In August 2012, the inter-relationship between security and education became clear with Peres’s participation in the opening of the new rocket-proof campus at World ORT-affiliated Sha’ar HaNegev High School.
The new campus meant the end of 12 years of students and teachers sprinting into shelters whenever a ‘red alert’ warned of incoming missiles from Gaza, just a couple of miles away. Now they could continue their lessons without fear.
Peres, who was now President, joined the 1,200 students at the campus which had been built next to the old one in a defiant message to the terrorists who had been trying to render their home uninhabitable.

“I am proud of you.” Shimon Peres writes a tribute to Sha’ar HaNegev students at the 2012 opening of the World ORT-affiliated school’s new rocket-proof campus.
“I’m proud of you,” the President wrote on a special message board, saying later that the students had displayed “steadfastness in learning, achievements and creativity”.
“This fortified school inaugurated today is the least that can be done for you. In response to the rockets you are making a strong statement,” he added.
To the world, Peres may be best known as a Nobel Peace laureate and his work for peace and mutual understanding featured in his major addresses to World ORT congresses. But it was a task which he saw as extending beyond the realm of diplomacy and into civil society; it was part and parcel of a general desire for social and economic development.
“The world has changed,” he concluded in his 1993 address to the World ORT Congress. “There is so little to do with missiles and planes and so much to do with schools and education. We also have to get rid of old prejudices and not to take all the disputes as a permanent presence of an ongoing future. Alas, people prefer to remember rather than to think. It is not a time of remembrance. It is a time of thinking. It is because of it that we attach so much importance to your organisation.
“We cannot change the Land of Israel, the size of it, so we are changing the population with an immigration from Russia, with our own rate of birth, with an immigration from other places. We cannot enrich the land with gold and silver and oil. We can have enriched people enriching the land. We don’t want to be just a fighting nation; we want to be a winning nation, to offer to neighbours, close and far away, a new hope and a new example, to tell them that even a desert is not a must, you can cross it once in 40 years and then in another 40 years make out of it a garden.
“It is here where the most important promise and the major call of our time resides, and let’s do a job which fits the need of our time and that promises a future for our children.”