Hebrew University of Jerusalem: Difference between revisions
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*Theologian: [[Malachi Martin|Fr Malachi Martin]] |
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*Chemists: [[Renata Reisfeld]] |
*Chemists: [[Renata Reisfeld]] |
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*Business: [[Léo Apotheker]] (CEO of [[SAP AG]]) |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
Revision as of 19:26, 28 October 2009
האוניברסיטה העברית בירושלים | |
File:Hebrew University of Jerusalem Logo.svg | |
Type | Public |
---|---|
Established | 1918 |
President | Menachem Ben-Sasson |
Rector | Sarah Stroumsa (Oct. 2008) |
Vice-Presidents | Elhanan Hacohen (General Director), Hillel Bercovier (R&D), Carmi Gilon (International Relations) |
Academic staff | 1,200 |
Undergraduates | 12,000 |
Postgraduates | 10,000 |
Location | , |
Nickname | Hebrew U, HUJI |
Website | www.huji.ac.il |
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Template:Lang-he, ha'universita ha'ivrit birushalayim; Template:Lang-ar, Al-Jāmi`ah al-`Ibriyyah fil-Quds; abbreviated HUJI) is Israel's oldest university.
The First Board of Governors included Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud, Martin Buber, and Chaim Weizmann. It is home to the world's largest Jewish studies library. Scholars who have been faculty members include Gershom Scholem, Yeshayahu Leibowitz, Don Patinkin, Daniel Kahneman and Robert Aumann. Four of Israel's prime ministers are alumni of the Hebrew University. In the last seven years, six graduates of the University received the Nobel Prize. The Hebrew University is consistently ranked in Academic Ranking of World Universities as the top university in Israel and in the top 100 in the world.[1]
History
One of the visions of the Zionist movement was the establishment of a Hebrew university in the Land of Israel. Founding a university was proposed as far back as 1884 in the Kattowitz (Katowice) conference of the Hovevei Zion society. A major supporter of the idea was Albert Einstein, who bequeathed his papers and his literary estate to the university.
The cornerstone for the university was laid in 1918, and, seven years later, on April 1, 1925, the Hebrew University campus on Mount Scopus of Jerusalem was opened at a gala ceremony attended by the leaders of the Jewish world, distinguished scholars and public figures, and British dignitaries, including Lord Arthur James Balfour, Viscount Allenby and Sir Herbert Samuel. The university's first Chancellor was Judah Magnes.
By 1947, the University had become a large research and teaching institution. Plans for a medical school were approved in May 1949, and in November 1949, a faculty of law was inaugurated. In 1952, it was announced that the agricultural institute founded by the university in 1940 would become a full-fledged faculty of agriculture.[2]
During the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, the Arabs repeatedly attacked the university, located to the northeast of Jerusalem, and convoys moving between the Israeli-controlled section of Jerusalem and the university.
After the attack on the Hadassah medical convoy in 1948, the Mount Scopus campus was cut off from Jewish Jerusalem.[3] When the Jordanian government reneged on the 1949 Armistice Agreements and refused Israeli access to the Mount Scopus campus, the new University president, Prof. Benjamin Mazar, eventually was able to build a new and much larger campus at Givat Ram in western Jerusalem, which was completed in 1953. In the interim, classes were held in 40 different buildings around Jerusalem. [4] The Terra Sancta building in Rehavia, rented from the Franciscan Custodians of the Latin Holy Places, was also used for this purpose. [5] A few years later, together with the Hadassah Medical Organization, a medical science campus was built in the Jerusalem neighborhood of Ein Kerem in southwest Jerusalem.
By the beginning of 1967, the students numbered 12,500, spread among the two campuses in Jerusalem and the agricultural faculty in Rehovot.
After the reunification of Jerusalem in the Six-Day War of June 1967, the University was able to return to the Mount Scopus campus, which was rebuilt. In 1981 the construction work was completed, and the Mount Scopus campus again became the main campus of the university. The university was again touched by conflict on July 31, 2002, when a Palestinian construction worker (a resident of East Jerusalem) exploded a bomb in the university's crowded Frank Sinatra cafeteria during lunch time. Nine people — five Israeli citizens, three American citizens, and one citizen of both France and the United States — were killed by the explosion and many more injured. Hamas claimed responsibility for the attack. World leaders including Kofi Annan, President Bush, and the President of the European Union issued statements of condemnation.[6][7]
Libraries
The Jewish National and University Library is the central and largest library of the Hebrew University and one of the most impressive book and manuscript collections in the world. It is also the oldest section of the university. Founded in 1892 as a world center for the preservation of books relating to Jewish thought and culture, it assumed the additional functions of a general university library in 1920. Its collections of Hebraica and Judaica are the largest in the world. It houses all materials published in Israel, and attempts to acquire all materials published in the world related to the country. It possesses over 5 million books and thousands of items in special sections, many of which are unique. Among these are the Albert Einstein Archives, Hebrew manuscripts department, Eran Laor map collection, Edelstein science collection, Gershom Scholem collection, and a collection of Maimonides' manuscripts and early writings.
