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Dorrit Moussaieff

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Dorrit Moussaieff (Hebrew: דורית מוסאיוף), (born 12 January 1950) is the Israeli-born British-Icelandic First Lady of Iceland, jewelry designer, editor, and businesswoman.

Early Life

Moussaieff was born in Jerusalem, Israel, to a wealthy devout Bukharian Jewish family from Uzbekistan that are part of a long dynasty of jewelers. She is the great granddaughter of Shlomo Moussaieff (rabbi) and is the second cousin of famous author Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson [1]. Her great grandmother, Esther Gaonoff, was from Bukhara but had some Moroccan Jewish ancestry. Her father, Shlomo Moussaieff (businessman), is a Bukharian Jew but her mother, Aliza, is an Austrian Jew of Ashkenazi heritage. Dorrit was born and raised in the Bukharian Jewish Quarter, Jerusalem but when she was thirteen, her and her family moved to London. She suffered from dyslexia and didn't attend ordinary schools but was taught at home. In addition to English and Hebrew, she also learned to speak German, French, and the Icelandic language.

Career

Dorrit became interested in jewelry at a very young age. She spent a lot of childhood years at her family's jewellery store and developed a love for designing. In her life, she has become a very successful jewlery designer and it made her very wealthy. She said, "At the age of 14 I started to work in my parents' jewelry shop at the Hilton Park Lane in London. I was very lonely. I had no friends at all. It was a hard time for me - all I did was sell jewelry. It's in my blood, you know; some people are artists or writers, but I am a jewelry salesperson in the blood, that's what I was born for." [2] Moussaieff has been active in British and American cultural life. She is a contributing editor to British society magazine Tatler

She participates in other business transactions as well. She was a part of an organization that had constructed an office building at Canary Wharf, London. They made an estimated profit of 25 million pounds. They are now involved in a tourism projecy in the Turkish part of Cyprus. [3]

First Lady of Iceland

Moussaieff married Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson, president of Iceland on his 60th birthday. She is the current First Lady of Iceland and has likely become the most significant Jew in Icelandic history. In recent years, she has helped present Icelandic culture abroad.

Personal Life

Moussaieff married twice. The first, was with a Jewish designer named Neil Zarak, but they got divorced. Dorrit did not remarry for the next 30 years until she married the President of Iceland Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson.

Dorrit says that she's "religious in the soul" and she still follows some aspects of Judaism. For example, on the eve of Hannukkah, she remembered that she was supposed to light the first candle of the menorah. A menorah was found for her and after lighting the candle, she taught her husband about the holiday. [4] In May 2006, while visiting Israel, Moussaieff was detained at Ben Gurion International Airport in Tel Aviv. According to reports, Moussaieff got into an argument with security personnel who refused to acknowledge her British passport. Immigration officers stated that she was obliged by Israeli law to enter and exit the country using her Israeli passport only, or face prosecution. When Moussaieff could not produce an Israeli passport, it is alleged that staff became rude and aggressive, asking her suggestive, personal and racist questions. Moussaieff reportedly responded with various insults of her own by saying, "This is about to become a serious diplomatic incident. This is why everyone hates Jews." Part of the incident was captured on film and shown on Israeli television. This caused a minor international incident since it involved the first lady of Iceland. [5] The Israeli Embassy in Norway, which handles diplomatic ties with Iceland, later expressed regret over the incident, though it restated the law that Israeli citizens must carry their Israeli passports when in the country.[6] Moussaieff carries an Israeli and a British citizenship and received Icelandic citizenship on 31 July 2006.

Many Icelandic people did not like the way that their First Lady was treated by the Israeli workers at the airport. They said, "It was a shock to us to hear how Dorrit Moussaieff was treated, especially since she has been active in introducing Jewish culture in our country in a very positive way." [7]

References

Preceded by First Lady of Iceland
2003–Present
Succeeded by
Present