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05 March 2025

Women’s Leadership

There is a high demand for combat roles among women in the November-December 2023 draft (photo credit: IDF SPOKESPERSON'S UNIT)

 Is this the Israeli version of the Kurdish Women in Combat Leadership??

Women’s leadership: Key to addressing Israel’s crises- opinion

It’s time women have the authority to shape policies that prevent the next crisis before it’s too late....


too late for what?


The past year has been one of the most challenging in Israel’s history, particularly for women and especially for female students. An entire generation of women has been forced to navigate an impossible reality.


Women’s leadership

Students have shouldered the responsibility for their families while their partners were repeatedly called up for reserve duty; young women have struggled to make ends meet while juggling studies and an unforgiving economic climate; and mothers of students have been left without support, with the higher education system failing to make the necessary adjustments.


Women have played every conceivable role in this war, even if public discourse has rarely reflected it. They have fought on the front lines, led relief efforts, supported families, continued their studies, and maintained their jobs under impossible conditions – and yet their contributions have been largely unrecognized.


Over 60,000 women have served on reserve duty, including thousands of combat soldiers who played an active role on the battlefield. Thousands of mothers left their children behind to fulfill their military obligations, managing their households from afar.


Others bore the entire burden alone – raising children under fire while maintaining their careers and financial stability. While male reservists received widespread acknowledgment and support, women who served in the same roles remained invisible – as is reflected in both the recognition and assistance they received.


If there is one pattern that has repeated itself throughout this crisis, it is Israel’s reliance on emergency management.


There is no long-term planning and no infrastructure in place to prevent systemic failure – only last-minute, makeshift solutions that allow the system to “survive” until the next inevitable collapse. And so we must ask: Why do we keep making the same mistakes? Why do we insist on repeating a failed approach?


The answer is simple: For years, Israel’s political and administrative systems have been dominated by the same outdated mindsets: short-sighted, reactive, and tactical rather than strategic. 


Women have been shut out of decision-making circles, and that is precisely why the country continues to repeat its failures.


The conversation about women’s leadership cannot be reduced to representation alone. The question is not whether there will be more women around the government’s decision-making table, but whether Israel will embrace a different leadership approach – one that goes beyond reactive crisis management and instead builds the structural foundations to prevent future crises altogether.


We already know that women in leadership handle crises differently because they tend to lead with a systemic perspective and long-term vision. 


Women consider the full spectrum of consequences that their decisions may have, rather than focusing solely on immediate reactions. They listen, plan, carefully weigh their next steps, and act with a broad understanding of the realities on the ground. This isn’t just theory.


It is backed by research and data. From countries led by women during the COVID-19 pandemic to the responsible economic management of women in key financial roles, time and again, female leadership has been proven to create stability, prevent collapse, and foster long-term planning.


This is precisely what Israel is missing in 2024: leadership that doesn’t merely put out fires but prevents them from igniting in the first place.


This applies across all sectors, from economic crises to the healthcare system. Women are the ones carrying the weight of these crises on their shoulders, yet they lack the power to change how they are managed. While women take charge in wartime – whether in combat, on the home front, or in the workforce – they have remained sidelined when it comes to shaping national policy. Will women be given a seat at the table just to create a more “diverse” picture, or will they be granted the mandate to lead and drive real change?


In this war, women have stood on the front lines in every sense, on the battlefield, in the workforce, in their homes, and in academia. They have led, sustained the economy, and raised children under fire. Women do not need symbolic “representation.” They need real power.


Every male soldier is brought into this world from a mother, from a woman. 

Without this birthrate there are insufficient male soldiers. 

And you know what that means, especially as recruitment for 

religious men and women increases, it means 

LESS RELIGIOUS MEN AND WOMEN. Is this their target?


The state must recognize that reserve duty is not just assigned to soldiers – it mobilizes entire families. It’s time women have the authority to shape policies that prevent the next crisis, before it’s too late.



Source:  https://www.jpost.com/opinion/article-844699

The writer, SIVAN KOREN, is chair of the National Union of Israeli Students.

_______________________

A well crafted psychic' article to lure women’s minds to serve on the battlefield! 

But which battlefield?


The Torah (our blueprint to life) mandates the role of the female, chava, 

Hashem created on the sixth day with Adam, to procreate and fill the Earth. 

And at Sinai it was mandated that we Israelites/Yehudim to be follow 

the strict laws of Halacha. Men go out into the world and women tend 

to the home and child rearing. This is the balance envisioned by G-d 

to enable the world to run smoothly. 


The ‘State’ does not replace G-d chv”s!



2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I heard that women combat reservists do not deserve the same kudos as male combat reservists because they cannot make the same contributions due to their limited role (they're not really allowed to engage in combat) and due to their lesser physical capability.
Also, what's called "combat" for girls means they clear out the dead and wounded, and paramedic stuff. And much more.
Despite this, the girls and women feel it's a type of mesirus nefesh. They're innocent and utterly sincere. But they're also very misguided and doing a lot of harm, despite their noble intentions.
Gedolei Yisrael for decades have been saying giyus banos is a terrible thing, and yahareg v'al ya'avor, and this is absolute daas Torah.
A Bas Yisrael Partner

Anonymous said...

NOW THEY ALSO CAN BE IN WHEELCHAIRS AND REHABILITION WITH THEIR HUSBANDS

Rabbi Yaakov Moshe Charlap on the Land of Eretz Yisrael

OUR LAND OF GAZA TO BECOME A CELEBRITY VENUE FOR ALL PEOPLES. WHAT A SHANDA. THIS IS NOT TO BE DONE TO OUR HOLY LAND.   READ ON.... There we...