Gabriela Shalev | Jewish Women's Archive (original) (raw)
Gabriela Shalev, one of the outstanding Israeli academicians in the field of law, has instructed innumerable students in the intricacies of contract law, on which she has published and lectured in the light of her own analyses and theories.
Shalev’s father, Bernard Manheim, who was born in 1913, immigrated to Palestine from Germany in 1933. In 1938 he married Bella Peterseil, who was born in Poland in 1912 and whose parents moved to Germany when she was one year old. They perished in the Holocaust. Bernhard and Bella lived in Tel Aviv, where he worked in food while Bella cared for their home and their two daughters, Gabriela (b. 1941) and Nurit (b. 1945).
When she was twelve years old Gabriela first met Shaul Shalev (b. 1940), whom she again encountered when she began studying at the Tel Aviv Municipal High School A. They married in October 1964 and were thenceforth inseparable until his heroic death in the The Day of Atonement, which falls on the 10th day of the Hebrew month of Tishrei and is devoted to prayer and fasting.Yom Kippur war of 1973. Gabriela herself had joined the Israel Defense Forces in August 1959, serving as a patrol leader, a platoon commander, and finally as the first commander of a company of conscripts of the kind that had previously not been drafted either because they knew no Hebrew or because of their generally low level of education.
In 1966 Gabriela Shalev completed her studies for an LL.B. degree at the Law School of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem summa cum laude, after clerking for two years, first with Supreme Court Justice Joel Sussman and then, for six months, in the legal department of the Jewish Agency for Israel. She continued her studies in Jerusalem and in 1966 also gave birth to a daughter, Narkiss. In 1969 she completed her LL.M. degree, again summa cum laude, and continued to doctoral studies on the subject of exemption clauses in contracts, under Professor G. Tedeschi. Her thesis was completed in 1973, summa cum laude. In 1970 she gave birth to a son, Eran.
All this while, Shaul Shalev, who was both a soldier and a scholar, was serving as an officer in the tank corps of the IDF. When the Yom Kippur War erupted in October 1973 he was in Sinai with the brigade under his command. Having single-handedly rescued a group of thirty-five Israeli soldiers who had been encircled by enemy forces, he volunteered to lead the attempt to recapture an Israeli position. Hit by a shell, he died instantly on October 9, the third day of the war.
At this difficult time in her life, Gabriela Shalev thought of switching from law to medicine, because she wanted to engage in a constructive, healing profession. But since, as the mother of two young children, this proved impractical, she instead went to Harvard Law School for two years of post-doctoral research (1975–1976). Since 1986 she has lived with her partner Uzzi Levy (b. 1938). In 1986 she was promoted to the rank of full professor in the Law School of the Hebrew University.