In his will, Albert Einstein left the Hebrew University his personal papers and the intellectual copyright to them, as well as the right to use his image. The Albert Einstein Archives contain some 55,000 items.[8]
In addition to the National Library, the Hebrew University operates subject-based libraries on its campuses, among them the Avraham Harman Science Library, Givat Ram; Mathematics and Computer Science Library, Givat Ram; Earth Sciences Library, Givat Ram; Bloomfield Library for the Humanities and Social Sciences, Mt. Scopus; Bernard G. Segal Law Library Center, Mt. Scopus; Library of Archaeology, Mt. Scopus; Moses Leavitt Library of Social Work, Mt. Scopus; Zalman Aranne Central Education Library, Mt. Scopus; Library of the Rothberg International School, Mt. Scopus; Muriel and Philip I. Berman National Medical Library, Ein Kerem; Central Library of Agricultural Science, Rehovot; and the Roberta and Stanley Bogen Library of The Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace, Mt. Scopus.
The Hebrew University libraries and their web catalogs can be accessed through the HUJI Library Authority portal.
Campuses
Hebrew University has four campuses, three in Jerusalem and one in Rehovot[9]. In 2003, it had a student population of 23,000.
Mount Scopus
Mount Scopus (Hebrew: Har HaTzofim הר הצופים), in the eastern part of Jerusalem, is home to the Faculty of Humanities, Faculty of Human Sciences, Faculty of Law, School of Business Administration, Rothberg International School, Frank Sinatra International Student Center, Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace, The Mandel Institute of Jewish Studies and the newly established School of Public Policy.
Givat Ram
The Givat Ram campus, named for Edmond Safra, contains the scientific departments, as well as the Jewish National Library.
Ein Kerem
The Ein Kerem campus is located in the same complex as the Hadassah Ein Kerem hospital. Although the primary focus of the campus is the medical and dental departments of the university, the molecular biology department also finds its home there.
Rehovot
The Faculty of Agriculture[10] and the School of Veterinary Medicine[11] are located in the city of Rehovot in the coastal plane. The Faculty of Agriculture was established in 1942 and the School of Veterinary Medicine opened in 1985. These are the only institutions of higher learning in Israel that offer both teaching and research programs in their respective fields.
Distinguished faculty
- Moshe Altbauer, Slavic studies
- Lydia Aran, scholar of Buddhism
- Robert Aumann, 2005 Nobel Prize laureate for Economics
- Yishai Bar, law
- Yehoshua Bar-Hillel, linguistics
- Yaacov Bar-Siman-Tov, international relations
- Aharon Barak, former President of the Israeli Supreme Court
- Yehuda Bauer, Holocaust history
- Jacob Bekenstein, physics
- Yehoshua Ben-Arieh, historical geography[12]
- Ernst David Bergmann, chairman of Israeli Atomic Energy Commission
- Martin Buber, religion
- Ilan Chet, agricultural biotechnology
- Marcel-Jacques Dubois, philosophy
- Shmuel Eisenstadt, sociology
- Menachem Elon, former Deputy President of the Israeli Supreme Court
- Adolf Abraham Halevi Fraenkel, mathematics
- Eliezer E. Goldschmidt, horticulture[13]
- Louis Guttman, social sciences and statistics
- Ephraim Halevy, Mossad chief
- Daniel Kahneman, 2002 Nobel Prize laureate for Economics
- Ruth Kark, geography of Eretz Israel
- Yaacov Katan, plant pathology[14]
- Aharon Katzir, chemistry
- David Kazhdan, mathematics
- Baruch Kimmerling, sociology
- Ruth Lapidoth, law
- Ruth Lawrence, mathematics
- Yeshayahu Leibowitz, biochemistry and Jewish philosophy
- Amihai Mazar, archaeology, Israel Prize Winner
- Benjamin Mazar. archaeologist, Israel Prize Winner, former University president and rector
- George Mosse, history
- Amnon Netzer, Jewish Studies and history
- Ehud Netzer, archaeology
- Mordechai Nisan, social science
- Dan Pagis
- Nurit Peled-Elhanan, education
- Joshua Prawer, history
- Michael O. Rabin, computer science and mathematics
- Giulio Racah, physics
- Gershom Scholem, Jewish mysticism
- Eliezer Schweid, Jewish philosophy
- Shaul Shaked, Middle Persian, with a focus on Zoroastrian literature[15]
- Saharon Shelah, mathematics
- Zeev Sternhell, political science
- Hayim Tadmor, Assyriology
- Jacob Talmon, history
- Amos Tversky, psychology
- Claude Vigée, French literature
- Avi Wigderson, computer science and mathematics
- Hanna Yablonka, Holocaust history
- S. Yizhar, author
Notable alumni
- Nobel Prize laureates: Daniel Kahneman (economics 2002), David Gross (physics 2004), Aaron Ciechanover and Avram Hershko (chemistry 2004), Robert Aumann (economics 2005), and Ada Yonath (chemistry 2009).
