Wikipedia:WikiProject Jewish Women

Betty Friedan, 1960

Welcome to WikiProject Jewish Women, a collaboration area for Wikipedians interested in improving coverage of Jewish Women.

Scope

What it means to be Jewish is a complex question; "being Jewish" is somewhere between a nationality, ethnicity, religion, and culture. With this complex question in mind, we seek to expand Wikipedia's coverage of:

  • Historical and contemporary Jewish women
  • Jewish women's organizations
  • Women's roles in and contributions to the Jewish faith
  • Women's contributions to significant Jewish historical events
  • Topics, media, and other issues that are related to Jewish women

Limits:

  • Time period: There is no time period limit to this project. Everything from Biblical times to today falls within the scope of this project.
  • Identity: Any person or institution that identifies as Jewish is welcome. This includes individuals who identify as Jewish culturally but not theologically and converts.
  • Sexuality/gender identity: Queer women are in the scope of this project as are Jewish transgender women. For further guidance, see WikiProject: LGBT Studies.
  • Race: Jews are found in all corners of the world, and belong to many different racial and ethnic groups. Jews of all races are within the scope of this project.

Events

Meetup page for Women in Jewish History Edit-a-thon at Center for Jewish History, May 4th, 2014.

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Individuals

    • Judy Abel
    • Rachel Adelman
    • Helen Goldmark Adler (scholar and wife of Felix_Adler_(professor))
    • Racie Adler
    • Arlene Agus
    • Nima_Alderblum
    • Mildred Elizabeth Levine Albert
    • Anna Marks Allen
    • Wendy Amsellem
    • Sadie Cecilia Annenberg (Major donor to the State_of_Israel and wife of Moe_Annenberg)
    • Anna Appel
    • Susan Aranoff
    • Adrien Arpel
    • Rachel Auerbach
    • Sophie Cahn Axman
    • Karen Bacon
    • Cora Baird (puppeteer and business partner/wife of Bil_Baird)
    • Golde Bamber
    • Evelyn Beck
    • Michelle Friedman Belfer
    • Bella Bellarina
    • Rav Rahel Berkovits, Orthodox woman rabbi and Halacha scholar, one of the founders of the first "partnership minyan"[1][2][3]
    • Dr. Adena Berkowitz
    • Libbie Suchoff Berkson
    • Beatrice Berler
    • Rochel Berman
    • Pearl Blazer
    • Blanche Bloch
    • Anita Block
    • Robin Bodner
    • Madeline Borg
    • Carrie Bornstein
    • Helen Blum
    • Susan Braun
    • Dina Brawer
    • Elsie Bregman
    • Shira Breuer
    • Jeanette Goodman Brill
    • Ruth Brin
    • Ruth Brod
    • Claire Brook
    • Emilie Bullowa
    • Dorothy Walter Bush
    • Shoshana Cardin
    • Corinne Chochem
    • Debra Nussbaum Cohen
    • Helen Louise Cohen
    • Rosalie Cohen
    • Felice Cohn
    • Ruth Colian
    • Alanna Cooper
    • Jo Copeland
    • Lucille Corcos
    • Ray Karchmer Daily
    • Annette Daum
    • Carrie Dreyfuss Davidson
    • Rita Charmatz Davidson
    • Katya Delakova
    • Florence Levin Denmark
    • Ruth Dresner
    • Florence Dolowitz
    • Stella Drabkin
    • Erika Duncan
    • Sophia Dubnow-Erlich
    • Deborah Ebin
    • Dora Edinger (Biographer of Bertha_Pappenheim)
    • Lily Edelman
    • Judith Eisenstein
    • Jacqueline Koch Ellenson
    • Shulamith Reich Elster
    • Katharine Engel
    • Judith Epstein
    • Spira Epstein (Hadassah)
    • Devorah Evron
    • Mary Jacqueline Fabian
    • Ruth Fagen
    • Minna Regina Falk
    • Ruth Lewis Farkas
    • Sara Rivka Feder-Keyfitz
    • Jessica Feingold
    • Mary Fels
    • Irene Fine
    • Jane Brass Fischel
    • Lisa Fishbayn
    • Ruth Fizdale
    • Magdalen Flexner
    • Lee Weiss Frank
    • Dr. Tamar Frankiel
    • Miriam Freud-Rosenthal
    • Jane Friedenwald
    • Maharat Ruth Balinsky Friedman
    • Rachel Friedman
    • Mamie Gamoran
    • Evelyn Garfiel
    • Elisabeth Rozetta Geleerd
    • Berta Gersetn
    • Doris Bauman Gold
    • Rose Goldstein
    • Dorothy Lerner Gordon
    • Jean Gordon (1903-1985)
    • Dr. Chaya Rosenfeld Gorsetman
    • Bessie Goldstein Gotsfeld
    • Emma Leon Gottheil
    • Richea Gratz
    • Selina Greenbaum
    • Sharon Weiss-Greenberg
    • Amelia Greenwald
    • Beverly Gribetz
    • Jennie Grossinger
