How 'Tomb Raider' led Angelina Jolie to empowering women, Cambodia, protecting honeybees and beyond

The queen bee is a woman on a mission.

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We all have those moments when we transform our lives based on which road we take...a decision that helps us grow. The turning point came for actor Angelina Jolie years ago: “I feel very fortunate that I reached this place in my life all those years ago,” she shares with Harper’s Bazaar.

Angelina Jolie at Angkor Wat in Cambodia this February.

Jolie is reflecting on her first visit to Cambodia in 2000, when she was filming Lara Croft: Tomb Raider on location at the Ta Prohm Temple in Angkor Wat. That shoot was to be the start of a lifelong relationship with the country where she went on to adopt her eldest son, Maddox, establish a foundation, and buy a home whose protected acres have offered a safe haven at difficult moments in her life. “For me, going there was an awakening of many things in the world I didn’t know about, like what it means to be a refugee... I felt very honoured when, years later, I was able to become a mother to a Cambodian son and have citizenship in the country," she says. “I feel at peace when I’m in Southeast Asia.”

Jolie’s most recent trip to Cambodia was for the inauguration of the latest phase of the Guerlain X UNESCO Women for Bees programme. From there, she was to return to LA, but delayed her flight in order to fly to Yemen, where she met with displaced families to raise awareness about the humanitarian crisis created by the ongoing civil war. Once back in the US, she lost no time in picking up the threads of the multiple projects she is working on, including the Guerlain initiative, which aims to equip women in selected UNESCO biospheres with beekeeping knowledge. Conceived as a way of addressing threats to the global honeybee population, whose pollinating powers are crucial to food security and ecosystem management, the ambitious scheme also promotes female education and entrepreneurship—a cause that has long been close to Jolie’s heart. “As I’ve travelled around the world, I’ve seen that women are often very vulnerable and always very capable,” she says.

Angelina watching beekeepers at work in Cambodia.

Now in its second phase (last year’s pilot was held in France, with further stages planned for Rwanda, Ethiopia, China’s Yunnan province, and the Amazon region), the programme is predicated on the concept of sharing expertise—because “when you train a woman, she trains others,” says Jolie. “We all have different strengths, but I think there is something innate to a woman about nurturing and community. They are qualities that come very naturally to us—it’s like motherhood, right?” she adds, smiling sympathetically. “The way our bodies respond when we hear a baby crying...I think we just have something in us when it comes to thinking about others and not ourselves, and that really helps with this kind of work.”
 
With six children of her own to care for—Maddox, Pax, Zahara, Shiloh, and twins Knox and Vivienne—does Jolie feel her instinct to give back has grown stronger than ever? “My children have an impact on every aspect of who I am," she says, decisively. “The moment you become a parent, your life isn’t yours. You don’t know what ‘you’ is; it’s not really about your life anymore, and so you want to represent them, you want to be that model for them, and be your best self.” If ever she finds herself questioning her decisions or her identity, it is to her children she turns for reassurance. “When I have doubts and I don’t know who I am, I’ll sit with them and feel they know me more than anyone knows me,” she says. “And then I see myself and I see them as good people, interesting people, all very strong individuals, and I think I can’t be all bad, I can’t have made a mess.”

Jolie has been open about past struggles with her mental health, including recently suffering from what she has described as post-traumatic stress disorder (an experience she drew upon in her portrayal of Thena who is afflicted by a psychological condition, in last year’s Marvel blockbuster The Eternals). Since filing for divorce from Brad Pitt in September 2016, she has gone through a complex and protracted legal battle during which she alleged domestic violence against Pitt, who was cleared of any wrongdoing but acknowledged he had an alcohol problem. She now retains sole custody of her five minor children (Maddox is over 18 and therefore exempt from consideration), having successfully argued that the judge who had previously granted Pitt shared custody could not be deemed impartial. No wonder, after such upheaval, Jolie tells us she is still “figuring out” how to lead her life. “All of us struggle, because nobody’s a perfect person, so we’re just putting ourselves in check to ask, are we coming from the right place?” she muses. “And there’s no end to that growth.”

There is certainly no divorcing Jolie from her powerful sense of purpose. Far from disappearing from public view in the wake of her separation from Pitt, she has continued to use her star power to advocate for humanitarian causes, joining Instagram in 2021 to raise awareness around the horrors facing women and girls living under the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, and travelling to Ukraine in April to visit orphaned children in Lviv. Nonetheless, she is conscious of the need not to over-burden her own sons and daughters, especially in our era of social media and 24-hour news. “They are more connected than any generation has ever been, and with that comes an overload of information about the world we’re living in—some very frightening things, and they’re exposed to all of them,” she says. “They’re being encouraged to do something about it, which is wonderful because it gives them agency, but also, they shouldn’t feel that pressure.” While she wants her children to grow up with a sense of civic responsibility, she suggests that “the biggest challenge for this generation is just trying to help them seek joy and find peace... They need some silliness and rebellion!”

If there is one inheritance she hopes to pass on, it is an understanding of the power of community. Projects such as Women for Bees succeed because they are less about charity and more about building supportive networks—hence Jolie’s desire for her sons and daughters to see themselves as part of a global family. “You help them to connect to and learn about cultures and people around the world, and that way they’ll value them," she says. “If it’s the right thing to do, it should be natural.” And with that, Jolie—actor, mentor, mother—is off to her next engagement, changing the world one connection at a time.


Feature image: Photographs documenting the Women for Bees programme, on display as part of the exhibition ‘Piquées: Art, Woman and Revolution’ at Maison Guerlain Paris

Translation and editing: Evie Lukassen

Photography: Ian Gavan

Courtesy: Guerlain and Charlotte Abramow

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