Another female appointment in the rabbinical courts

by time news

Deborah Eiferman (Photo: Talia Taub)

Deborah Eiferman has been appointed Senior Vice President for Administration and Human Capital, thus the rabbinical courts have reached the target set by the Civil Service Commission, of 50% in the proportion of women in senior positions.

Eiferman, a mother of 6 who lives in Beit Shemesh, has served in the public service for more than twenty years. First in the Prime Minister’s Office, later in the Ministry of Religious Affairs’ accounts, and since 2011 she has been managing the Religious Buildings Division in the Ministry of Religious Affairs.

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She has a bachelor’s degree in public policy and a master’s degree in business administration. Deborah Eiferman: “After more than twenty years of extensive, professional and diverse work in the public sector in general and in the religious services in particular, I enter the management of the rabbinical courts willingly and with the desire to promote and leverage a variety of areas entrusted to the rabbinical courts.

The Civil Service Commissioner, Rabbi Daniel Hershkovitz, wished the employee success and said: “I welcome the appointment of Ms. Eiferman to the position of Deputy Director of Administration and Human Capital in the Rabbinical Courts. “Her appointment is an examination of the fulfillment of the Civil Service Commission’s policy in the field of adequate representation, which advocates a non-compromise on quality and professional excellence and the integration of all groups entitled to adequate representation by right and not by grace.”

The director of the rabbinical courts, Rabbi David Malka: “I have no doubt that Ms. Eiferman will express her professional abilities and proven experience in her new role, and will contribute in her personality for the benefit of the employees in the court system. We wish her success in fulfilling the important mission she has won.”

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