- Presidents of Israel: Ephraim Katzir, Yitzhak Navon, Moshe Katsav
- Prime Ministers of Israel: Ehud Barak, Ariel Sharon, Ehud Olmert
- Supreme Court Justices: Aharon Barak, Dorit Beinisch, Menachem Elon, Elyakim Rubinstein, Meir Shamgar, Yitzhak Zamir
- Members of the Knesset: Colette Avital, Yael Dayan, Taleb el-Sana,Dalia Itzik, Roman Bronfman,David Rotem, Ahmed Tibi
- Foreign service: Naomi Ben-Ami, Gabriela Shalev
- Sports and culture: Yochanan Vollach, Natalie Portman, Itzik Kornfein
- Archaeologists: Aren Maeir, Benjamin Mazar, Amihai Mazar, Eilat Mazar, Yigael Yadin
- Activists: Elie Yossef
- Journalists: Khaled Abu Toameh
- Writers: Aharon Appelfeld, Elias Chacour, Yael Dayan, David Grossman, Batya Gur, Shifra Horn, Amos Oz, A. B. Yehoshua, Amnon Jackont, Amalia Kahana-Carmon, Yehoshua Kenaz.
- Academics: Ahron Bregman, Uri Davis, Gerson Goldhaber, Haim Harari, Joshua Jortner, Alexander Levitzki, Ehud Kamar, Efraim Karsh, Asa Kasher, Walter Laqueur, Avishai Margalit, Ory Mazar, Dana Olmert, Miri Rubin, Ada Yonath
- Lawyers: Alex Hartman, Elias Khoury, Menachem Mazuz, Ya'akov Ne'eman, Asaf Posner, Malcolm Shaw, Orly Taitz
- Theologian: Fr Malachi Martin
- Chemists: Renata Reisfeld
- Business: Léo Apotheker (CEO of SAP AG)
See also
References
- ^ Academic Ranking of World Universities 2006, published by Shanghai Jiao Tong University.
- ^ The subversives on the hill - Haaretz - Israel News
- ^ Victims of Hadassah massacre to be memorialized, Judy Siegel-Itzkovich, Jerusalem Post, April 7, 2008.
- ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=6x3S8eM3spAC&pg=PA193&lpg=PA193&dq=attacks+on+medical+convoys+to+mount+scopus&source=bl&ots=i3xSFCCEoQ&sig=OfknIC090FABGc6blXu_PbZtM80&hl=en&ei=d__gSan5I56RjAevpu3UDQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=10
- ^ Jerusalem: Architecture in the British Mandate Period
- ^ HUJI Memorial Pages
- ^ Terrorist bombing at Hebrew University cafeteria
- ^ Albert Einstein's bequest to the Hebrew University
- ^ The Hebrew University of Jerusalem - About
- ^ Faculty of Agricultural, Food and Environmental Quality Sciences
- ^ Koret School of Veterinary Medicine
- ^ Yehoshua Ben-Arieh's publications on Magnes Press web site
- ^ Description page on Faculty of Agriculture site
- ^ The developer of soil solarization for pathogen control.
- ^ Department of comparative religions
External links
- Hebrew University web site
- The Mandel Institute of Jewish Studies web site
- Einstein Archives at the Hebrew University
- Hebrew University Technology Transfer company - An article
- The British Friends of The Hebrew University (BFHU)
- Ancient and Premodern Law at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem