By Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Twenty-eight years after making aliya from Ethiopia,
Belaynesh Zevadia will return to her birthplace in the summer – this time as
Israel’s ambassador.
The Foreign Ministry’s appointments committee on Tuesday
announced Zevadia’s appointment to Addis Ababa.
The 44-year-old will be Israel’s first Ethiopian-born
ambassador.
“It is a great honor to be appointed ambassador, and
especially the first ambassador from the Ethiopian community,” she said. “I
made aliya as a youth and am returning to Ethiopia as an ambassador.”
Zevadia said her appointment was proof that Israel gives
opportunities to all, veteran citizens as well as new immigrants.
Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman said that the decision to
appoint Zevadia, besides the fact that she is a “talented diplomat,” was also
“an important message to Israel, which is currently fighting racism against the
Ethiopian community.”
The appointment was a sign of “fighting against prejudice,”
he said.
“I am convinced that she will represent Israel with honor
and bring pride to the Ethiopian community,” Liberman said. “In Israel people
are judged not by their skin color or sex, but rather by their ability to
contribute.”
Zevadia, who joined the Foreign Ministry in 1993 as its
first Ethiopian-born diplomat, served previously at the consulates in Houston
and Chicago.
She grew up in the village of Ambova in the Gondar province,
and arrived in Israel at the age of 16 on a Jewish Agency scholarship to study
at the Hebrew University.
After attending Jerusalem’s Ulpan Etzion, Zevadia went to
work for the Jewish Agency during Operation Moses, the airlift from November
21, 1984 to January 5, 1985, that brought some 8,000 Ethiopian Jews to the
country. She worked in helping ease initial absorption pains for the
immigrants.
Zevadia’s father was the head kes (religious leader) in
Gondar, and died three years after coming to Israel, in 1989.
She has a BA in international relations, and an MA in
anthropology and African studies, from the Hebrew University.
MK Danny Danon, head of the Knesset’s Immigration and
Absorption committee, characterized the appointment as a “victory for Ethiopian
aliya.”
Zevadia was a role model for the entire Ethiopian community
and clearly illustrated the phrase that “black is only a color,” he said.
Danon, who said he would dedicate an upcoming committee
meeting in her honor, said the appointment gave hope to the community of better
integration into society.
Interior Minister Eli Yishai also congratulated Zevadia on
her appointment, saying that while it was an important step in stamping out
racism, much still needed to be done to eradicate prejudice toward both new and
veteran immigrants.
The appointments have to go to the cabinet for final
approval.
http://www.jpost.com
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