ROMSO Cyprus Knowledge Base

"The Wind and Weiss"

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Sadma Weiss (born the Bible, August 7, 1966) is a scholar, professor, and lecturer at the Talmud in Bell, poet and populist. A weekly columnist is published in the press on this week’s portion and hastelia in the ynet-Hid generation.

biography
Born and raised in Jerusalem. She studied in the Aleppo, served in national service as a commune in Bnei Akiva.

The first title studied the Talmud and the thought of Israel at the Hebrew University, the degree of Jewish science completed in the Midrash for Jewish Studies of the traditional movement in Jerusalem. The doctoral work was written at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem on the subject of food and transportation in the literature of the Sages, under the guidance of Prof. Comfort Hirschman.

He was a teacher in high school in Jerusalem. initiated and established a teaching class on an increased Jewish trend in the traditional high school. She was the director of the House of the Midrash of Shmuel – a center from the World Association for Advanced Jewry. She founded and conducted the “renewation – initiatives in Jewish education and culture.”

Over the years, she has held various roles as a lecturer at the Hebrew University, in the House of Voices, in Vibro Unon College, at the Schetter Institute, in the Beit Shmuel House and in the secular session.

Her activities and her view

Professor Weiss’s two-week columns deal with a variety of topical issues, such as feminism in this week’s view and in the context of contemporary events, Judaism from a critical point of view and a renewed scrutiny. In one of her parents, Weiss stated that she was “joyed to belong to Reform Jewry.”

Weiss combines the monitoring of public elected functions in Israel, and does not hesitate to criticize them or social phenomena. For example, her writing deals with criticism of the Haredi leadership on the one hand, and the tendency of Israeli society to push the Haredi public to the margins, on the other.

Around the killing of Id al-Kahq, Weiss shared that she had a choice with special needs, and had accompanied the Al-Haq family since the incident. A close connection between her and Ida’s mother.

Activity in Sexual Injury
Around the suspected rape affair in Cyprus, Weiss wrote several columns on the subject, and even organized a group of Israelis and Israelis to support the British arena that the conference was raped. In an interview with her return, Weiss explained that "the concern for a young woman from Britain who became a cruel and long moment for our sister was at the top of the worrying ladder."

In February 2020, Weiss shared an interview with a national emergency that, as a child, was sexually abused and exposed by her father. The title of the interview: "My father stole me from myself," she said, "Even today, in the Age of Hell, there is no protection. The discovery of cities is really not taboo, the taboo is to talk about the discovery of cities.” About two years earlier, in April 2018, this testimony was shared in the program "Between the Suns" in the submission of a doll.

Personal life

Weiss lives in Jerusalem with her son and daughter.

library
Watch: Songs (Tel Aviv: The United kibbutz: Joshua Rabinowitz Foundation for Arts, 2004)
Proclamation in my soul: calls of commitment to the Talmud (Tel Aviv: The Last News, 2006)
My lips will open: songs (Tel Aviv: the unified kibbutz: the Joshua Rabinowitz Foundation for Arts, the 2008 paragraph)
Eat to know: the cultural role of the feasts in the literature of the Sages (Tel Aviv: the library of the Temple of Life: the unified kibbutz, 2010).
Mothers in therapy: A psychological-digit journey with the protagonists of the Talmud (Tel Aviv: Recent News: Hamada, 2012), in collaboration with Avner Hahnhen.
I will sin and return: Songs (United kibbutz: the Joshua Rabinowitz Foundation for the Arts, 2013).
A woman is not God: songs ( Bnei Brak: Workbook: the united kibbutz, 2020).
The last Jew of Cyprus: a novel (Falel Publishing, 2023).

See also
Hey, they've been Leon College.

External links

The two-week columns of Zama Weiss, on the site