The first thing Ilan Fluss will tell you, if you ask him why he came back, is that he never really left.
He says this with diplomatic exactness, the kind the man has always trained himself to edit sentiment out of sentences, only to find, on certain nights, that sentiments will prevail anyway.
The ballroom filled with silverware and protocol. Israel’s 77th Independence Day. The night should have belonged to the country, but somewhere between the appetizers and the speech, it became clear the night was his.
For three years, I watched him navigate power without noise. He gave little, revealed less. He was always out of the way. The applause came too late to be polite. And just loud enough to feel earned.
Israel Ambassador Ilan Fluss is never a man who owns rooms. He does not arrive in waves. He arrives in parentheses. You notice him when he speaks. Not loudly. Precisely.
He doesn’t rush. He doesn’t posture. He remembers.
He remembers Manila by scent. Diesel in the dark. A generator to keep the water going. Brownouts like clockwork. Dirt where tollways would rise. MRT still just a rumor in the sheet. It was his 30th birthday. It was the beginning.
And he remembers what it meant to be a younger man, a deputy ambassador, with a new son and a beautiful wife, a borrowed country that would never quite become foreign again.
“I am a Balikbayan diplomat,” he said.
His return was personal.
His name does not stir headlines in Tel Aviv. Never the diplomat chased by microphones or followed by scandal. He doesn’t shake hands for show; he reroutes power between nations. Deliberate. Unseen. Until it works.
He built alliances that held. Yields that tally. Tech that landed.
It’s traction over theater. And, instead of pomp, plumbing.
Under his watch, the embassy became a launchpad for greenhouses, irrigation systems, education programs.
There are now Filipino farmers harvesting lettuce under Israeli-designed shade nets in Bulacan. There are irrigation valves in Tarlac that whisper Hebrew engineering. There are students in Taguig learning in classrooms funded, in part, by the Israeli government.
He remembers who helped. He insists that history must be learned. And on this, his final speech, he reached back to 1939.
“We remember how President Quezon allowed 1,200 Jewish refugees escaping death and murder by the Nazis in Europe to enter into the Philippines,” he said.
It is the kind of story you carry with you because it carried your people when no one else would.
“That gesture,” he said, “is a light in a very dark time.”
He paused.
Mr. Fluss is not slick. He does not dazzle. He stays in the moment until it has finished breathing.
In one of the more ambitious moves of his tenure, Mr. Fluss brokered a deal between Metro Pacific AgroVentures and the Israeli LR Group to construct a 3.5-hectare greenhouse facility, the largest in the Philippines.
“President Marcos, during our first meeting, asked me personally to bring the agro technologies and practices of Israel,” Fluss recalled.
For all the numbers, for all the acreage and data points and budget lines, what most people won’t see (and gets buried in the formal releases) is the face he makes when someone mentions the 28,000 OFWs in Israel.
His brow tightens. Softens. Tightens again.
“We are so grateful,” he said, “for their dedication and love for Israel and its people.”
When Hamas launched its attack on 7 October, Mr. Fluss didn’t lead with strategy. He led with sorrow.
That evening, the Israeli flag stood at half-mast. A small detail. A heavy one.
And before he turned to hope, he turned first to grief. He didn’t deflect. He didn’t euphemize. He said it plainly. Two Jews. Murdered in Washington. For being Jews. That was the why. There was no other.
A quiet reminder that antisemitism is not history. It endures. It evolves. It kills.
Without missing a step, he returned to something stronger than fear: Connection.
The alliance between Israel and the Philippines has always been unequal in size, but never in spirit. What binds them, Mr. Fluss said, is not power. It is gratitude.
“Because of you,” he said, voice low but steady, “this journey has been both meaningful and unforgettable.”
He did what few diplomats ever do. He prayed.
“I want to end with an ancient Jewish prayer for peace for Israel, the Philippines and the world: ‘May He who makes peace in the heavens grant peace to us and all our people, and let us say Amen.’”
No anthem could match the quiet weight of that.
No headlines ran with it the next day. But if you were there, you’d know something had closed, gently, and something else had opened in its place.
It’s hard to profile a man like Mr. Fluss. The influence is not in the charisma or controversy. It’s in continuity.
There are few headlines that celebrate infrastructure. Fewer celebrate restraint. But if you trace the pipes, the wires, the roots of cooperation between Israel and the Philippines, you’ll find his fingerprints in the concrete.
You won’t find a monument to Ilan Fluss. Just lettuce in Bulacan, Hebrew valves in Tarlac and a farewell that hit harder than most wars.
Because real diplomacy doesn’t announce itself. It leaves things better.
Years from now, they’ll study the outcomes. And if they’re honest, they’ll find him at the roots.