Background
Moshe Dwek was born in Aleppo, Mandatory Syria, to a Jewish family.
Moshe Dwek was born in Aleppo, Mandatory Syria, to a Jewish family.
At the age of 13, he was part of a group of Jewish boys that immigrated to Mandate Palestine. He initially lived on kibbutz Dorot, then on kibbutz Glil Yam. He fought in the Israeli War of Independence.
On October 29, 1957, while the Knesset (then located in Frumin House) was in session, Dwek, who was standing on a balcony, threw a grenade he had stolen from the army into the chamber.
The grenade exploded and seriously injured rabbi Haim-Moshe Shapira of the National Religious Party. Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion, Foreign Minister Golda Meir, and Transport Minister Moshe Carmel were injured by shrapnel.
The grenade that Moshe Dwek threw had been intended for Ben-Gurion and Meir. Dwek later asked Shapira for forgiveness
Although he was portrayed as psychologically unbalanced, a panel of experts agreed that he was fit to stand trial and he was sentenced to 15 years in prison, part of which he spent in a psychiatric hospital.
Requests for a retrial were rejected.
After 10 years, Dwek requested a pardon, but this was denied. A slightly different account, published in 1959, gives his name as Moshe Ben Yaakov Dueg, 25 years old. This version says he suffered an accident in childhood that left him mentally unbalanced.
He had another accident in a youth camp after coming to Palestine just before the founding of the state of Israel.
He then tried to sue the Jewish Agency for $66,000. After losing the case he sent threatening letters to the judge and was arrested.
He was found unfit for trial. In another incident he tried to stowaway on a plane to New New York
They spoke only Arabic and the courier translated the letter for them.
The party platform called for an end to Ashkenazi hegemony, and integrating the Sephardic and Mizrahi Jews into the leadership by giving them half of all government ministries, as well as widespread representation in the Knesset, municipalities, and the Jewish Agency. Its other demands included setting up a university, college, and a religious polytechnic institute in the coastal city of Netanya. He is remembered for his unusual television advertisements, which would start off with Dwek chanting the words Number"ar, Number"ar, Number"ar (literally "youth, youth, youth").
The incident was allegedly prompted by Dwek"s inability to receive national insurance for his declining health, and was apparently not prompted by larger political issues. He had no party affiliations. Dwek later started his own political party, which he named Tarshish, and ran for the Knesset in 1988.