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Feminism in Israel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Feminism in Israel is a complex issue in contemporary Israeli society due to the varied demographic makeup of the country and the country's particular balance of religion and state issues.[1] For secular Israeli women, the successive campaigns for women's rights and equality reflect a similar timeline and progression as Western democracies. For Israeli Arabs, however, the issue of feminism is strongly linked to Palestinian causes. And for Orthodox Jews, selected women's rights and women's representation in the Israeli Parliament are recently debated issues.

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Historical development

First-wave

The manifestations of first-wave feminism in Israel began before statehood, during the Yishuv period. These early campaigns were rooted in the ideology of Israeli socialism. A feature of this era is the women who sought to be treated as equals, chiefly in the areas of agricultural labor in the kibbutzim and within the workers' parties.[2] While the first wave of Israeli feminism didn't reach its peak until the 1920s, efforts such as those made in the Revolution of 1886, in which local women worked to gain suffrage in Yishuv institutions are said to have ignited the rise of feminism in the area.[3][4] It was not until 1927 that women gained the right to vote in Jewish communities and the ability to be elected and serve in the local government.[4]

Second-wave feminism

Second-wave feminism took somewhat longer to manifest in Israel. Questions concerning the need for a new women's rights movement began in the early 1970s, and in 1972, Israel's first radical women's movement was established. Notable events during that era include the establishment of the Ratz political party ("Movement for Civil Rights and Peace") which won four seats in the 1973 Israeli legislative election.[2]

During this period, key early activists were American Jews living in Israel who organized consciousness-raising meetings in Israel's major cities.[5]

In contemporary Israeli society

In 2018, 30,000 women protesters gather in Tel Aviv to respond to the issue of domestic violence.[6]

Arab Israeli feminism

Arab Israeli feminism emerged following Israel's second-wave feminism, criticizing the dominant discourse as ignoring the double discrimination experienced by the Palestinians of Israel, and demanded their path to emancipation. Their initial actions concerned work, education, domestic violence. The general stance of Israeli Arab feminists is anti-colonial and sympathetic to Palestinian nationalism, however, no feminist “movement” has been constituted due to internal organizational fragmentation.[7] In Arab feminist literature, a common theme of discrimination concerns the childhood experiences of boys and girls in the family.[8]

Writings on this trend of feminism tend to neglect the impact on the Israeli Druze community.[9]

Mizrachi feminism

As feminism in Israeli society developed, a distinction began to form between Ashkenazi (Jews of European origin) and Mizrachi (Jews of Middle Eastern origin) forms of feminism. A rift formed along ethnic lines, as Mizrachi activists felt excluded and marginalized from mainstream women's movements. The First Mizrahi Feminist Annual Conference was held in 1995, representing the formal recognition of Mizrachi feminism in Israel.[10]

Orthodox and Haredi feminism

In 1981, Chana Safrai [he] חנה ספראי, established the first institution for advanced study of Talmud by women, where such illustrious teachers as Dr. Nehama Leibowitz and Rabbi Dr. Binyamin Lau were among the faculty.[11] Following the opening of this school, higher Torah learning institutions for women proliferated in Israel over the next four decades.[11] In 1982 a halakhic study was published highlighting that it was appropriate for religious women to serve in the IDF.[12] In 2002 Aluma was established, which assists religious girls to attain meaningful service in the IDF.[13] In 1987, a legal case was brought before the Supreme Court of Israel arguing that Leah Shakdiel [he] לאה שקדיאל must be allowed to serve on local religious councils. The case was brought after the Israeli Minister of Religious Affairs canceled Shakdiel's appointment to the religious affairs committee in Yeruham. After the court ruled in her favor, Leah Shakdiel became the first woman to serve on a religious council in Israel.[14]

In Haredi Jewish communities, one of the first substantive attempts by religious women to organize along political lines was the establishment of the Lo Nivcharot, Lo Bocharot ("not elected, no vote") in 2012 which campaigned for the Haredi political parties to allow women to join the party.[15] A subsequent initiative was the establishment of the political party U'Bizchutan organized by Haredi women.[16]

