Leading the charge of women into Israeli high tech

 
 
 
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Historically, Haredi men have entered the Israeli workforce in relatively low numbers, and women - particularly religious women—have lagged in their participation in high-tech professions.

 
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Where the start-up nation starts up 

 
 
 
 
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What do Haredi women in Israel do? This one works in cyber security.

Tikvah Katz works for Intel, as part of a team making sure that Intel’s computer chips are not hackable. Quite important, given that these chips are in nearly every PC in the world.

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Career options for religious women can be tiny. Natalie, for instance, is in nanotechnology. 

Natalie Fardian-Melamed’s nanotechnology research could mean that in the future, “your computers will be made out of DNA.” How exactly would that be possible? 

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The Breaking New Ground Appeal: help us double the opportunity

Tal Campus has grown by leaps and bounds. Today, there are a total of 1860 women with 440 faculty members.

 
 
 
 
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