For the women on Hadassah’s 2025 list of Zionists to watch, Oct. 7 was a call to action

0
When Emily Austin was 16, a Holocaust education trip to Poland changed her life. The child of secular Israeli immigrants to New York, Austin grew up in Brooklyn and decided early on that being a Jew was important to her identity. But after the Poland trip, Jewish pride and combating antisemitism took center stage in her life.

 

“It was a turning point,” said Austin, now 23 and a sports journalist, model and social media influencer with over 3 million followers on Instagram. “It was so traumatizing, and I made a promise to myself to not let it happen again.”

After Oct. 7, 2023, Austin, already a passionate public advocate for Israel, went to southern Israel to see firsthand the devastation wrought by Hamas and to meet with victims and survivors. Austin documented her experiences in videos and pictures that she shared with her millions of followers.

Despite generating backlash for her pro-Israel activism — including lost sponsorships and antisemitic threats and vitriol — she said recently, “It makes me double down and only fuels my commitment to keep fighting for Israel.”

Hadassah, The Women’s Zionist Organization of America, named Austin to its 2025 list of “18 American Zionist Women You Should Know.”

The annual list, now in its third year, comprises a diverse group of activists, nonprofit leaders, politicians, entertainers, business innovators, educators and writers. Each is deeply involved in advocating for Zionism and speaking up for Israel in the United States and around the world.

“Some of the women you may know —but all of them you should know,” said Diana Diner, the list’s curator and Hadassah’s Israel and Zionism educator. “These women are doing the critical work of educating and of advocating for Israel.”

Diner, who herself made last year’s list, added, “They may not look or sound alike, but they are united in showing the world what it means to be a Zionist in 2025.”

Mazi Pilip, an Ethiopian-born Israeli now living in New York, made battling antisemitism a focus of her winning political campaign for a seat in the Nassau County, New York, legislature. (Courtesy of Hadassah)

This year’s list includes:

  • Anila Ali, a Muslim women’s-rights activist born in Pakistan and the co-founder of the American Muslim & Multifaith Women’s Empowerment Council.
  • Bellamy Bellucci, a South African-born dancer, model and Israel advocate known for her unique identity as a Black transgender Jewish woman who uses social media to promote inclusivity.
  • Patricia Heaton, an Emmy Award-winning actress (“Everybody Loves Raymond”) and devout Catholic who brings Christians together to support Jews and Israel through the October 7th Coalition, the group she co-founded after the 2023 Hamas attack.
  • Caroline D’Amore, a TV personality who is the Italian-American founder and CEO of Pizza Girl. Despite not being Jewish herself, she has visited Israel several times since Oct. 7 and advocates to fight antisemitism and foster dialogue.
  • Mazi Pilip, an Ethiopian-born former Israel Defense Forces paratrooper who made battling antisemitism a focus of her winning political campaign for a seat in the Nassau County, New York, legislature.

“What most people don’t understand is to be a Muslim is to be a Zionist,” said Ali, 57. “When I pray five times a day, several times in that prayer we ask God to bless us like the Jews and the Christians, like he blessed Abraham.”

At a 2024 event co-hosted with Hadassah at which Sheryl Sandberg’s film “Screams Before Silence,” a documentary about the sexual violence Hamas committed on Oct. 7, was screened, Ali spoke to an interfaith audience about the weaponization of sexual violence against Israeli women and girls.

“Truth is more powerful than anything,” she said. “I am honored and proud to be a Zionist.”

Another woman on this year’s list, Yocheved Kim Ruttenberg, grew up as a religious Jew but without Zionism, and over time became distanced from Jewish observance, too.

Then her brother joined the IDF. When the Oct. 7 attack happened, she dropped everything, quickly raised $17,000 for essential supplies for soldiers, and days later arrived in Israel with 23 duffel bags filled with such items as headlamps, socks and underwear.

“I just thought, ‘I have to go to Israel,’” said Ruttenberg, 24. “Even my mom said, ‘If you don’t go, you’ll regret it for the rest of your life.’”

Her two-week trip lasted 18 months, and she eventually made aliyah, immigrating to Israel.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here