Though she rejected religion after becoming a radical feminist, she said, she studied Yiddish, Torah and Talmud while writing “Beyond the Pale” often wrote on Jewish themes and frequently included Jewish characters in her work. She was drawn to the area because of its Jewish lesbian activist community, she told J. Dykewomon spent part of her childhood in Puerto Rico, studied fine art at Reed College in Portland, Oregon, and settled in Oakland, California, in the early 1980s. “If I had to do it all over again, I might have chosen Dykestein or Dykeberg,” she said at the time.ĭykewomon was raised in a fiercely Zionist household her father fought in Israel’s War of Independence, and her mother worked with a Zionist smuggling ring. She adopted Dykewoman, then Dykewomon, to demonstrate her allegiance to the lesbian community - but later regretted not using her name to assert her Jewish identity, too. The Jewish News of Northern California, in 1997. She wanted to distance herself from the Nachman line of rabbis from whom she descended, she told J. “May her memory be a blessing.”īorn Elana Nachman in New York City in 1949, Dykewomon changed her name after the publication of her first novel, “Riverfinger Women,” in 1974. “We mourn the loss of Elana Dykewomon, a queer activist, author, and teacher with a fiercely dedicated readership,” the Jewish Women’s Archive said in a tweet, in one of many tributes to come after Dykewomon’s death.
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