Isha L'Isha - Haifa Feminist Center

Isha L'Isha - Haifa Feminist Center Isha L’Isha, established in 1983, is the oldest grassroots feminist organization in Israel and one of the leading voices of women’s rights in the country.

We offer women a safe, supportive environment in which they address their needs, providing room for self-expression and development. Isha L’Isha provides a platform to discuss issues of direct importance to women’s lives and their communities, such as feminism and women's rights, violence against women, reproductive rights, discrimination in work and society, sexual identity, the economy, ecological and environmental issues, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and healthcare. Isha L'Isha is a community of Ashekenazi, Mizrahi, Palestinian, immigrant, native-born, straight and Lesbian women, and is dedicated to making the voices of Israel's most marginal women heard. "אשה לאשה" הוקמה בשנת 1983 והיא ממשיכת דרכה של קבוצת הנשים
הפמיניסטיות מחיפה שהנהיגו את המאבק לזכויות הנשים בשנות השבעים.

אנו קהילת נשים הפועלת מתוך רצון לקיים הבנה ושותפות בין הנשים בישראל, ללא הבדל דת, לאום, עדה, העדפה מינית ומעמד כלכלי. "אשה לאשה" היא המרכז הפמיניסטי הוותיק ביותר בישראל ואחד הקולות
המובילים במאבק למען זכויות נשים בארץ.

מרכז "אשה לאשה" הינו בית פתוח המקיים פעילויות לאורך כל השנה: כנסים, הרצאות, סמינרים, מידע ויעוץ טלפוני, קבוצות מנהיגות ועוד. בבית קיים מרכז מידע הכולל ספריה ואוסף ארכיוני מגוון בנושאים הקשורים לנשים. פעילות אלו מאפשרת לנו נגישות לידע ומידע על נושאים שונים ויצירת תרבות הבוחנת את חוויותיו, מקומנו ותפקידנו בחברה.

تأسست جمعية امراة لامراة، عام 1983 لتكميل درب نسويات رائدات من حيفا قدن النضال لحقوق المراة في سنوات السبعين.
جمعية امراة لامراة تعمل لالغاء التمييز والعنف والقمع ضد النساء على مختلف اشكاله، الدفاع عن حقتا باتخاد القرار بكل ما يخص اجسادنا، خلق ظروف لتحصيل التفاهم والشراكة والحوار المتبادل بين نساء من ثقافات وخلفيات مختلفة، العمل على تحسين خدمات قائمة وملائمتها لاحتياجاتنا الخاصة كنساء، تغيير اجتماعي بواسطة نشر وترسيخ الوعي للمساواة بين الجنسين، ننشط ضد كل تعبير يحمل طابع جنسي في المجتمع وعلى نشر فكر تساوي الحقوق والفرص بين كل النساء أينما تواجدن.

03/10/2023

Alice Shalvi, Hailed as a Mother of Feminism in Israel, Dies at 96.
By Jane Eisner

Alice Shalvi, an innovative educator and social activist revered by many as a founding mother of modern Jewish feminism in Israel, died on Monday at her home in Jerusalem. She was 96.

Her daughter Pnina Shalvi-Vega confirmed the death.

Dr. Shalvi developed a brand of feminist activism that drew on her experiences as a mother and a teacher, along with her deep knowledge of Jewish text, to help galvanize the nascent women’s movement in Israel beginning in the mid-1970s.

She was best known for her leadership of Pelech, an experimental school in Jerusalem that provides an egalitarian secular and religious education for Orthodox girls, and for her work as the founding director of the Israel Women’s Network. The network, formed in 1984, lobbies the government to reform Israeli laws treating women differently from men — in the military, marriage, employment and the administration of health care.

A diminutive woman who retained the accent and bearing of her European childhood, Dr. Shalvi was showered with accolades and awards recognizing her contributions to education, scholarship, religious life and civil society. In 2007, she received the Israel Prize, the country’s highest civilian award, for lifetime achievement.

Born in Germany and reared in England, Dr. Shalvi enjoyed influence beyond Israel, the country she called home for 74 years. She had devoted supporters in the United States — Friends of Alice, her husband called them — who considered her, in the words of the Ms. magazine co-founder and author Letty Cottin Pogrebin, “the queen mother of Israeli second wave feminism.”

Dr. Shalvi charted her own path throughout her life, defying stereotypes and convention, sometimes at great professional cost and personal anguish. As a religiously observant mother of six children, she was not expected to challenge the authority of the Israeli rabbinate, but she forged ahead anyway, even burning restrictive religious marriage contracts in a dramatic demonstration to support women who were prevented from divorcing their husbands.

A devoted educator in secondary schools and universities, Dr. Shalvi jeopardized her career by speaking publicly to Palestinians and in support of the peace process. Her participation in dialogues between Israeli and Palestinian women was one reason she was forced to resign from Pelech in 1991.

The price she paid was personal, too. In the opening acknowledgments of her memoir “Never a Native” (2018), she apologized to her children for the suffering caused by what she called her “over-indulgence in public affairs.”

Dr. Shalvi said she chose the name of her memoir when she considered “the overarching metaphor of my life, which has been lived in three different countries, in all of which I was in fact an ‘alien.’”
Dr. Shalvi said she chose the name of her memoir when she considered “the overarching metaphor of my life, which has been lived in three different countries, in all of which I was in fact an ‘alien.’”

The home she shared with her husband, Moshe Shalvi, in the Beit HaKerem neighborhood of Jerusalem, was often abuzz with her extensive family and ever-expanding network of colleagues and friends. They would gather amid the white jasmine and giant fruit trees in her garden, the conversation flowing effortlessly between Hebrew and English.
It was there that she worked on her memoir, writing in long hand on a yellow legal pad. When asked in an email in 2018 why she chose “Never a Native” as its title, she replied, “It came to my mind when I considered the overarching metaphor of my life, which has been lived in three different countries, in all of which I was in fact an ‘alien.’”

Despite having lived in Israel since 1949, Dr. Shalvi often said that she felt closest to the Friends of Alice, the 10 Jewish feminists, mostly in the New York area, who supported her for decades.
“She’s been a teacher, a role model, a fantastic oracle, a rhetorician,” Ms. Pogrebin, one of those friends, said in an interview. “She was a groundbreaking presence who was doing work that had not been done before, here or there. It was very hard to silence Alice.”
Alice Hildegard Margulies was born on Oct. 16, 1926, in Essen, the industrial city in western Germany, the youngest of three children of Benzion and Perl Margulies, who were first cousins. Her parents owned a wholesale business selling linens and cutlery. Theirs was a cultured home, filled with music and literature, infused by her father’s devotion to his synagogue and the religious Zionist movement. Alice was a solitary child, especially after her sister died of pleurisy when Alice was 2, leaving her with a much older brother with whom she had little in common.

As Hi**er rose to power and N**i harassment of Jews intensified, the family fled south to Mannheim, where they had relatives, and finally to London.

In Britain, where she was called “the little refugee girl” at school, Alice, a voracious reader, nurtured a passion for English literature. Although English was not her first language, she won numerous writing awards and was accepted to Newnham, one of two women’s colleges at Cambridge University.

She excelled in her studies and became immersed in Jewish life on campus. There, foreshadowing her later activist inclinations, she proposed one day that women, too, should lead the singing at Shabbat meals. To her surprise, the men agreed.

“And, the following Friday evening, I made history by being the first woman to lead,” Dr. Shalvi wrote in her memoir. “Unfortunately, the victory was marred. In my nervousness, I pitched my voice too high and, to my shame, had to readjust the key after the first two lines. But the precedent had been set.”
She moved to Israel in 1949 with a master’s degree in social work from the London School of Economics and Political Science, but was unable to find work there in her chosen field. By chance the following year, she was offered a teaching job at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and discovered her professional calling; she became a faculty member and earned her doctorate there in 1962. She eventually became head of the English departments at Hebrew University and Ben Gurion University of the Negev, and rector of the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies.

Dr. Shalvi met her future husband, Moshe Shelkowitz, an immigrant from New York who later changed his surname to Shalvi, through mutual friends. An editor of Jewish reference books, he died in 2013 after 63 years of marriage.

In addition to their daughter Pnina, she is survived by two other daughters, Ditza Shmuel and Heftziba Kelner; two sons, Yoel and Micha Shalvi; 21 grandchildren; and 27 great-grandchildren. Another son, Benzion, died in 2016.

