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'''Isabella Segal''' (born c.1956) is an accountant.
[[File:Isabella Segal.jpeg|thumb|Isabella Segal]]'''Isabella Segal''' (born c.1956) is an accountant.


:"From early childhood, I have struggled with issues surrounding my gender identity. I grew up in North West London in a lovely, warm secular Jewish family with my late Dad, my Mum (Ruth) and my younger sister. However, as a child I would pray every night that when I woke up the next morning I would be a girl."<ref name=jc>http://www.thejc.com/blogs/isabella-segal/my-jewish-transgender-journey Isabella Segal, "My Jewish Transgender Journey", ''Jewish Chronicle'', 24 December 2015.</ref>
:"From early childhood, I have struggled with issues surrounding my gender identity. I grew up in North West London in a lovely, warm secular Jewish family with my late Dad, my Mum (Ruth) and my younger sister. However, as a child I would pray every night that when I woke up the next morning I would be a girl."<ref name=jc>http://www.thejc.com/blogs/isabella-segal/my-jewish-transgender-journey Isabella Segal, "My Jewish Transgender Journey", ''Jewish Chronicle'', 24 December 2015.</ref>

Revision as of 12:44, 5 July 2016

Isabella Segal

Isabella Segal (born c.1956) is an accountant.

"From early childhood, I have struggled with issues surrounding my gender identity. I grew up in North West London in a lovely, warm secular Jewish family with my late Dad, my Mum (Ruth) and my younger sister. However, as a child I would pray every night that when I woke up the next morning I would be a girl."[1]

She was ranked number 47 in the Rainbow List 2014. The citation said:

"Segal, a partner at Nyman Libson Paul, was one of only two trans executives to appear in the Financial Times top 100 list of LGBT executives. She began living full-time as a woman in May last year and says that most of her colleagues and clients have been “hugely supportive”.[2]

She had gender reassignment surgery in 2015.[1]

References

<references>