Ran Ichay (Hebrew: רן ישי; born 1970) is an Israeli humanitarian, and a former diplomat and civil servant.            

Ran Ichay
Ran Ichay
Israeli Ambassador to Kazakhstan
In office
August 2006 – September 2008
MinisterTzipi Livni
Preceded byMichael Lotem
Succeeded byIsrael Mei Ami
Ministry of Jerusalem
In office
November 2016 – January 2019
MinisterZe'ev Elkin
Preceded bySarit Goldstein
Succeeded byMordechai Benita
Personal details
Born1970 (age 53–54)
Israel
Alma materBar-Ilan University
AwardsKnight-Commander of the Royal Order of Omukama Chwa II Kabalega
Kazakh Order of Jubilee Officer of the Order of Saint George (Kingdom of Hungary)
Camp Ichay, Syria, 2017

Biography

edit

Ichay was born to families that immigrated to Israel after the independence. His father's family fled from Spain to North Africa in the first decades of the 15th century due to the persecutions against jews. The family lived mainly in Sousse, in Tunisia, and owned the House of Ichay, where many of the family's children were born, and later fled to Israel due to the Kadesh war, in 1956. His mother's family, Shor (Arabic: bani-Tabi' - meaning: of-the-Ox), fled from Yemen during the Israeli war of independebce. Ichay graduated school and joined the Israeli Navy in 1988 as a midshipman, before transferring to the Artillery where he served until 1992. He currently serves as a volunteer in the Israeli border guard, ranked Major, and in the Police Aerial Unit, as a flight-observer.

He later joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as a cadet in 1995, upon graduating Bar-Ilan University. Starting in 1999 and until 2001 he worked in the Embassy of Israel in Brussels and in the Israeli Mission to the European Communities, as second and first secretary.[1] In 2002–2004, Ichay was advisor to Foreign and Finance Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In 2005 he became head of International Relations of the Ministry of Science and Technology, and in 2006 he was appointed his country's ambassador to the Republic of Kazakhstan, serving concurrently in Kyrgyzstan. In 2010, Ichay was appointed administrative manager to the Turkel Commission (the Public Commission to Examine the Maritime Incident of 31 May 2010) and later that year became senior deputy director general of the Prime Minister's Office. In 2012 Ichay was elected chairman of the Municipal Committee of his village in Gush Etzion and in 2019 came out third in the Likud Party primary election for the seat reserved for Israeli settlements in the West Bank. In 2016 he was appointed director general of the Ministry of Jerusalem and Heritage, and he retired from the service two years later, in January 2019. Ichay also did extensive humanitarian work; in Kazakhstan he launched Operation Dostik, to provide medical help to HIV infected infants in Chimkent county,[2] in the south of the Republic, for which he was decorated later with the Kazakh Order of Jubilee [ru].[3][4]

In 2017 he participated in establishing and operating "Camp Ichay",[5] initiated and launched by the American humanitarian organization "Friendships", to provide medical care for Syrian victims of the Syrian Civil War, in the Golan Heights.[6][7]

In 2020 was appointed to the Association of Representatives of the Kingdom of Bunyoro-Kitara in Uganda. upon receiving the title of Knight-Commander of the Royal Order of Omukama Chwa Kaballega (hereditary).

Books

edit

In 2010 Ichay published his "Dawn at Midnight" (in Hebrew) – the history of Jews in Kazakhstan.
In 2016 he published "Thy Border's Keeper", dealing with Jewish and Israeli history.
In 2017 he edited "Israel's Right"' a government publication dealing with the legal status of Judea and Samaria OCLC 1091791983.[8]

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "CNN.com - Belgium's legal trap for world leaders - January 23, 2002". edition.cnn.com.
  2. ^ "A shared destiny among Jews, Kazakhs". December 19, 2008.
  3. ^ Семерых израильтян наградят по указанию Назарбаева
  4. ^ "Семерых израильтян наградят по указанию Назарбаева". Tengrinews.kz. December 6, 2011.
  5. ^ "Friend Ships: Christian Group Leaves Waves of Mercy in its Wake on Syria Border". blogs.timesofisrael.com.
  6. ^ Reed, Anne (June 1, 2018). "Jews help Christians help Muslims". AFA Journal. Retrieved September 2, 2019.
  7. ^ Rubin, Shria. "These evangelicals in Israel are on a mission to win the hearts and minds of Syrians". USA TODAY.
  8. ^ "The status of Judea/Samaria: Examination of Israel's lawful rights". Israel National News.