Rivlin was born on a moshav in Herut, Israel. Her parents, Mendi and Drora Kayla Shulman, who immigrated from Ukraine, helped establish the community.[2] Her mother, who had immigrated from Ukraine, was widowed when her husband died at the age of 45 from an illness. Rivlin was five at the time.[3] Her mother then worked the farm, "with its orchard, cattle and chickens." "I remember her working hard and fighting like a lioness for the right to work the land, despite the objective difficulties entailed in choosing such a demanding way of life. She never sank into debt – no small feat in a cooperative farming settlement," Rivlin later wrote.[4]
Rivlin attended local schools and graduated from the Ruppin Regional High School. In 1964 she enrolled at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem where she earned a BSc in Botany and Zoology, along with a Teaching Diploma.[5]
Career
Rivlin became a researcher at Hebrew University in 1967. Her initial role was in the Department of Zoology and she later worked in the genetics division in the Department of Ecology.[6] She later worked as a scientific secretary at the university's Institute of Life Sciences.[7] Rivlin retired in 2007.[6]
Political links
In her position as the wife of the Israeli President, Rivlin concentrated on areas she was most familiar with through her academic work and family. One area of focus was nature and the environment.[8][9]
Rivlin was also a vocal supporter of women and children.[10] Inaugurating her first major initiative as First Lady, she welcomed 200 Akim activists to the President's residence to draw attention to the needs of intellectually challenged children and to advocate for supporting them.[11] Sharing a message of peace and tolerance, she hosted students and teachers from the Hand in Hand: Center for Jewish-Arab Education in Israel at the President's Residence following an arson attack at their school.[12] Rivlin said violence against children was a great problem throughout society, and that Israel should work to investigate and address child abuse. "We must break this conspiracy of silence once and for all", she said.[13] In March 2016, she hosted a group of women who had publicly shared their experiences with sexual assault and domestic abuse.[14] Rivlin told them that by telling their stories, they would help others who face difficult issues.[15]
In 1970, Rivlin met Reuven Rivlin at a party.[20] They married in 1971, a year after their meeting.[20] It was his second marriage and he had a son from his first marriage. It was her first marriage. The couple had three children, Rivka, Anat, and Ran.[20][21] The family resided in Yefeh Nof.[22] After her retirement in 2007, she became a film buff, watched theatre, and developed an interest in gardening and the environment.[6] Later in life, she studied the history of art.[22]
Rivlin suffered from pulmonary fibrosis, an interstitial lung disease.[23] She was regularly seen in public with a portable oxygen tank. On 11 March 2019, Rivlin received a lung transplant from 19 year old Yair Yehezkel Chalabli's body, who died in a freediving accident.[24] She died on 4 June, one day shy of her 74th birthday, at Beilinson Hospital in Petah Tikva of complications following the transplant.[20][25] She is survived by her husband and a sister, Vered.[6]