WFP, my work and me…Nihal Nassereddin
Nihal Nassereddin is a nutrition officer and food technologist based in her home city of Jerusalem. She joined WFP in 2009 and is a passionate advocate for food safety and quality through testing produce, auditing factories and suppliers, and managing risks along the food chain.

Who has inspired you most in your life?
I joined WFP in 2009 when the Palestine Country Office was
the first in the whole region to hire a food technologist,
and when the Food Quality Control unit was just being
established at headquarters. Bertrand Salvignol was the
head of unit. I used to call him the encyclopedia and he
was one of the people who really inspired me and left a
mark. Really, he was the one that helped me develop my
career in WFP.
What is the best decision you ever made?
So far, the best decision I’ve ever made – on my own – is
studying nutrition and food science. I am doing the thing
that I really enjoy and I was lucky to be able to choose
what to study when I finished high school, when most
teenagers are lost.
"Every girl has the opportunity and access to education."
What was education like when you were growing up? What
sort of opportunities did you have?
In Palestine, but also in many other Arab countries,
women’s education is considered one of their assets. Being
educated and holding a Master’s degree is not something
unique or uncommon in Palestine. Every girl has the
opportunity and access to education - this isn’t
limited to certain people or area or background. On the
contrary, people push more for their daughters' education
than their sons', and are always trying to give their
children the best for their future.

What was your own school like?
I was in one of the hardest and most demanding schools in
Jerusalem, which applies the German curriculum. Every year
I remember I cried and asked my parents to send me to
another one but they refused and insisted I stay at it,
even if I felt it was really hard to get high grades. When
my parents sent me to Jordan to study nutrition and food
science – at that time, nutrition wasn’t included in the
curriculum of Palestinian universities – I really
appreciated their firm stance on not changing my school,
and their determination to offer me the best.
Which words or phrases do you most overuse?
Most of the time I feel I am hated by the quality managers
at the factories, as if they feel like I am a school
principal who is searching for their mistakes and
defaults, but I always tell them: ‘It is in your own
interest and benefit before anything else. Having a strong
system will allow you to compete globally and be proud of
your local production.’
Where in the world would you most like to live?
Palestine, my home country. I would like to travel around
the whole world, but in the end I will also end up back
here – the memories, the family. It’s not easy to live
here, especially for people who live in Jerusalem, but
still it is our legacy, our family, our memories which can
never be replaced by anything else.
How is it working in Palestine right now?
It is more challenging, but entering Gaza has always been
challenging. Given the humanitarian context, and even as a
humanitarian, you need a special permit to go to Gaza and
even some areas in the West Bank. COVID-19 has
added even more restrictions on movement and
access. We had a group of women who were pregnant or
breast feeding, and/or had children under 5, who lived in
one of the most restricted areas of the West Bank. To
communicate with them, we developed a Whatsapp group and
started to contact them daily, to talk about nutrition or
food safety, and how to maintain hygiene when they cook.
It worked really well. The mothers were really interactive
and look forward to receiving new messages and sharing
their views.
When have you felt at your happiest?
I feel I should say when I had my children but that’s not
100 percent right! I was happiest at that stage of my life
when I got my Master’s, as I had felt it was mission
impossible for me being a mother of two and working with
WFP at the same time. When I got it, I felt like I
controlled the world.