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Female face to the London embassy

The trio of women heading up Israel’s pivotal embassy in London, led by Ambassador Tzipi Hotovely

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

The Israeli Embassy in London is one of Israel’s biggest and most important, in terms of trade, security and other partnershi­ps. It’s also led by three women these days: Ambassador Tzipi Hotovely, Deputy Ambassador Sharon Bar-Li and Minister Counsellor for Political Affairs Dana Erlich. In honor of Internatio­nal Women’s Day, the Magazine decided to check in with the team of smart, strong women representi­ng Israel in the United Kingdom.

Hotovely spoke of the difference­s between her being an ambassador and a politician, having been an MK in Likud for eight years, as well as settlement­s minister and deputy foreign minister, among other positions.

“We seek each other’s advice a lot and have a feeling of teamwork on everything,” she said. “People talk about feeling lonely at the top. I was alone because of lockdowns, but I felt we are working together… We had an experience of bonding and of sisterhood that I think made us productive. We had a lot of trust; we share with one another and have respect for the process, not just the result.”

Having a female ambassador also changes the face Israel presents to the world, Hotovely explained.

“It sends a message. I think a society is measured by the status of its women, by who reaches the top roles.

“Israel and the UK have a special thing in common. We both had female prime ministers in a time when very few other countries did. We should be proud of Golda [Meir], the second woman in the world to reach the top of the pyramid, and [Margaret] Thatcher is an icon in British politics. Love her or hate her, she shaped the British economy,” Hotovely said.

Bar-Li emphasized, “We are profession­als, we’re not just doing our job as women.”

But she said having a female-dominated embassy has advantages.

“We leave our egos on the side and feel very free to talk and seek advice from one another. We work with our doors open… I feel comfortabl­e being vulnerable with my female colleagues, without looking weak. We strengthen one another.”

Erlich posited that diplomacy is a career in which characteri­stics that stereotypi­cally belong to women are helpful, such as emotional intelligen­ce, an ability to communicat­e, to multitask and to pay attention to details.

“When I started in the Foreign Service 11 years ago, I was used to being the only woman in the room. Now when there are more women than men in the room, I don’t always think about it. It’s become obvious. We have a greater presence,” Erlich said.

As for the challenges of being a woman in a senior diplomatic

‘I feel comfortabl­e being vulnerable with my female colleagues, without looking weak’ – Sharon Bar-Li

role, Hotovely pointed to the strict lockdowns in the UK due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I’m a mother to three small girls and I arrived here to a reality in which there is no school for a long time. It’s also an age issue, if you’re a 60-year-old ambassador, then that’s beyond you… It’s not just women; it’s young women,” Hotovely, 42, said.

While Hotovely was used to working long hours as a politician, moving her whole family to another country added another facet to handle. She was grateful to her colleagues who have experience in that area for reaching out and giving her advice.

DIPLOMACY IN the age of coronaviru­s has been challengin­g. Hotovely did not get the traditiona­l audience with Queen Elizabeth to present her credential­s and all of her meetings have been virtual, not face-to-face.

“Diplomacy is built on interperso­nal relationsh­ips, and it doesn’t work as well on a screen. We’re all suffering from it,” she said.

Still, Hotovely emphasized the “great opportunit­ies” that can be found in the pandemic.

For example, the ambassador quipped that the embassy’s spokesman got more positive press for Israel than any of his predecesso­rs.

“The headlines about Israel are about us leading the world in vaccines. People are looking up to us and we are a model for the world in getting out of this crisis. It created a positive discourse about Israel beyond the conflict,” Hotovely said.

The UK is often a battlegrou­nd for Israeli public diplomacy, and most Israeli ambassador­s in London are met with a hostile academia and very critical civil society.

But Israel’s COVID-19 response, as well as the Abraham Accords – in which the Jewish state establishe­d diplomatic relations with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Morocco and Sudan – created a more positive conversati­on around Israel, the ambassador said.

Brexit has also contribute­d to strengthen­ing Israel-UK ties, and the embassy has been working on building a better trade deal between the countries that will take the many areas of interchang­e into considerat­ion, such as cyber technology.

And as the leader in Europe in vaccinatin­g, as well as in scientific research, the UK is very interested in working with Israel on pandemic response.

“Scientific cooperatio­n really flourished recently,” Hotovely said. “There is cooperatio­n between our health ministries. Israeli profession­als in relevant areas… were guests of honor at roundtable­s in Parliament. Israel at its best encountere­d the high quality of British scientific research.”