Dr. Shalvi’s legacy as an educator is reflected most profoundly in Pelech, which she led for 15 years and which to this day is regarded as a model for enlightened religious education.

“She taught us as Jewish women to speak in an ethical Jewish language,” Tamar Elad-Appelbaum, a former student of hers who became Dr. Shalvi’s rabbi at Kehilat Zion, a progressive congregation in Jerusalem, said in an interview.

She credited Dr. Shalvi with instilling in her students a unique blend of social consciousness and religious faith, whether the class was on a Talmudic text or a Shakespeare play.
Image
Dr. Shalvi at home in Jerusalem in 2016. Despite having lived in Israel since 1949, she often said that she felt closest to the Friends of Alice, the 10 Jewish feminists, mostly in the New York area, who supported her for decades.
Dr. Shalvi at home in Jerusalem in 2016. Despite having lived in Israel since 1949, she often said that she felt closest to the Friends of Alice, the 10 Jewish feminists, mostly in the New York area, who supported her for decades.
“She taught about feminism, human rights, human dignity as a religious woman,” Rabbi Elad-Appelbaum said.

Dr. Shalvi helped found the Israel Women’s Network in 1984 after serving on a special government commission on the status of women. Under her leadership, the network, among other things, sought to give women greater political representation by creating programs to increase the number of women running for office and to encourage those already in office to cross party lines.

“They created a tradition of left-wing and some right-wing feminists who collaborated on work they could agree on,” said Hamutal Gouri, a senior fellow at the Kiverstein Institute, an initiative promoting equality for women in Jerusalem.
Dr. Shalvi never lost her ability as an educator to connect across generations. When she was honored by the Kiverstein Institute with a lifetime achievement award in 2021, she captivated audience members younger than most of her granddaughters. “It’s not every feminist,” Ms. Gouri said, “certainly not into her 90s, who gets teenage girls, understands what they are going through and can serve as an inspiration.”

In her memoir, Dr. Shalvi wrote with pride about her Pelech students — “my girls,” she called them — who had gone on to become judges, doctors, university lecturers, curators and business executives.

“They are bearing out my contention,” she wrote, “that no area in life should be closed to you just because you are female.” ‏

02/10/2023

חברות אישה לאישה אבלות על מותה של אליס שלוי, ממייסדות הפמיניזם בישראל.
מלים רבות נכתבו על פועלה ולא נתיימר לסכמו כאן. נגיד רק שעבור רבות מאתנו, אליס היא מקור השראה. אישה גדולה מהחיים, שלא חיכתה שיבשילו התנאים אלא פעלה בתוך סביבות שמרניות ופטריארכליות כשהיא מונעת על ידי אור פנימי של אמת, אהבת אדם ואשה, ומחויבות חסרת פשרות לשוויון ולצדק מגדרי וחברתי. כמו כן ראויה לציון העובדה שהיא חתרה באופן פעיל לשלום עם הפלסטינים דווקא מתוך הסביבה האידיאולוגית התורנית והציונית אליה השתייכה. "אשה לאשה – מרכז פמיניסטי חיפה" הוא ארגון פמיניסטי רדיקלי, לא ציוני ולא דתי. יחד עם זאת, אנחנו מעריכות ומוקירות את יכולתה של שלוי לנסח, לממש, ולחנך לחזון של צדק ושוויון לנשים גם כשהדבר גבה ממנה מחירים, ולחתור לחברה צודקת יותר.

15/03/2023

On Friday 17th March 2023, I will be running the Jerusalem Marathon in support of Isha L'Isha - Haifa Feminist Center and their 'Women Without Status' project. I have chosen to dedicate this run to Isha L'Isha and this project specifically, to rai...

On Friday 17th March 2023, Stav Williams will be running the Jerusalem Marathon in support of Isha L'Isha - Haifa Femini...
13/03/2023

On Friday 17th March 2023, Stav Williams will be running the Jerusalem Marathon in support of Isha L'Isha - Haifa Feminist Center and their 'Women Without Status' project.

She has chosen to dedicate this run to Isha L'Isha and this project specifically, to raise funds and raise awareness of the difficulties that women without status are facing here in Israel. We would appreciate your support and donations.