A major issue prompting efforts for Orthodox women's rights is the issue of agunot, women whose husbands refuse to divorce under Jewish law.[17]

Haredi feminism is still a slowly emerging trend but it is distinct from modern Orthodox approaches. Modern Orthodox and Religious Zionist efforts include issues relating to religious law such as the question of women's prayer groups and access to public rituals such as dancing with the Torah scroll on Simchat Torah. By contrast, Haredi feminism has been concerned with the political sphere and does not address restrictions in religious ritual areas.[18]

Legislative responses

The Israeli government marks International Women's Day, as marked by the United Nations and other countries around the world, to commemorates the struggle for women's equality under the law. The Knesset has established a Committee on the Status of Women and Gender Equality which is responsible for promoting the status of women in social, economic, and political affairs, and addressing gender-based discrimination in Israeli society.[19]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Feminism in Israel | Women in Israel – a revolution halted?". Fathom. Retrieved 2020-09-20.
  2. ^ a b "Feminism in Contemporary Israel | Jewish Women's Archive". jwa.org. Retrieved 2019-03-17.
  3. ^ "Politics in the Yishuv and Israel". Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved 2020-09-20.
  4. ^ a b Yaron, Joanne (2011). "The Rise of Feminism in Israel". Palestine-Israel Journal of Politics, Economics & Culture. Retrieved March 31, 2021.
  5. ^ Feldman, Y. S. (2000). From" The Madwoman in the Attic" to" The Women's Room": The American Roots of Israeli Feminism. Israel Studies, 5(1), 266-286.
  6. ^ Lanzkron, Naomi; staff, T. O. I. "At Tel Aviv rally, 30,000 protest rising violence against women". www.timesofisrael.com. Retrieved 2020-09-20.
  7. ^ Marteu, É. (2012). Israeli and Palestinian feminisms: Postcolonial issues. Revue Tiers Monde, (1), 71-88.
  8. ^ Levy, N. W. (2009). “… but it has its price”: Cycles of alienation and exclusion among pioneering Druze women. International Journal of Educational Development, 29(1), 46-55.
  9. ^ Booth, M. (2011). Nazira Zeineddine: A Pioneer of Islamic Feminism, by Miriam Cooke.
  10. ^ Dahan-Kalev, H. (2001, November). Tensions in israeli feminism: The mizrahi ashkenazi rift. In Women's Studies International Forum (Vol. 24, No. 6, pp. 669-684). Pergamon.
  11. ^ a b See "History of Ne'emanei Torah Va'Avoda:About Us" in Hebrew http://p23291-286-12237.s286.upress.link/%[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ "The Enlistment of Women to Serve in Sherut Leumi and the IDF: A Halakhic Analysis," ed. Cohen, Yechezkel. (NTA:1982). See NTA website for additional conversation on the subject. https://toravoda.org.il/
  13. ^ "Serving with Faith | אלומה". aluma.org.il. Retrieved 2020-09-20.
  14. ^ "Shakdiel v. Minister of Religious Affairs | Cardozo Israeli Supreme Court Project". versa.cardozo.yu.edu. Retrieved 2020-09-20.
  15. ^ Nathan Jeffay, "Israeli elections: Charedi women refuse to vote", The Jewish Chronicle, 10 January 2013.
  16. ^ Miriam Krule (21 January 2015). "Ultra-Orthodox Women in Israel Launch Their Own Political Party". Slate. Retrieved 18 June 2015.
  17. ^ Zion-Waldoks, T. (2015). Politics of devoted resistance: Agency, feminism, and religion among Orthodox Agunah activists in Israel. Gender & Society, 29(1), 73-97.
  18. ^ Ross, T. (2016). Radical Feminism and a Theology of Jewish Autonomy: An Anatomy of Unexpected Alliances. Jewish Studies Quarterly, 23(4), 374.
  19. ^ "Lexicon of Terms|International Women's Day". www.knesset.gov.il. Retrieved 2020-09-20.
This page was last edited on 8 March 2024, at 21:56
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