Hadassah Women - traduzione in
Diclib.com
Dizionario in linea

Hadassah Women - traduzione in

ABOUT 80 JEWS ON A CIVILIAN CONVOY TO MOUNT SCOPUS ENCLAVE, INCLUDING MEDICAL PERSONNEL, SLAUGHTERED BY MUSLIM ARABS LIVING IN SHEIKH JARRAH IN JERUSALEM AGAINST THE INDIFFERENCE OF THE BRITISH FORCES DURING THE INTER-COMMUNAL STAGE OF THE 1948 WAR
Hadassah medical convoy incident; Hadassah Hospital Convoy Massacre; Hadassah Massacre; Hadassah convoy massacre
  • An ambulance preparing to join the convoy to Mount Scopus. April 13, 1948
  • Haim Yassky Street, named for doctor killed in the convoy to Har HaTzofim
  • Ha Ayin-Het Street, named for the slain 78 of the convoy to Har HaTzofim
  • Hadassah convoy memorial at Hadassah University Hospital, Mount Scopus
  • Hadassah convoy story at Hadassah University Hospital, Mount Scopus

woman rabbi         
  • Description of Bella Cohen (Bayla Falk) as a Torah scholar (''The American Israelite'', 19 April 1867)
  • Depiction of Huldah the prophetess
  • Rabbi Dina Brawer
  • In 1972, the first denominational ordination took place at Hebrew Union College (Ohio)
  • In the early 1900s, [[Henrietta Szold]] was admitted into a rabbinical school on condition she would not receive ordination
  • Mural depicting Deborah serving as judge
  • Nishmat - Women's Midrasha in Jerusalem
  • [[Sally Priesand]] becomes the first formally ordained woman rabbi in Reform Judaism in 1972
JEWISH WOMAN WHO HAS STUDIED JEWISH LAW AND RECEIVED RABBINICAL ORDINATION OR FULFILLS OTHER JEWISH RELIGIOUS ROLES
Female rabbis; Women Torah scholars; Woman Torah scholar; Women rabbis; Beit Midrash Har'el; Woman rabbi
donna rabbino
Hadassah Women      
le donne Hadassah
woman soldier         
  • US Army officer completes barbed wire training in 2021
  • <nowiki>Second woman to win the Iron Cross, nurse Elfriede Wnuk</nowiki>
  • A Congolese female para-commando during jump training at capital Leopoldville in 1967
  • Two members of a US Marine Corps Female Engagement Team patrolling a town in Afghanistan during 2010
  • HMAS ''Waller'']] in 2013
  • U.S. Navy's women submariners meet [[President Obama]] and other dignitaries, 2012
  • Women's [[Camogie]] (sports) team of Irish military with their male commander, 2012.
  •  Then-Princess Elizabeth served in the British Army, during the 1940s.
  • An Indian Army female officer briefing Russian soldiers during a joint exercise in 2015.
  • Russian female cadets
  • National Cadet Corps]], India
  • Russian military's women contingent in their formal wear during a parade, 2013
  • Sailors in formation at the [[Center for Information Warfare Training]], [[Naval Air Station Pensacola Corry Station]], 2019
  • Russian poster from [[Russian Civil War]] years
WOMEN PARTICIPATING IN MILITARY ACTIVITIES
Timeline of women's participation in warfare; Female roles in the military; Female roles in the Military; Female role in the military; Women in the miltary; Contemporary Debate on Women's Roles in the Military; History of Women in the Military; Women Soldiers; Women in the army; Female soldiers; Female soldier; Woman soldier; History of women in the military; Military women; Women in militaries; Women in Military Service; Women on submarines; Sexual assault of women in the military; Women soldiers; Women in military service
soldatessa

Definizione

policewoman

Wikipedia

Hadassah medical convoy massacre

The Hadassah convoy massacre took place on April 13, 1948, when a convoy, escorted by Haganah militia, bringing medical and military supplies and personnel to Hadassah Hospital on Mount Scopus, Jerusalem, was ambushed by Arab forces. Seventy-eight Jewish doctors, nurses, students, patients, faculty members and Haganah fighters, and one British soldier were killed in the attack, including twenty three women. Dozens of unidentified bodies, burned beyond recognition, were buried in a mass grave in the Sanhedria Cemetery.

The Jewish Agency claimed that the massacre was a gross violation of international humanitarian law, and demanded action be taken against a breach of the Geneva Conventions. The Arabs claimed they had attacked a military formation, that all members of the convoy had engaged in combat, and that it had been impossible to distinguish combatants from civilians. An enquiry was conducted. Eventually an agreement was reached to separate military from humanitarian convoys.