Sara Netanyahu

Wife of Benjamin Netanyahu (born 1958) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sara Netanyahu (Hebrew: שרה נתניהו; née Ben-Artzi [בן ארצי]; born November 1958)[1] is the spouse of the prime minister of Israel by marriage to Benjamin Netanyahu, holding the role for her third time. By profession, she is an educational and career psychologist.[2]

Prime MinisterBenjamin Netanyahu
Preceded byLihi Lapid
Prime MinisterBenjamin Netanyahu
Preceded byAliza Olmert
Quick facts Spouse of the Prime Minister of Israel, Prime Minister ...
Sara Netanyahu
שרה נתניהו
Netanyahu in 2025
Spouse of the Prime Minister of Israel
Assumed role
29 December 2022
Prime MinisterBenjamin Netanyahu
Preceded byLihi Lapid
In role
31 March 2009  13 June 2021
Prime MinisterBenjamin Netanyahu
Preceded byAliza Olmert
Succeeded byGilat Bennett
In role
18 June 1996  6 July 1999
Prime MinisterBenjamin Netanyahu
Preceded bySonia Peres
Succeeded byNava Barak
Personal details
BornSara Ben-Artzi
(1958-11-05) 5 November 1958 (age 67)
Spouses
Doron Neuberger
(m. 1980; div. 1987)
(m. 1991)
Children2, including Yair
Parent(s)Shmuel Ben-Artzi (father)
Chava Paritzky (mother)
EducationTel Aviv University (BA)
Hebrew University of Jerusalem (MA)
OccupationEducational psychologist
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Family and education

Sara on her father Shmuel Ben-Artzi's lap, 1960

Sara Ben-Artzi (later Netanyahu) was born in the northern Israeli town of Kiryat Tiv'on, near Haifa. Her father, Shmuel Ben-Artzi, was a Polish-born Israeli Jewish educator, author, poet and biblical scholar, who died in 2011 at the age of 96. Her mother, Chava (née Paritzky; 1922–2003), was a sixth-generation Jerusalemite. She has three brothers, all of whom were Israel Bible Contest champions: Matanya Ben-Artzi, a professor of mathematics, Hagai Ben-Artzi, a professor of Bible and Jewish Thought, and Amatzia Ben-Artzi, a technology entrepreneur.[2]

Netanyahu attended Greenberg High School in Kiryat Tiv'on, where she was an outstanding student.[2] She completed a B.A. in psychology at Tel Aviv University in 1984 and her master's degree at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1996.[2]

Netanyahu married Doron Neuberger in 1980. The couple divorced in 1987.[3] In 1991, she married Benjamin Netanyahu. They have two sons, Yair and Avner. In 2010, Avner won the International Bible Contest on the national level, and came in third place on the international level.[2]

Career

Sara and Benjamin Netanyahu at the grave of Benjamin Netanyahu's brother Yonatan Netanyahu in 1997

Netanyahu worked as a reporter for Maariv LaNoar, a weekly magazine for Israeli teenagers. In the Israel Defense Forces, she was a psycho-technical evaluator in the Department of Behavioral Sciences of the Military Intelligence Directorate ("Aman").[2]

Netanyahu worked as a psychotechnical evaluator of gifted children at the Institute for Promoting Youth Creativity and Excellence headed by Dr. Erika Landau, and at a rehabilitation center of the Ministry of Labour. She also worked as an El Al flight attendant.[2]

As wife of the prime minister, Netanyahu chaired Yad b'Yad, an aid organization for abused children[4] and Tza'ad Kadima for children with cerebral palsy. In 2001, she went to work as an educational psychologist in the psychological service of the Jerusalem Municipality.[citation needed]

Her work includes psychological diagnoses and treatment for children in the school system and assistance to children from families in distress.[2][non-primary source needed]

Netanyahu has received media coverage for scandals she has been involved in.[5]

Netanyahu won a libel case filed against Schocken Books for falsely maligning her, and a libel suit in 2002 against the local paper Kol Ha'ir, after two unfounded reports were published about her in the paper's gossip column.[6][7] In 2008, Channel 10 reported that when she travelled to London with her husband for a public diplomacy campaign during the 2006 Lebanon War, she spent a large sum of money on luxuries paid for by a donor in London.[8] In response, Netanyahu filed a libel suit against the channel.[9][10] As her trip had not been approved by the Knesset's Ethics Committee, her husband was notified by the committee.[11]

In January 2010, the family housekeeper sued Netanyahu in a labor court for withholding wages, unfair working conditions and verbal abuse.[12] Netanyahu was sued as of March 2014 by another caretaker and former bodyguard to the family over claims that she was abusive towards him.[13] In February 2016, the Jerusalem Labor Court ruled in favor of plaintiff Meni Naftali, who claimed that Sara Netanyahu had created a hostile work environment and awarded him damages of NIS 170,000.[14] The National Labor Court subsequently rejected her appeal.

In 2015, reports surfaced that she had ordered catered meals and charged the government nearly $100,000 for the expenses when the Prime Minister's Office already employed a cook.[15] Police recommended indicting her in 2016.[16] On September 8, 2017, Attorney General Avichai Mandelblit announced that Netanyahu would be charged with ordering meals at the state's expense without authorization.[17][18] On 17 January 2018, the pre-indictment hearing was held. Netanyahu's lawyers met with Mandelblit, while she herself did not attend, breaking with usual custom.[19] After negotiations for a plea bargain collapsed,[20][21] the trial was set for July 19.[22] Netanyahu's lawyers argued that the meals were ordered by an assistant for visiting dignitaries.[23]

On 16 June 2019, Netanyahu signed a plea deal and was convicted of misusing state funds, with the more severe charge of fraud being dropped. She was ordered to pay 55,000 NIS ($15,275) to the state.[24]

In December 2024, she was accused of harassing witnesses during the corruption trial against her husband.[25][26][27]

See also

References

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