to meet Egyptian President Nasser,
but his request was denied and he was deported back to Israel, where
he was jailed for traveling to a hostile country.
It was the first, but not the last, of his well-publicized efforts
at reconciliation between Israelis and Arabs, which included hunger
strikes to protest Israeli settlement policy in the occupied
territories, and meeting Yasser Arafat when such parleys were still
outlawed in Israel.
Nathan's meeting with the Palestinian leader earned him an 18-
month prison sentence, in 1991, which was later commuted to six
months.
Apart from his peace efforts, and activities on behalf of disaster
relief - he set up refugee camps in Somalia, Ethiopia and Guatemala -
Nathan was perhaps best known for his pirate radio station, The Voice
of Peace.
Founded in 1973, with its famous call sign, 'from somewhere in the
Mediterranean, we are the voice of peace,' the station broadcast from
a ship anchored off Israel's territorial waters.
It was launched with the song 'give peace a chance' and in its
heyday, its all music-format attracted a listenership of tens of
millions in the region.
Nathan was forced to close down the station in 1993, after
spiraling operating costs of the ship, coupled with declining
advertising revenues, saw its debts mount to hundreds of thousands of
dollars.
He suffered a stroke in 1996 which left him partly paralysed, and
a second stroke around a year later left him without power of speech.
At Nathan's 80th birthday celebrations in April 2007 veteran
Israeli statesman Shimon Peres, who would soon become the country's
president, remarked that Nathan 'showed that one nan can do for the
sake of peace.'
On Wednesday night the president eulogized Nathan as 'a great
warrior against war, against poverty and against discrimination.'
'He was the greatest conqueror of hearts and a man of faith in a
time when there was none,' Israeli media quoted Peres as saying.
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