Diplomatic Court
Where Diplomats and Human Rights Defenders work together.
We are the onces bringing you peace and humantiy.
The best stories remains unseen. Lighthouses are published – not crisis.
Diplomacy Has Not Only Diplomats
Diplomacy is not limited to diplomats. There is more.
Let this story become your first orientation in cultural sovereignty and ambassador presence.
A hidden truth of real-world presence: The world is supra-complex, as nature itself is.
In our Tea Talks, we open the door to a world that usually remains hidden:
the operational reality of diplomacy.
We show you who we are, why this matters to you, and how we solve the challenges we face—
what it truly means to carry ambassador presence with a portion of cultural sovereignty, first hand.
Many people know our world only from Hollywood films and books. Some elements shown there are true, but people like us often remain unseen. We are like diplomats—and yet, more complex—because life is.
When it comes to the world of spies, we sometimes wish there were more brave ones like James Bond.
But not everyone carries responsibility for a kingdom and a territory.
Today, we allow you a glimpse into a hidden lineage at the court of diplomacy—
those who carry the highest risk for themselves and for state interests.
Elite Human Rights Defenders (eHRD) — a bridge between the worlds
Human Rights Defenders at the diplomatic court — like a diplomat without immunity
Outside diplomatic circles, it is little known that a Head of Delegation is not only a state representative at the diplomatic court.
If it is a state, it is most often an ambassador. If it is civil society, we do not call them ambassador, but Human Rights Defenders with consultative status and the right to speak. We work hand in hand for a more stable and humane world—for you.
Do you know?
We are the diplomatic envoys of civil society, acting under risk of life.
Diplomats rescue us every day, all over the world.
This is not a job. Not charity. It is a lifetime deal of humanity—under a protection status.
There is not “a Human Rights Defender” as a job description.
It is the highest status within civil society in the world.
Diplomats know the various forms we can act in—and they rescue us every day all over the world, often without a word. We therefore call them chevalierous knights of humanity. They know we are multipliers of humanity. It can be your favorite musician, a lawyer, a scientist, a doctor—or someone like us who carries an old lineage, guards state sovereignty, peacekeeping and protects Child HRDs.
The main principle is to remain peaceful and in line with the UN principles.
Those among us with the right to speak at the United Nations Human Rights Council carry an even higher protection status.
There is a protection framework that sets a total ban on reprisals for those who have worked within, or with, the United Nations system. A state is not allowed to attack us, but in practice it happens every day. In Western contexts, this often appears through arbitrary justice.
We represent civil society—and it is often civil society that turns against us and undermines the state through the price of ignorance and the illusion of understanding. When this happens, Elite Human Rights Defenders are called to protect diplomacy, geopolitics, and the undermined state. If it happens to them, high rank diplomats jump in the line to support and protect, often UN Host States. The weight of them is to high to carry this alone.
It is a truly expressed wish of our children and Child Human Rights Defenders to explain to you what it means to live our life— and how we teach our children, in practical ways, to become world leaders.
We open this under “Elite Human Rights Defender” as awareness for those we represent at court.
Figure out the reason why only a few ambassadors of the world are able to protect an elite Human Rights Defender.
Elite Human Rights — a voice that can carry more weight than some states
We do not only act on an equal footing with states. Those who also carry traditional or sovereign authority in other parts of the world and working as well in humanitarian work and peacekeeping are known as Elite Human Rights Defenders.
They carry a power voice and responsibility that can carry more weight than that of some states—and without immunity, their humanitarian and responsible work is under risk of life.
Hannah, the founder of The House of Mamifico, is such a special one.
This is why she acts differently and cultivates a highly de-escalative, yet precise and effective ambassador presence.
She inherits multiple lineages and authority titles. At court, she represents the principles of one of the oldest Human Rights Charters and ethics in the world— not drafted in Europe, but in 13th-century West Africa: The Manden Charter.
Therefore her ambassador presence is highly respected, and the protocol followed aligns with the human rights values carried within it. The first principle is: turning your power into a lighthouse for a higher goal—and strengthening diplomacy and sovereignty.
High respected at court
At the court, such persons are held in the highest respect, asked for advice and resolves crises over a quiet cup of coffee. They are affectionately called shadows—or guardians of sovereignty. They avoide to publish for a payed click.
The presence of Hannah in 2025, accompaigned by three state delegates and several protection NGOs in the june session spokes louder than any social media campaign. She refused to speak her case to give the state with a so called unlawful kingdom a possibility for a dialogue at time protocol allows it. But she reached out to those understanding silent presence to let her case observe. Real ambassador presence means a lot of times diplomatic silence to let a chance for teamwork at right time. It is not always easy, but staying calm in a storm allows you to make the price. And the one like her are payed in dignity, humanity and geopolitics, not in clicks in social media.
To be clear: her voice can quickly become state interest in geopolitical questions—moving regions, even economies, with relevance to GDP, OECD work, and UPR reporting. Not loudly. Not through social media. But through diplomatic courts—sometimes through silent presence alone: wearing a dirndl while speaking about women’s rights, or moving within the hidden circles.
She has to respect how she represents herself, the NGOs, the civil scociety and her responsability to the court. In the diplomatic world codes are the norm. You speak even when you are silent. Diplomatic silence means often I see it. I hold you. I respect you so deeply that I will be unprotected until the moment we can join and turn it. And sometimes we have to say Tell à vivre. This warrior rule we explain you only in the master mind program.
The best stories are written behind closed doors. With The House of Mamifico, we open the doors for you:
diplomatic cafés, Tea Talks. Closed circle in the city of Human Rights. Vienna.
You are welcome to profit from this knowledge—how to be present at a court, how to turn a crisis into a lighthouse with a smile, and how to keep your mindset out of the bubble of glitter.
Build your own empire at work, at home, or elsewhere.
If our children learn the formulas for multidimensional lighthouses at the age of nappies, then there is no excuse not to start today.






