In Shadow of War, Iranian, Afghan Women Join Others in Tel Aviv to Push for Change

Israeli, Emirati, Saudi, Lebanese, other leaders attend inaugural Women Champions for Change summit to brainstorm solutions for regional progress

By Ariela Karmel

22 September 2025

Thirty women leaders, from or with roots across the Middle East and North Africa, gathered in Tel Aviv last week to discuss collaboration on social change, offering a quieter form of regional dialogue amid headlines dominated by war and diplomatic rifts.

Ulfat Haider (left) and Nazanin Afshin-Jam Mackay (right), speaking on a panel at the inaugural Women’s Champions for Change summit at the Peres Center for Peace in Jaffa, September 18, 2025. (Women’s Champions for Change)

Israeli, Lebanese, Iranian, Tunisian, Saudi, Afghan, Moroccan, Emirati and Iraqi women — several of whom reside in the United States, Canada and UK — were part of the inaugural Women Champions for Change summit. The multi-day conference, which concluded on Thursday, at the Peres Center for Peace and Innovation in Jaffa.

“The fastest way to change the Middle East is to mobilize the women of the Middle East,” said co-leader Stav Bar-Shany, noting that women often bring empathy and authenticity into spaces where traditional diplomacy struggles.

The initiative, founded by social entrepreneur Danny Hakim, brought together activists, social entrepreneurs, athletes, business executives and diplomats from across the region with a focus on grassroots leadership in civil society.

The goal of the summit was to create a platform for cross-border connection and to highlight the role of women in leading social change, even amid political and military conflict, with participants coming together to discuss shared challenges and brainstormed opportunities for collaboration.

Iranian native Nazanin Afshin-Jam Mackay, who participated in the summit, told The Times of Israel that “the conflicts tearing through the Middle East today are overwhelmingly driven and negotiated by men. Since October 7, not a single woman has been at the negotiating table in efforts to end the war.”

The summit largely focused on wider regional ambitions and cross-border collaboration, including expanding normalization agreements. Though organizers did refer to the toll of Israel’s ongoing war with Hamas in broad terms, little reference was made to Gaza or Palestinians.

Some participants, including speakers, identified as Palestinian citizens of Israel. Other participants included a Palestinian woman from East Jerusalem and Hanan Abu Quedar, a Bedouin sports and social change leader originally from Khan Younis in Gaza, who resides in Israel, but no Palestinian women living in Gaza or the West Bank were present, and their absence was not explicitly addressed.

From: https://www.timesofisrael.com/in-shadow-of-war-iranian-afghani-women-join-others-in-tel-aviv-to-push-for-change/

 

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