    • Mary Belle Grossman
    • Sidonie Matzner Gruenberg
    • Rose Gruening
    • Irene Rothschild Guggenheim
    • Melinda Guttmann
    • Chaya Halberstam
    • Julia Horn Hamburger
    • Rebecca Harary
    • Lean Cohen Harby
    • Judy Heicklen
    • Chana Henkin
    • Sylvia Herscher
    • Sylvia Axelrod Herskowitz
    • Ruth Hirschberg
    • Gertrude Hirschler
    • Marilyn Hirsh
    • Sarah Hofstetter
    • Anna Weiner Hochfelder
    • Rebekah Gumpert Hyneman
    • Kathleen M. Hyman
    • Racheli Ibenboim
    • Blanche Frank Ittleson
    • Anna Jacobson (German professor)
    • Janie Jacobson
    • Jean Jaffe
    • Marie Grunfeld Jastrow
    • Tziporah Jochsberger
    • Lydia Joel
    • Helen Joseph (puppeteer)
    • Irma Jung
    • Dorothy Kahn
    • Betty Kaplan d.1966
    • Debra Kaplan
    • May Karff
    • Fay Karpf
    • Ilona Karmel
    • Monique Katz
    • Miriam Karpilove
    • Lyalya Kaufman
    • Rhoda Kaufman (See Georgia_Women_of_Achievement
    • Lillian Kavey
    • Rachel Keren
    • Lillian Ruth Kessler
    • Ruth Kisch-Arendt
    • Michelle Greenberg Kobrin
    • Madeline Kochen
    • Irene Koenigsberger
    • Rose Kohler
    • Marian Kohn
    • Esther Loeb Kohn
    • Shira Hecht-Koller
    • Frances Krasnow
    • Esther Krauss
    • Doris Kreindler
    • Anna Moscowitz Kross
    • Sarah Kussy
    • Tillie LeBlang
    • Lotta Levensohn
    • Jacqueline Levine
    • Elma Ehrlich Levinger
    • Dr. Rabbanit Rachel Levmore
    • Adele Rosenwald Levy
    • Belle Rosenfeld Levy
    • Dorothea Litzinger
    • Hannah Ruth London
    • Rebecca Touro Lopez
    • Fannie Eller Lorber
    • Minnie Low
    • Esther Lowenthal
    • Adeline Cohnfeldt Lust
    • Gerda Luft
    • Kay Macpherson
    • Malasha Mali
    • Dr. Bat Sheva Marcus
    • Jessie Marmorston
    • Ellen Lehman McCluskey
    • Martha Mednick
    • Drew McFarlane
    • Eugenia Goodkind Meyer
    • Gertrude Geraldine Michelson
    • Abigail Minis
    • Lillian Nassau
    • Rachel Natelson
    • Dina Najman
    • Carol Kaufman Newman
    • Estelle Newman
    • Anita Norich
    • Rosanna Dyer Osterman see History_of_the_Jews_in_Galveston,_Texas and History_of_the_Jews_in_Texas
    • Vera Paktor
    • Eleanor Pam
    • Mollie Parnis
    • Helen Harris Perlman
    • Alice Petluck
    • Zinaida Poliakova (1863–1953), eldest daughter of Lazar Polyakov[4]
    • Virginia Morris Pollak
    • Josephine Wertheim Pomerance
    • Nechama Price
    • Lydia Rapoport
    • Ada Rapoport-Albert
    • Elizabeth Brandeis Rausenbush
    • Colette Roberts
    • Sophia Moses Robison
    • Esther Rome co-author of Our_Bodies,_Ourselves
    • Gladys Rosen
    • Norma Rosen
    • Esti Rosenberg
    • Doris Rosenthal
    • Betty Ross (Journalist)
    • Recha Rothschild
    • Rivke Rubin
    • Ruth Rubin
    • Esther Ruskay
    • Muriel Rykeyser
    • Eva Salber
    • Margarete Sallis-Freudenthal
    • Beth Samuels
    • Bertha Schaefer
    • Rewekka (Regina) "Wecki" Schein
    • Pamela Brett Scheininger
    • Therese Schiff
    • Lisa Schlaff
    • Miriam Finn Scott
    • Sylvia Bernstein Seaman
    • Yente Serdatzky
    • Julie Seltzer
    • Grace Seixas Nathan
    • Chava Shervington
    • Mindel Sheps
    • Ema Sheyver (often rendered: Emma Schaver)
    • Wilma Shore
    • Rose Shoshana
    • Fradel Shtok
    • Lillie Shultz
    • Esther Shumiatcher-Hirschbein
    • Ilana Fodiman Silverman
    • Carrie Obendorfer Simon
    • Emily Solis-Cohen
    • Judith Solis-Cohen
    • Barbara Miller Solomon
    • Maida Solomon partner and wife of Harry_C._Solomon
    • Estelle Joan Sommers designer at Capezio
    • Bertha Kaplan Spector
    • Johanna Spector
    • Flora Spiegelberg
    • Devora Steinmetz
    • Edith Mendel Stern
    • Elizabeth Stern (Writer)
    • Zelda Stern
    • Fradel Stock
    • Hannah Mayer Stone
    • Dorothy Straus
    • Lillian Laser Strauss
    • Manya Gordon Strunksy
    • Sylvia Blagman Syms
    • Helen Tanzer
    • Abigail Lindenbaum Tambor
    • Malka Tussman
    • Sophie Udin
    • Marie Pichel Warner
    • Gladys Weinberg
    • Susan Weiss
    • Mildred Wertheimer
    • Thyra Winslow
    • Louise Waterman Wise
    • Martha Wolfenstein
    • Helen Rosen Woodard
    • Rose Worts
    • Marjorie Wyler
    • Devorah Zlochower

