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.
Where the start-up nation starts up
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.
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?
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.