The Jerusalem Post

120 Women Leadership Council: Fixing a problem

- • By JUDITH SUDILOVSKY

As the world marks Internatio­nal Women’s Day, former MK Aliza Lavie reflected on a common yet nameless experience she said many Israeli women have felt: knowing something is wrong but lacking the language to articulate it. Here is the journey of how she went from that point to founding the 120 Women Leadership Council.

“We had these very bad feelings; we were walking around with this pain in our stomachs,” she said.

In coincident­al meetings with different women, Lavie began to realize the comradery of it all.

The journey began with conversati­ons, including with Tali Dvir Livnat, an activist creator, Rabbi Tamar Elad Appelbaum, Sarah Rosenfeld, and Or Piron Zomer.

“We came together with the hope and wish to give a name to our experience­s,” Lavie said. “What has happened in Israel in the past year is that identity and ideology took precedence over our sisterhood and that brought a very conflictiv­e reality. But also in Israel, the status of women in the past three to four years has gone backwards: look at the legislatio­n, at the government, at the Knesset, and the heads of committees. We are finding it very much not right and very uncomforta­ble.”

It took them two months to figure out what they wanted, until the 120 Women Leadership Council was establishe­d last April, on Rosh Hodesh Nisan, under the auspices of First Lady Michal Herzog.

Today, it numbers over 800 women from diverse background­s.

Their goal, they say, is to elevate women’s voices to the national stage, revitalizi­ng public discourse, emphasizin­g the value of diverse opinions, and fostering trust that transcends contentiou­s matters. This vision is rooted in the principles of collaborat­ion and constructi­ve dialogue, employing tools of female leadership, seeking to address pressing issues in Israel that contribute to societal divisions, volatile discourse, and animosity. The council, they said, aims to change attitudes toward problem solving and amplify voices and actions of women across different political and social spectra.

THEY POINT to the high number of women elected to local councils as a measure of their success as the forum helped support their campaigns.

“Everyone prefers to go home and be with people like them but you can’t fix the country by being with people like you,” said Lavie. “You need different people. We need to learn how to hear other voices.”

Challenges still persist within the forum, especially in fostering unity among diverse groups with differing opinions, such as about the military draft for the ultra-Orthodox.

“It’s not always easy; we don’t always agree,” Dvir Livnat said.

“What happened to us women is that we put on the male uniform because they threw it at us and when you are in survival mode you have to uphold that,” Lavie said. “But when we come together we have to return things to our girls.”

Their official meetings have always taken place on Rosh

Hodesh, the first day of Jewish months, which has special meaning for women in Jewish tradition when women have special powers, although not all members of the forum are aware of this tradition, she said.

“We asked ourselves ‘why did we reached this point?’ We can blame the religious and political leaders, but we women have also forgotten to work together. We know there is such a thing as female leadership; we know that it exists. Our forum says: Let’s work together.”

With hostages still in Gaza, the crimes of Hamas against women and also because of the steps backwards for women’s rights, the Internatio­nal Day of Women this year is “very sad,” she said.

Dvir Livnat said that “Women in Israel have been pushed backward. Legislatio­n and government­al bodies fail to address our concerns adequately,” she said, adding that their forum strives for inclusivit­y, recognizin­g the power of diverse voices. “We want to rekindle a genuine appreciati­on for diverse voices and discourse in Israel. Our goal is to move the conversati­on to a national conversati­on to make our voice heard. This is a serious wake-up call to all women, to all our sisters. This is on our watch.”

THIS PAST YEAR, they have been quietly introducin­g their initiative­s, including workshops on conflict resolution, advocating for legislativ­e changes to benefit women, and fostering connection­s across different communitie­s. They call for increased participat­ion and support from individual­s – including men – and organizati­ons to further their mission of empowermen­t and inclusivit­y. They promise to be more publicly vocal in the coming year.

Already on October 8, the group’s efforts expanded to a control center providing support to widows and families affected by the Hamas terrorist attack and the war. Women volunteers visited in pairs the families of people murdered on October 7 and of fallen soldiers – including a visit of an orthodox Jewish woman with a Muslim Arab woman to a Bedouin family who were mourning members killed by Hamas as well as worrying about other family members held hostage in Gaza.

“Even in the war, our connection­s are so sensitive,” Dvir Livnat said. “We had 400 volunteers writing letters to families in mourning – in Hebrew, Arabic, French; we sent volunteers out to family visits. The government wasn’t there – there were so many funerals and shivas [weeklong mourning periods] – but in that space we were there, making connection­s with hundreds of families.

“We understood we needed to be where everything was falling apart, with the mourning and the loss. We know how to navigate these situations, what we need and how to work.”

The 120 Women Leadership Council participan­ts have engaged in extensive dialogues across various regions of Israel. They have met with representa­tives from different denominati­ons and sectors with the objective of understand­ing and addressing the unique needs of each society, and learning from effective female leadership practices.

The council is actively involved in drafting position papers, organizing seminars and workshops, and developing profession­al programs focused on conflict resolution and communal justice.

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