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‘Our whole community is hurting,’ says IDF’s first female Druze recruit

Eman Safady is the face and voice of Israel’s fiercely patriotic 160-000 strong Druze community

July 30, 2024 15:39
RU568
Speaking out: Eman Safady's first broadcast on IDF Galatz radio, in 2019
7 min read

Days after Hezbollah attacked the Druze village of Majdal Shams, killing 12 young people, Eman Safady is still in acute shock. “I am hurting,” she says. “When the event occurred, I called my contacts in the Golan who were at the scene, and I heard the screams of the mothers, women, and men. This still does not leave my mind.”

Eman and I first met in Israel in May, when I travelled there as part of a press delegation. Like most British Jews, I knew virtually nothing about the Druze, and was keen to find out more. As I learned about her own extraordinary achievements, I asked if I could interview her about her life and her culture for this paper. That interview took place last Friday. The very next day, Hezbollah attacked, unexpectedly thrusting the Druze and – as a spokesperson for that community – Eman, herself, into the international spotlight. “I would have liked for us to be known under happier circumstances,” she acknowledges.

Eman lives in Haifa but grew up in the Druze village of Abu-Snan in the north of Israel as one of five children, her mother a primary school teacher and her father, a businessman. They spoke Arabic at home but Eman considers Hebrew to be her first language. She learned English at school and, later, studied English and American culture.

From early on, it was clear she wasn’t a typical Druze girl. “I am a minority within a minority,” she says. “Although we have a lot of educated women – doctors, judges, a Knesset member – it’s not usual for a Druze woman to become a journalist.”