On Friday 17th March 2023, I will be running the Jerusalem Marathon in support of Isha L'Isha - Haifa Feminist Center and their 'Women Without Status' project. I have chosen to dedicate this run to Isha L'Isha and this project specifically, to rai...

כל כך ראויה.  כל כך גאה בה.  ג'סיקה נבו, זוכה פרס על מפעל חיים, אות זכויות האדם ע"ש אמיל גרינצוויג לשנת 2022
28/11/2022

כל כך ראויה. כל כך גאה בה. ג'סיקה נבו, זוכה פרס על מפעל חיים, אות זכויות האדם ע"ש אמיל גרינצוויג לשנת 2022

ברכות חמות לזוכי אות זכויות האדם ע"ש אמיל גרינצוויג לשנת 2022: הסוציולוגית ג'סיקה נבו וההיסטוריון והפעיל החברתי גדי אלגזי, שזכו באות מפעל חיים, ואשת התקשורת ח'ולוד מסאלחה, שזכתה באות דור העתיד.

דווקא כשהאיומים על הדמוקרטיה ועל זכויות האדם מתעצמים, יש חשיבות מיוחדת להוקיר ולחזק את פעילי ופעילות זכויות האדם – שאינם נרתעים, אינם מוותרים ונלחמים למען חברה צודקת יותר.

תודה מיוחדת לחברי ועדת האות: פרופ' ח'אולה אבו בקר, פרופ' יוסי דהאן ועו"ד יהושע שופמן.

לקריאה על פועלם של הזוכים: https://www.acri.org.il/post/__842

הצטרפו אלינו לטקס הענקת האות שיתקיים במסגרת פסטיבל סולידריות/ مهرجان تضامن / Solidarity Festival לזכויות אדם בסינמטק ת"א. 9.12.22 בשעה 12:00 - לרכישת כרטיסים עם קוד ההנחה SOL24:
https://cintlv.pres.global/order/71864

Isha L'Isha Weekly RoundupThis week the main events on our mind are:1. The Israeli Election ResultsAlthough we are still...
15/11/2022

Isha L'Isha Weekly Roundup

This week the main events on our mind are:

1. The Israeli Election Results

Although we are still anxiously waiting for the final outcome to be decided, we find the country in an extremely troubling time from a feminist perspective. Seeing a picture of a potential leader's wife with a gun did nothing to ease the anxiety, as well as the overall looming prospect of what this new government could mean for us women.

2. Eyal Golan Trial

The second round of abuse allegations against popular singer Eyal Golan continued this week. The exploitation of power for taking advantage of young women is not a new story, and history doesn't demonstrate that the male perpetrators always receive the punishment they deserve, will this time be different?

Affairs such as these in our country today continue to threaten the mental and physical safety of women. So, what can we do about it?
How should we, as radical feminists, think about this as a society? What courses of action can be taken? What can we do, to try and alter the flow of events moving forwards in a way that can create meaningful change?

We're interested to hear what you think in the comments.

We suggest staying aware of the intersectionality of issues that we, as a society face. Issues such as violence against women, the occupation and LGBTQ+ issues go hand-in-hand. Placing focus on one of these issues at the expense of the others, will not produce the results we want. We must remain united in our fight, using our strength in numbers to affect the course of the future.

What we at Isha L'Isha have been up to this week:

1. Amal Elsana Alh'jooj Book Launch for 'Hope Is A Woman's Name'

We were proud to attend the book launch for Amal Elsana Alh'jooj's powerful memoir about the reality of being a Bedouin woman in the Negev today. The joint Jewish-Arab event demonstrated the resilience of women in the face of adversity and the power in being able to tell your story. The response from the women in attendance was moving and important.

2. Trans Community in Haifa: Past and Present Meeting

Tonight, we will hold a movie and panel honoring the trans community in Haifa. Acknowledging the continued existence of the trans community is incredibly important in raising visibility and awareness. We are proud to honor the bravery and beauty of the brave trans men and women who existed and still exist in our city.

Thank you for reading, and please let us know what you think in the comments.

What actions have you taken this week to try and create change?