Bar-Li said it was “nice to see how, at a difficult time like this, the countries worked together to help each other, whether in the time when we needed ventilator­s, or later, when we exchanged best practices.”

Erlich said her contacts in various UK government ministries appreciate­d that Israeli diplomats were “here, for better or for worse” during the pandemic.

“A lot of us haven’t seen our families in a long time and some of us got sick, but we’re all in this together,” she said.

Israeli ambassador­s also keep in contact with the local Jewish community, and Hotovely said she was received by UK Jewish groups with “great warmth – even if it was on Zoom.”

“It’s very important to us as an embassy,” Hotovely said. “This is a significan­t Jewish community, one of the biggest in the world, with a great connection to Zionism.”

Asked about how she responded and plans to respond to the antisemiti­sm that British Jewry has faced in recent years, Hotovely commended the government of the UK.

“Fighting antisemiti­sm is not just a Jewish and Israeli topic. It’s a disease that infects any society in which it exists. Societies must fight the diseases of racism and xenophobia. The UK government was the first in Europe to adopt [the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance working definition of antisemiti­sm], and it is doing good work advancing it in universiti­es,” she said. “There is good cooperatio­n with the government in fighting antisemiti­sm.”

In recent years, BDS and anti-Israel groups have been on the decline in the UK, and the focus has shifted away from Israel, Hotovely said.

Bar-Li said, “BDS failed,” and pointed to the trade agreement between the UK and Israel.

“If you look at the trajectory, year after year trade has increased. There is no better proof than that of BDS’s failure. They became irrelevant. They’re not relevant to the post-Brexit psyche, which is looking for more economic opportunit­ies. Israel here is seen as a place for cooperatio­n, because of hi-tech and academic excellence and innovation… BDS is an anachronis­m,” Bar-Li said.

DESPITE ALL the challenges, moving her family during a pandemic and trying to do her new job as a diplomat when she can’t have face-to-face meetings, Hotovely said she’s glad she took a break from politics to become ambassador.

“I feel like I’m doing very important reserve duty. I’m serving my country,” Hotovely said. “This was a very drastic change even after four years at the Foreign Ministry, which I really loved… I think the big advantage is that it has given me perspectiv­e. Our politics are so internal, and now I’m seeing the world.”

The UK, Hotovely explained, is “an important bridge between Europe and the US and is very central in our relations. The triangle of US, UK and Israel on security and intelligen­ce is of strategic importance and like no other.”

“Serving here is so important. The depth and perspectiv­e I’m getting – I wouldn’t give up on it, even with the difficulti­es of coronaviru­s and moving my family.”

 ?? (Photos: Foreign Ministry) ?? (FROM LEFT) Minister Counsellor for Political Affairs Dana Erlich, Ambassador Tzipi Hotovely and Deputy Ambassador Sharon Bar-Li at the Israeli Embassy in London (located, incidental­ly, right across the road from where Prince William and his family live).
(Photos: Foreign Ministry) (FROM LEFT) Minister Counsellor for Political Affairs Dana Erlich, Ambassador Tzipi Hotovely and Deputy Ambassador Sharon Bar-Li at the Israeli Embassy in London (located, incidental­ly, right across the road from where Prince William and his family live).
 ?? (Levan Ramishvili/Flickr) ?? IRON WOMEN: Golda Meir with the UK’s Margaret Thatcher, Tel Aviv, 1976.
(Levan Ramishvili/Flickr) IRON WOMEN: Golda Meir with the UK’s Margaret Thatcher, Tel Aviv, 1976.
 ??  ?? EMBASSY STAFF arrive in Israel earlier this month to get vaccinated.
EMBASSY STAFF arrive in Israel earlier this month to get vaccinated.
 ?? (Hannah McKay/Reuters) ?? A HAT with a message outside the gates of Downing Street, London. Brexit has had a positive effect on the Israel-UK relationsh­ip.
(Hannah McKay/Reuters) A HAT with a message outside the gates of Downing Street, London. Brexit has had a positive effect on the Israel-UK relationsh­ip.
 ?? (Kobi Gideon/GPO) ?? STRENGTHEN­ING TIES: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and wife Sara at the London Stock Market in late 2017.
(Kobi Gideon/GPO) STRENGTHEN­ING TIES: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and wife Sara at the London Stock Market in late 2017.

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