Naomi Gale

Naomi Gale is a senior lecturer at Ashkelon Academic College (an adjunct of Bar-Ilan University), where she teaches courses in sociology and anthropology. She received her B.A. from Tel Aviv University and her Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Sydney, Australia. Her academic interests include immigration of Jewish communities, with special emphasis on women’s position in traditional societies and their transition to modern societies. Her interests in Gender Study led her to study law and she received her LL.B. from The Inter-Disciplinary Center Herzliya, Israel. She is the author of The Sephardim of Sydney: Coping with Political Processes and Social Pressures (2005) and Violence Against Women: Normal or Deviant Behavior? (2003).

Articles by this author

Kurdish Women

Jews lived in Kurdistan for 2,800 years, until a mass migration to Israel in the 1950s. This Jewish community’s ancient roots and relative seclusion in the Kurdistan region fostered unique religious, cultural, and linguistic characteristics. Despite assimilation and the loss of traditional practices, the community remained tight-knit.

Iraqi Jewish Women

Jews lived in Iraq for thousands of years. Life for Iraqi Jewish women was determined by tradition, custom, and religious law, with a patriarchal system that emphasized child-rearing and household duties. These traditions shifted with the secularizing British Mandate in Iraq, and again with the assimilation the Iraqi Jewish community experienced upon immigration to Israel.

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How to cite this page

Jewish Women's Archive. "Naomi Gale." (Viewed on November 1, 2024) <http://qa.jwa.org/encyclopedia/author/gale-naomi>.