Institutions

Topics:

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Biography Boxes

The Manual of Style says: "Whether to include an infobox ... is determined through discussion and consensus among the editors at each individual article." While sports and politician bios can benefit from infoboxes, most articles in liberal arts fields, as here, do not. See arbitration report: "Infoboxes may be particularly unsuited to liberal arts fields when they repeat information already available in the lead section of the article, are misleading or oversimplify the topic for the reader". I disagree with including an infobox in this article because: (1) The box would emphasize unimportant factoids stripped of context and lacking nuance, in competition with the WP:LEAD section, which emphasizes and contextualizes the most important facts. (2) Since the most important points in the article are already discussed in the Lead, or adequately discussed in the body of the article, the box would be redundant. (3) It would take up valuable space at the top of the article and hamper the layout and impact of the Lead. (4) Frequent errors creep into infoboxes, as updates are made to the articles but not reflected in the redundant info in the box, and they tend to draw vandalism, fancruft and repeated arguments among editors about what to include. (5) The infobox template creates a block of code at the top of the edit screen that discourages new editors from editing the article. (6) It would discourage readers from reading the text of the article. (7) IBs distract editors from focusing on the content of the article. Instead of improving the article, they spend time working on this repetitive feature and its coding and formatting. See also WP:DISINFOBOX.

