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Title:Trailblazing Jewish Women Exhibit
Date:3/18/2023 (Saturday)
Address:114 Whitney Ave, New Haven, CT
Location:New Haven, CT
Hours:Saturday, March 18, 2023 at 12:00 PM 5:00 PM EDT
Cost/Cover:See Details
Contact Info:See Details
Details:During Womens History Month, NHM will host a traveling exhibit from the Jewish Historical Society of Greater Hartford featuring trailblazing CT Jewish women who overcame obstacles of gender, social class, and religious identity to carve their own paths. Trailblazer: Connecticut Jewish Women Making History will be on view March 1-31, 2023, during regular museum hours.

The exhibit consists of large panels telling the stories of 12 groundbreaking women who persevered despite untold challenges. From women's rights activists to artists, journalists, and health and education reformers, they all overcame barriers to make changes that still impact lives today: Rebecca Affachiner; Anni Albers; Beatrice Fox Auerbach; Rabbi Jody Cohen; Annie Fisher; Miriam Karpilove; Ellen Ash Peters; Matilda Rabinowitz; Esther Rome; Betty Ross; Sophie Tucker and Florence Wald.

At various times the womens ideas were considered outlandish, controversial, even radical, but their grit and determination made them pioneers in their fields. Three of the women will be of particular interest to New Haveners: Albers, Peters, and Wald.

As an artist who worked for decades in New Haven and Orange, CT, Albers continuously pushed the boundaries of material, technique, and form, combining the techniques of craft and the language of modernism. She pushed back on the idea of weaving as women's work to transform it into an art form.

Peters was the first female faculty member at Yale Law School and the first female justice of the State Supreme Court. She wrote the 4 -3 decision in the landmark Sheff v. O'Neill case requiring the state to provide Connecticut school children with a racially integrated and substantially equal education.

Wald is considered the mother of the American hospice movement. After working as a nurse and teaching at Rutgers University, she became an associate professor at Yale University and the first Jewish dean of nursing. She established Hospice Inc., the country's first hospice care fa
Event is:One Day Only
Audience:All Welcome
Category:Show
Submitted by:contributed
 
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