Alice Shalvi


Alice Hildegard Shalvi is an Israeli professor and educator. She plays a leading role in progressive Jewish education for girls and for advancing the status of women.

Biography

She was born in Essen, Germany, to an Orthodox Jewish family. Her parents, Benzion and Perl Margulies, were religious Zionists. Alice was the youngest of two children. The family had a wholesale linen and housewares business.
In 1933, soon after Hitler's rise to power in Germany, the family home was searched, prompting their move to London in May 1934. In London, Shalvi's father and brother imported watches and jewellery. When the Blitz began, they moved to Aylesbury, 50 kilometers north of London, and lived in a small house in Waddesdon, which was part of the estate of James Rothschild.
The family built a factory there for ammunition calibration devices that established them financially. In 1944, Shalvi studied English literature at Cambridge University. In 1946, she was sent to the 22nd Zionist Congress in Basel as a representative of British Jewish students.
In 1949, after completing a degree in social work at the London School of Economics, Shalvi immigrated to Israel, settling in Jerusalem. She became a faculty member in the English department of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and earned her PhD there in 1962.
In May 1950 she met Moshe Shelkowitz, a new immigrant from New York, whom she married in October of that year. They had six children: Joel, Micha, Ditza, Hephzibah, Benzion and Pnina.
Moshe Shalvi died on 6 July 2013.

Academic and public career

Shalvi headed the English literature departments at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. She was the founder of Pelech, an experimental school for religious girls that unconventionally taught Talmud, and of the Ohalim movement of neighbourhood associations ; she was also founding director of the Israel Women's Network. In the latter position, she was one of the most prominent feminist advocates in Israel, developing a program that covers most forms of discrimination and disadvantage faced by women in Israeli society. An important aim of her work was gaining acceptance of Israeli women's contributions in all sections and at all levels of the armed forces, since army service plays a significant role in Israeli economic, political, and social life. In the 1990s she founded the International Coalition for Agunah Rights. She also served as rector of the Schechter Institute for four years. In 2018 she published a memoir entitled Never A Native.

Awards and recognition