Houda Nonoo Explained

Birth Date:7 September 1964
Houda Ezra Ebrahim Nonoo
Residence:Manama (Bahrain)
Office:Bahraini ambassador to the United States
Term Start:3 July 2008
Term End:15 November 2013
Successor:Abdullah bin Mohammad bin Rashed Al Khalifa
Office2:Majlis al-shura
Term Start2:2005
Term End2:3 July 2008
Successor2:Nancy Khedouri
Spouse:Salman Idafar
Children:Menasheh Idafar, Ezra Idafar
Relatives:Misha Nonoo (cousin)

Houda Ezra Ebrahim Nonoo (Arabic: هدى عزرا نونو; born 7 September 1964) served as the Bahraini Ambassador to the United States from 2008 to 2013. She was appointed to the position by decree of Foreign Affairs Minister Khaled Ben Ahmad Al-Khalifa. Nonoo is the first Jew, and third woman, to be appointed ambassador of Bahrain. She is also the first Jewish ambassador of any Middle Eastern Arab country,[1] [2] [3] and the first female Bahraini ambassador to the United States.[4]

Biography

Nonoo was born in Manama, to a family of Jewish business entrepreneurs with origins in present-day Iraq. Nonoo's grandfather Ibrahim left Baghdad in 1888 and started a financial business in Bahrain.[5] [6] [7]

Nonoo lived for an extended period of time in the United Kingdom, where she attended Carmel College, a Jewish boarding school,[8] and earned an MBA. She also met and married Salman Idafar,[9] a British Jew, with whom she had two sons; Menasheh and Ezra. After her father died in a car accident, she returned to Bahrain to take over the Basma Company,[10] a company offering different office services, from IT[11] to janitoring, hence becoming a successful businesswoman after inheriting the family's business.[12]

Prior to her appointment to the Majlis al-shura in 2005,[13] she founded in 2004 and presided over the Bahrain Human Rights Watch Society, a society for the advancement of women's rights[14] as well as of foreign workers in Bahrain. For a total of three years served as a member of parliament (40-member Shura Council), after being appointed by King Hamad ibn Isa Al Khalifah. Her appointment made headlines because Houda is part of the small Jewish community of Bahrain. Bahrain's Jewish community reportedly consists of just 37 people, most of whom are the descendants of immigrants from Iraq and Iran.[2] Nonoo is not the first person in her family to enter Bahraini politics, or member of the Jewish community. In 1934, her grandfather Abraham Nonoo served as a member of the Manama Municipality, the first ever elected municipal body in Bahrain.[15] In 2000, a cousin, Ebrahim Daoud Nonoo was appointed to parliament. The Nonoo family is originally from Iraq having moved to Bahrain over a century ago.[16]

Appointment as ambassador to the United States

On 3 July 2008, Nonoo was appointed Ambassador of the Kingdom of Bahrain to the United States, a role that also included responsibility over Bahraini diplomatic representation to Canada, Mexico, Brazil and Argentina (non-resident). Some local media criticized the appointment,[17] and Radio Canada reported that her nomination was controversial within Bahrain, with some suggesting that a Jew might not be the best choice to defend Bahrain's refusal to recognise Israel. King Al-Khalifa rejected these concerns.

During her term as ambassador, she made quite a few changes at the embassy, like changing the iftar from all-male gatherings to mixed-gender events with lectures on Islam and also introduced and interfaith reunions with local imams, rabbis and Christian clergy as guests.

Her role ended in November 2013, when she was replaced by Abdullah bin Mohammad bin Rashed Al Khalifa, until then the military attaché of Bahrain in Washington.[18]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.radio-canada.ca/nouvelles/International/2008/06/08/006-bahrein-diplomatie.shtml "Bahreïn persiste et signe"
  2. http://www.radio-canada.ca/nouvelles/International/2008/05/31/004-Bahrein-juive.shtml "Une juive ambassadrice d'un pays arabe"
  3. Web site: Bahrain names Jewish ambassador. . 2008-05-30. 2008-05-30.
  4. Web site: Bahraini king taps Jewish woman lawmaker as envoy to U.S.. Haaretz. 2008-06-08 . 2008-05-29.
  5. Menachem Wecker, "The Arab World’s Jewish Ambassador", George Washington Today, February 1, 2010.
  6. Web site: 26 October 2009 . Meet Arab nation's Jewish ambassador . baltimoresun.com.
  7. Nora Boustany. "Barrier-Breaking Bahraini Masters Diplomatic Scene", The Washington Post, December 19, 2008.
  8. News: 4 December 2008. 6 May 2020. Round, Simon. Interview: Houda Nonoo. The Jewish Chronicle.
  9. https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/magazine/bahrain-protests-have-complicated-job-for-houda-nonoo-first-jewish-ambassador-from-an-arab-nation/2012/05/22/gJQA2v9SnU_story.html Bahrain protests have complicated job for Houda Nonoo, first Jewish ambassador from an Arab nation
  10. Web site: 7 December 2014 . Meet Houda Ezra Ebrahim Nonoo, First Jewish Ambassador from Arab Country . jewishbusinessnews.com .
  11. http://www.gulfcomputerservices.com/about.php Message from the Director
  12. News: Meet Houda Ezra Ebrahim Nonoo, Bahrain's Jewish U.S. Ambassador. 14 March 2011. Haaretz.
  13. http://www.wisemuslimwomen.org/womenotherfaiths/bio/houda_nonoo/ Houda Nonoo
  14. Web site: Arab Spring, Israel and Bahrain's 38 Jews in the eyes of Jewish ambassador to U.S. . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20171107020850/http://www.jns.org/latest-articles/2013/4/8/arab-spring-israel-and-bahrains-38-jews-in-the-eyes-of-jewish-ambassador-to-us#.V4qhcq3ly4o= . 2017-11-07 . 2016-07-16 . Jewish News Service.
  15. Nancy Elly Khedourie, From Our Beginning to Present Day (Al Manar Press: 2007) p. 78
  16. News: http://news.walla.co.il/?w=/2/1019749 . he:בחריין: יהודיה תכהן בפרלמנט. Walla!. 6 December 2006. 2006-12-07. he.
  17. Web site: Bahrain picks Jew as U.S. envoy, local media critical. https://web.archive.org/web/20160303205347/https://www.reuters.com/article/idUSL0826684820080608_1. dead. 2016-03-03. Reuters. 2008-05-08 . 2010-10-27.
  18. Web site: Chief . Habib Toumi, Bureau . 15 November 2013 . Bahrain appoints new ambassador in Washington . gulfnews.com .