You cannot speak on behalf of a nation when you have no mandate to do so.
As for me, even though I have been accused of anti-Semitism countless times, no one has ever heard me make anti-Semitic statements or engage in anti-Semitic behavior.
The government would have preferred not to take a stand, but the constant presence of the Israeli-Arab conflict on our television screens made it an issue that could no longer be avoided.
After all, you're not exactly a nation like all the other nations. You are unique, if only because you are such an ancient people, and because of the way you are spread all over the world and your obvious success in many fields.
An ancient dictum says that when Zeus wanted to destroy someone, he would first drive him mad.
By analogy, if we were to develop a soccer team, then we would not invite basketball and volleyball players to the try outs. We would invite soccer players to apply.
France was an occupied country, a country that surrendered and was left without the right to choose.
I'm always suspicious of people who repent of other people's sins.
I'm not saying that the gas chambers didn't exist. I couldn't see them myself.
If you take a book of a thousand pages on the Second World War, in which 50 million people died, the concentration camps occupy two pages and the gas chambers ten or 15 lines, and that's what one calls a detail.
In my speeches, I always condemned communism, national-socialism and fascism.
In recent years - before the intifada - there were three or four incidents of anti-Semitism a year, and that's out of 18 million crimes and violations of the law.
Millions also perished in the Chinese camps, and there have been terrible genocides in Cambodia and Vietnam.
Everyone sees drama from his own perspective.
Political rivals attacked me. I was savagely beaten. I was kicked in the face and I lost my eye as a result.