Violet Khoury (1929[1] - 1987[2]), an Israeli politician, served as the head of the local council of Kafr Yasif, making her the sole woman to hold such a position in an Arab council in Israel,[3][4] and the first woman elected to an Arab local council.[5]
Khoury was born into a family of Greek Orthodox priests,[1][4] with her father working as a policeman and her mother running a girls' school in Haifa. She attended a mixed Jewish-Arab English high school for girls in Haifa. Following that, she pursued studies in social work and after her graduation started working, conducting fieldwork in Arab villages across the Galilee. However, her actions faced criticism from some in Kafr Yasif who deemed it unbecoming for a single woman. Hence, in 1952, she entered into an arranged engagement with Fawzi Khoury, who was 18 years her senior. A year later, they formalized their union in marriage.[6]
Khoury entered local politics following her husband, who initially served as a council member and later became the head of the council. When he assumed the position of council head, there was an attempt to relocate Khoury to work in Rameh village to avoid conflict of interest seeing that she was employed as a social worker by the Kafr Yasif Council at the time. However, she declined this move, chose to resign, and instead opened a clothing store. Subsequently, she established the first kindergarten in Kafr Yasif.[6] After a political crisis within the council, Fawzi resigned, leading the council's plenary to ask Khoury to step into his role,[5] and in 1972 she officially took office.[4][7] She appointed numerous women to positions within the council, partly as a strategy to address the challenges of men working under her leadership. Throughout her tenure, the council secured grants from the Prime Minister's adviser on Arab affairs, and the ties with the neighboring kibbutz, Yehiam, were notably strengthened. Despite her accomplishments, she was removed from her position after approximately a year and a half. In the 1978 elections, she ran independently, securing one seat and becoming the first woman elected to an Arab local council in Israel.[5] Violet Khoury served on the council for 14 years.[8]
Further reading
edit- Herzog, Hanna (1999). Gendering Politics: Women in Israel. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0472109456.
External links
edit- فيوليت خوري اول امراء عربية تترأس سلطة محلية (trl.: Violet Khoury First Arab Woman to Head a Local Authority), by Makan 33 (TV report and interview with Violet Khoury in 1972 in Arabic language with Arabic and Hebrew subtitles, reissued on 1 July 2024; 1:29 min)
References
edit- ^ a b Herzog 1999, p. 209.
- ^ Zourob, Emtiaz (2014). "قلم ودفتر .. من وجع البنفسج: فيوليت خوري". قلم ودفتر .. من وجع البنفسج (in Arabic). Retrieved 2023-11-24.
- ^ "Arab Women Call Out to Arab Men: Let's Join Forces". The Israel Democracy Institute Website. 2022. Retrieved 2023-11-24.
- ^ a b c "Violet Khoury to head Kafr Yasif - For the first time an Arab woman heads a municipal authority". Al HaMishmar, on the press collection of The National Library of Israel (in Hebrew). 1971. Retrieved 2023-11-24.
- ^ a b c Herzog 1999, p. 211.
- ^ a b Herzog 1999, p. 210.
- ^ "The Female Spring: How Arab Women Change the Face of Israel's Local Elections". Haaretz. Retrieved 2023-11-24.
- ^ בקר, ח׳אולה אבו (1998). בדרך לא סלולה: נשים ערביות כמנהיגות פוליטיות בישראל [A rocky road: Arab women as political leaders in Israel] (in Hebrew). המרכז לחקר החברה הערבית בישראל. p. 72. ISBN 978-965-454-032-2.