ATn the beginning, in the 1950s, they made coffee or typed on a typewriter. Until the day when the heads of the Israeli secret service understood that women could access places inaccessible to men while going unnoticed. Indeed, “if you see a man alone, at night, on a street corner, you will find him suspicious,” said one of them. But, if it’s a woman, you will especially want to help her. Today, they make up more than 40% of the operational units of Mossad, are cyberneticians, cryptologists, heads of divisions, even participate in targeted assassinations. So much so that the service has become the most feminist institution in Israel, according to historian Michel Bar-Zohar.
This former Labor MP publishes a book, The Amazon …