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Translate
  • Translate:
    • Vicki_Baum
    • Therese Benedeck
    • Käte Frankenthal
    • Henriette Fürth
    • Melitta Gerhard
    • Auguste Hauschner
    • Hanna Hellmann
    • Hedwig Hintze (Guggenheimer)
    • Gertrud Kantorowicz
    • Lenny_Kuhr from Dutch Wikipedia
    • Johanna Loewenherz
    • Margarete Susman

Members

To join, simply add your name to the list using # {{user|Your name here}}. Please list your name in alphabetical order. No need to be Jewish or a woman to join!

  1. Bibliosaurusrex (talk · contribs)
  2. Bruriyah (talk · contribs)
  3. Caroleo68 (talk · contribs)
  4. DaringDonna (talk · contribs)
  5. DavidBibliophile (talk · contribs)
  6. fifthcoastbobcat (talk · contribs)
  7. Fouetté rond de jambe en tournant (talk · contribs)
  8. Gobonobo (talk · contribs)
  9. Invisiboy42293 (talk · contribs)
  10. K.Grey (talk · contribs)
  11. kschlot1 (talk · contribs)
  12. Ploni (talk · contribs)
  13. Lange.lea (talk · contribs)
  14. Lilithfangirl (talk · contribs)
  15. lizzie656 (talk · contribs)
  16. OR drohowa (talk · contribs)
  17. RachelCMiller (talk · contribs)
  18. RachelWex (talk · contribs)
  19. rh236 (talk · contribs)
  20. RockyMtChai (talk · contribs)
  21. Tamar Marvin (talk · contribs)
  22. Tsistunagiska (talk · contribs)
  23. Willthacheerleader18 (talk · contribs)
  24. GayFrogPlushie (talk · contribs)
  25. He0903420 (talk · contribs)
  26. DaringDonna (talk · contribs)
  27. Trillfendi (talk · contribs)

Project statistics

Pages relevant to this wikiproject can be assessed using a standard scale, described in detail on the Wikipedia:WikiProject_Jewish_Women/Assessment page.

Related WikiProjects

Templates

To add a page to this project, place this text: {{WikiProject Jewish Women|class=|importance=}} on the article's talk page. This template will appear:

WikiProject iconJewish Women NA‑class
WikiProject iconThis article is within the scope of WikiProject Jewish Women, a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Jewish Women on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.
NAThis article has been rated as NA-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale.

Resources

  • Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia
  • YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe
  • Jewish Commons
  • Hebrew Wikipedia
  • Yiddish Wikipedia
  • German Wikipedia
  • Russian Wikipedia
  • Polish Wikipedia

Categories

The following Categories are potentially of interest to this project, although not all of their articles may be within the project's scope.

To display all subcategories click on the "►":
Jewish women(5 C, 42 P)
To display all subcategories click on the "►":
Jewish history(24 C, 20 P)
To display all subcategories click on the "►":
Jewish feminists(6 C, 338 P)
To display all subcategories click on the "►":
Women in history(22 C, 14 P)
To display all subcategories click on the "►":
Women by occupation(125 C, 10 P)



Useful tools:

  • The Educational assignment tag can be used to mark an article as being/having been part of an assignment by placing the following at the top of the article's talk page:

    {{EducationalAssignment}}

    Be sure to click "save page" afterwards. There are further options for the template such as adding the date the assignment will end or a link to your project's write-up at Wikipedia:School and university projects, if you have one. There's more information at Template:EducationalAssignment.

  • The Article wizard helps you through the process of submitting a new article to Wikipedia. There are 6 sections to step through, then you'll be taken to the editing page. As each section is completed, the next becomes available.

See also:



  1. ^ biographical note on JWA
  2. ^ Swartz, K. L. (2013). Innovation within tradition: halachic egalitarianism and the role of independent minyanim (Doctoral dissertation, Smith College).
  3. ^ Berkovits, R. (2013). Torat Hayyim: The Status of Women in the Thought of Eliezer Berkovits. Shofar, 31(4), 4-15.
  4. ^ Zinaida Poliakova book
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