| Israelis  consider Shulamit Cohen a heroine, and, indeed, in recent years, she was honoured  by the Israeli state for services rendered to her country. Today, she is in her  nineties and lives quietly in an orthodox area of Jerusalem called Mea Shearim. Its residents  are known for their strict keeping of the Jewish Sabbath when visitors are told  not to smoke, take photographs, use mobile phones or drive. Those who infringe  the no-driving rule often face a barrage of stones.  It’s ironic  that Ms. Cohen has chosen to live in such a staunchly religious neighbourhood  where almost every street has put up posters advocating “modesty” when her past  revolved around sleaze. It appears, however, that Israelis prefer to turn a  blind eye to her former activities preferring to take the view that the end was  worth the means. In recent times, her story has been cleaned-up for public  consumption.  Shula Cohen  was a female version of the famous Egyptian-born Israeli spy Eli Cohen (no  relation), who was recruited by Israeli intelligence in the early 1960s, given  a fake identity and the new name Kamel Amin Thaabet. After a stint in Argentina working on his cover as an Arab  businessman, he was poised to pass himself off as a Syrian émigré, which wasn’t  difficult since his parents were Syrian Jews from Aleppo. Armed with bags full of cash and a  well-practised Syrian accent, he was sent to Damascus  via Egypt.  His job was to cultivate Syrian politicians and generals in order to filch  intelligence about Syria’s  defences on the Golan Heights.  Upon his  arrival, he wooed his high level targets with lavish parties and hosted his new  ‘friends’ in restaurants and cafes where his ears were always open to  gossip.  His charm worked so well that  according to his brother he became an advisor to the Syrian Minister of Defence  and was, at one time, third in line for the Syrian presidency. His star dimmed  when he was recognized as a Jew from Alexandria  by a Damascus  resident. It wasn’t long before Russian intelligence used sophisticated  equipment to trace radio transmissions to his home and tipped off their Syrian  counterparts. Eli was caught communicating on his hidden radio when he was  arrested, tortured and hanged in public view.  Shulamit  Cohen’s story mirrors that of Eli Cohen except hers has a different ending.  Originally of Russian extraction, she was born in Argentina. As a child, she moved  with her family to Iraq where  she became fluent in Arabic before finally immigrating to Palestine in 1937. Some years later, her  father, brother and fiancé were killed while fighting Palestinians and her  mother died soon afterwards. Alone and without financial support, Shula started  work as a secretary for a clinic in Tel Aviv, where she began a romantic  liaison with an Israeli general. She was enamoured of the fine looking  Polish-born soldier, but although Shula was beautiful and intelligent, it  wasn’t marriage that he had on his mind. Instead, he lured her into working for  the Mossad, which trained her in the art of seducing the rich and powerful and  sent her to England  to hone her English language skills.  In 1947,  under instructions from her bosses, she embarked on a marriage of convenience  with Josef Kishik a Jewish shopkeeper from Beirut  and returned with him to Lebanon.  There, she found a job in a bank and opened a private salon in the Wadi abu  Jamil district that was then the religious, economic, social and cultural  centre of the Jewish community. In time, she owned five such ‘salons’ in  different areas of Beirut, fitted with hidden recording and camera equipment  and staffed with female spies.  She also  rented a premises on Beirut’s  Hamra Street  that she turned into a night pub for the purposes of contacting the Mossad spy  ring without creating suspicion and to enable her to hire attractive new  recruits. Throughout the following 14 years, she bestowed her favours and those  of her employees on government officials, politicians and the upper echelons of  Lebanese society for a price.   It should  be explained that Beirut  had a thriving Jewish community of around 9,000 strong at that time, whose  members were protected by the Lebanese constitution, as well as 14 synagogues  and, at least, two Jewish banks. Jews in Beirut  enjoyed comfortable lifestyles in one of the most glamorous cities on earth but  many decided to leave following the 1967 war. The few that remained emigrated  elsewhere when civil war broke out in 1975 for reasons of security amid  widening sectarian divisions.  Between  1947 and 1961, Ms. Cohen fed her Israeli employers with secrets – including the  security protocol between the governments of Syria and Lebanon - and  established an organization called “The Jewish Self-Defence Force” that was  set-up to infiltrate Lebanese political parties. She is particularly acclaimed  in Israel for assisting  Syrian Jews from the cities of Aleppo and Sham  to covertly travel through the Lebanese mountains to begin new lives in Israel.  In this task she collaborated with other undercover Israeli spies in Beirut and Damascus.  She is also believed to have used her contacts to transfer Jewish money out of  banks in Syria and Lebanon  to Zionist organizations.  On August  9, 1961, Shula Cohen was finally arrested with her husband Josef Kishik on  charges of spying for Israel  along with 22 members of her network. A year later, she received the death  sentence which, on appeal, was commuted to 20 years in jail. But Ms. Cohen  served only seven years of her sentence. In 1967, she was released as part of a  prisoner exchange agreement between Israel  and Lebanon.  Today,  Shulamit Cohen is revered by the Israeli public as a person who sacrificed for  the sake of the Jewish state. However, her son Yitzhak, who grew up in Lebanon and is said to have visited his mother  in prison has eschewed the surnames Cohen and Kishik for ‘Levanon”, which in  Hebrew means Lebanon.  Egypt’s new Israeli ambassador may prefer not to advertise  his parentage but he is as staunch a Zionist as they. If he changed his name  because he wants a quiet life he won’t get one in Egypt  whose peace with Israel  is cold bordering on icy. Since taking up his post, he’s been criticised for  allowing his compatriots to dance and consume alcohol during the reopening of a  renovated synagogue; he’s had to make an official complaint about Egypt’s  Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit who called the Jewish state “an enemy” and  to cap it all his pet dog has been placed under three-months ‘house arrest’ for  entering the VIP lounge at Cairo Airport which is a canine-free zone.                   
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