

In Focus: Jewish Women in the Military
Navy: Cindy Gats (Desert Storm)

Cindy Gats |
Hailing from Queens in New York City, New York, Cindy Gats was a
student at Penn State University when she joined the ROTC. Upon
graduating from Penn State in 1986, Cindy was commissioned as a lieutenant
in the United States Marine Corps. Obtaining the rank of captain a few
years later, Cindy was stationed at the El Toro Marine Base in California
as a communications specialist and group leader of a paratroop squadron.
In addition to her regular duties, Cindy was given a position where she
assisted in managing and organizing religious services for the Marines.
An orthodox Jew, Cindy is devoted to the Jewish dietary laws of kashrut,
which "often presents a challenge when serving overseas." Cindy
also attends religious services on a daily basis laying t'fillin and
wearing a tallit over her captain's bars.
In the summer of 1990, Captain Gats was ordered overseas as part of Operation
Desert Shield to prepare for the upcoming war with Iraq. Although separated
from her paratroop squad, Cindy worked within 22 miles of the front lines of
battle when Operation Desert Storm broke out in 1991.
During her tour of duty in anti-Semitic Saudi Arabia, Cindy made a special
point of joining her fellow Jews in open celebrations of Shabbat and other
Jewish holidays.
How to Cite This Page
For a bibliography:
Jewish Women's Archive. "JWA - NavyCindy Gats." <http://jwa.org/discover/infocus/military/navy/gats.html>.
For a footnote:
Jewish Women's Archive, "JWA - NavyCindy Gats," <http://jwa.org/discover/infocus/military/navy/gats.html>.
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