CHANGE WITHIN TRADITION AMONG JEWISH WOMEN IN LIBYA (cl)University of Washington Press, 1992 - 221 pages |
Table des matières
21 | |
Family Life | 45 |
Work | 84 |
Educational Opportunities | 108 |
Participation in Public Life | 154 |
Conclusion | 204 |
209 | |
213 | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
AAIU activities AIU girls school AIU school Arab Arab Land Arbib Arie became behavior Benghazi boys bride British changes cultural customs Cyrenaica dowry economic education in Libya emissaries Encyclopaedia Judaica especially European female education Furthermore Gharyan groom growing number Ha-Cohen ha-Tiqyah he-Halutz Hebrew language Hebrew school Higgid Mordecai Ibid immigration indigenous influence involved Israel Italian Italian period Italian schools Jerusalem Jewish community Jewish education Jewish female Jewish girls Jewish soldiers Jews of Libya kidnapping leadership Libyan Jewish women Libyan Jews Maccabi mainly male marriage married Mislata Muslim Nashim number of Jewish Ottoman Empire Palestine Paris participated political population pupils rabbi regarded religious result rural school in Tripoli sexes Slousch social status Sukkot synagogue teachers teaching tion traditional trans-Saharan trade Tripolitan Jewish twentieth century urban vocational training wedding wizo woman women in Libya Yahadut Luv Yefren Yehudah society Youth Department youth movement Zawiya Zionist Zliten Zuarez
Fréquemment cités
Page 211 - The Country of the Moors. A Journey from Tripoli in Barbary to the Holy City of Kairwan. By EDWARD RAE.
Page 21 - There are few direct statements on the status of Jewish women in Libya during the late nineteenth century, and the existing reports were composed mostly by indigenous men or by Europeans.
Références à ce livre
A Social History Of Women And Gender In The Modern Middle East Margaret Lee Meriwether Aucun aperçu disponible - 1999 |