If you're interested in taking part in any of the events at with the Isha L'Isha community you're warmly invited. Take a look at our website or message us here to reach out.

https://isha.org.il/?lang=en

pl. sighn and share
25/06/2022

pl. sighn and share

People from all over the world are signing this open letter that says …

09/05/2022
מחר בשעה 18.00 בבית אשה לאשה
05/04/2022

מחר בשעה 18.00 בבית אשה לאשה

השבוע ביום רביעי ה-6.4 בשעה 18:00
נפגש לשיחה על "אקלים וסכסוכים" עם שרי אהרוני.
נדבר על סוגים שונים של קונפליקטים, בדגש על כתיבה פמיניסטית: פוליטיזציה והבדלים בהגדרות הנוגעות לקיומו של משבר האקלים; התארגנויות של נשים ילידיות בתגובה לניצול משאבי טבע כפמיניזם מיליטנטי; ההשפעה הסביבתית של סכסוכים מזויינים והקשר לחייהן של נשים ועוד.
מצפות להיפגש
Sarai Aharoni

השבוע ביום רביעי ה-6.4 בשעה 18:00
03/04/2022

השבוע ביום רביעי ה-6.4 בשעה 18:00

השבוע ביום רביעי ה-6.4 בשעה 18:00
נפגש לשיחה על "אקלים וסכסוכים" עם שרי אהרוני.
נדבר על סוגים שונים של קונפליקטים, בדגש על כתיבה פמיניסטית: פוליטיזציה והבדלים בהגדרות הנוגעות לקיומו של משבר האקלים; התארגנויות של נשים ילידיות בתגובה לניצול משאבי טבע כפמיניזם מיליטנטי; ההשפעה הסביבתית של סכסוכים מזויינים והקשר לחייהן של נשים ועוד.
מצפות להיפגש
Sarai Aharoni

Address

118 Arlozorov Street
Haifa
33276

Telephone

+97248650977

Website

http://feministnewsletter-isha.blogspot.com/

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Our Story

We offer women a safe, supportive environment in which they address their needs, providing room for self-expression and development. Isha L’Isha provides a platform to discuss issues of direct importance to women’s lives and their communities, such as feminism and women's rights, violence against women, reproductive rights, discrimination in work and society, sexual identity, the economy, ecological and environmental issues, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and healthcare. Isha L'Isha is a community of Ashekenazi, Mizrahi, Palestinian, immigrant, native-born, straight and Le***an women, and is dedicated to making the voices of Israel's most marginal women heard. "אשה לאשה" הוקמה בשנת 1983 והיא ממשיכת דרכה של קבוצת הנשים הפמיניסטיות מחיפה שהנהיגו את המאבק לזכויות הנשים בשנות השבעים. אנו קהילת נשים הפועלת מתוך רצון לקיים הבנה ושותפות בין הנשים בישראל, ללא הבדל דת, לאום, עדה, העדפה מינית ומעמד כלכלי. "אשה לאשה" היא המרכז הפמיניסטי הוותיק ביותר בישראל ואחד הקולות המובילים במאבק למען זכויות נשים בארץ. מרכז "אשה לאשה" הינו בית פתוח המקיים פעילויות לאורך כל השנה: כנסים, הרצאות, סמינרים, מידע ויעוץ טלפוני, קבוצות מנהיגות ועוד. בבית קיים מרכז מידע הכולל ספריה ואוסף ארכיוני מגוון בנושאים הקשורים לנשים. פעילות אלו מאפשרת לנו נגישות לידע ומידע על נושאים שונים ויצירת תרבות הבוחנת את חוויותיו, מקומנו ותפקידנו בחברה. تأسست جمعية امراة لامراة، عام 1983 لتكميل درب نسويات رائدات من حيفا قدن النضال لحقوق المراة في سنوات السبعين. جمعية امراة لامراة تعمل لالغاء التمييز والعنف والقمع ضد النساء على مختلف اشكاله، الدفاع عن حقتا باتخاد القرار بكل ما يخص اجسادنا، خلق ظروف لتحصيل التفاهم والشراكة والحوار المتبادل بين نساء من ثقافات وخلفيات مختلفة، العمل على تحسين خدمات قائمة وملائمتها لاحتياجاتنا الخاصة كنساء، تغيير اجتماعي بواسطة نشر وترسيخ الوعي للمساواة بين الجنسين، ننشط ضد كل تعبير يحمل طابع جنسي في المجتمع وعلى نشر فكر تساوي الحقوق والفرص بين كل النساء أينما تواجدن.