When Panama was looking for an ambassador to Israel, Ezra Cohen was the go-to choice
IN Arizona in late December 2024, Donald Trump delivered his first speech after being reelected president. True to form, over the course of 75 minutes, he unleashed a stream of extravagant promises about America’s imminent return to greatness. Buried among his grand declarations — such as his official renaming of the Gulf of Mexico to the “Gulf of America” — was one grievance that had probably never figured high on the average American’s list of concerns.
“China has been running the Panama Canal,” Trump thundered. “We didn’t give it to China — we gave it to Panama. And we are taking it back!”
The crowd erupted.
Despite the applause, Panama remains, for many, lodged in a peculiar sort of limbo — a country whose name is familiar but whose other details are vague. There are places we know by name, yet we have little idea of where they are, or what happens there. For anyone from South America (this writer included), it is a common experience: Foreigners may know the name of your country but almost nothing else about it — its customs, its landscapes, its geography. Often, they can’t even find it on a map.
When religious Jew Ezra Cohen was offered the ambassadorship of his country to Israel, the mission was clear: To make Panama “locatable” on the map, at least in the Israeli consciousness. Cohen, who had spent much of his life in the business world, prefers to frame the challenge in his own terms.
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