The Program in Jewish Studies is excited to announce its launch of听an endowed Professorship in Israel/Palestine Studies, thanks to an anonymous gift of $500,000. The Israel/Palestine Studies Professorship, highlighted in a recent article in Colorado Arts & Sciences Magazine by Clint Talbott (below),听will formalize the program鈥檚 commitment to the study and discussion of the region and to offer a model of university-based learning about a challenging set of issues.
First-ever Professorship in Israel/Palestine Studies
The professorship will ensure that courses on the culture, history and politics of Israel/Palestine have a long-term place in the 麻豆影院 curriculum, said David Shneer, the program鈥檚 director.
Further, this endowment will ensure that CU-麻豆影院 supports visiting speakers coming to Colorado and faculty and students travelling to the Middle East to study and research Israel/Palestine.
In addition, the professorship will allow CU-麻豆影院 to launch new initiatives that might include supporting language study in Hebrew and Arabic, both official languages of the State of Israel and necessary languages for understanding the region; hosting scholarly conferences on the study of Israel/Palestine; and bringing in visiting scholars, artists and writers producing culture in the context of Israel/Palestine, Shneer added.
鈥淲e aim to move beyond the polarized discourse of an 鈥業sraeli鈥 approach versus a 鈥楶alestinian鈥 approach by focusing on the scholarly study of this particular region, its peoples and cultures,鈥澨齢e said.
The Israel/Palestine Studies professorship, which will be bestowed on an existing CU faculty member in the Program in Jewish Studies within the next couple of years, is so named 鈥渢o ensure that CU 麻豆影院 will continue to promote meaningful conversations, teaching and research about the State of Israel and Palestinian Territories and their diverse populations.鈥
Its focus will also include the history of Zionism and the evolution of Jewish and Palestinian cultures and identities in the broader contexts of pre-1948 Ottoman and British Palestine, and with reference to European, Middle Eastern and global political developments and the broad sweep of Jewish history.
鈥淭he professorship formalizes a longer history at CU of teaching about Israel/Palestine,鈥 said Shneer. In 2007, the American-Israeli Cooperative Enterprise partnered with CU-麻豆影院鈥檚 International Affairs Program and the then-nascent Program in Jewish Studies to bring visiting Israeli Studies scholars to campus to offer courses such as the 鈥淎rab/Israeli Conflict鈥 and the 鈥淗istory of Modern Israel.鈥
As the Jewish Studies Program has grown, its faculty has taught complementary courses, including 鈥淚sraeli Literature,鈥 鈥淭el Aviv: Urban History and Culture,鈥 and 鈥淐ultures of Israel/Palestine鈥濃攚hich support the program鈥檚 minor in Hebrew and Israel Studies.
Last year, the 鈥淗istory of Modern Israel鈥 course was renamed the 鈥淗istory of Modern Israel/Palestine.鈥 The change reflects a philosophy of teaching about Israel/Palestine in broader geographic and historical contexts, Shneer stated.
With the change of name and focus, the course has been consistently well-enrolled, with 35 students each time it has been offered. It has also generated overwhelming interest from diverse students, those Jewish and non-Jewish, those with and without a prior relationship to Israel/Palestine, and those curious about both Jewish and Middle Eastern Studies.
Alexis Aaeng, a junior majoring in history and Jewish studies, offered high praise for the course: 鈥淚 consider the 鈥楬istory of Modern Israel/Palestine to be one of the most important courses that I have taken at the University of Colorado simply because it shed light on an otherwise forgotten and often neglected听piece of the conflict.鈥
The program has seen particular success with the Global Seminar to Israel and the West Bank, which ran in 2013 and 2014. The 2014 program had 11 students, only two of whom had been to the Middle East before.
Following the global seminar, some students are now continuing their graduate studies at Israeli universities, working on issues of Middle Eastern politics, peace and justice, the environment and conflict management.
Katherine Peters, who graduate last year with a degree in applied math and a minor in Jewish studies, attended the 2014 global seminar, said the professorship would be 鈥渧ital鈥 in framing views of the Middle East.
She said the professorship would foster more discussion about 鈥渉ot-button issues in a way that fosters critical thinking and analysis on all sides of the topic instead of just looking at it from one side.鈥
鈥淐U-麻豆影院鈥檚 Program in Jewish Studies prides itself on a diverse and collegial faculty and its role in a broader campus community that has been a space for dynamic conversations and study about the history, literature, culture and politics of Israel/Palestine,鈥 said Shneer.
鈥淭his generous gift further establishes CU鈥檚 Program in Jewish Studies as an international leader in research and teaching. It greatly advances our faculty鈥檚 vision, offering an even brighter future for the field and program,鈥 said Steven R. Leigh, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.
Haytham Bahoora, assistant professor of Arabic and director of the certificate program in Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, said the professorship is a significant development for the study of Israel/Palestine on campus and it will help to expand the study of the Middle East at CU in important new ways.
鈥淏y envisioning the study of Israel and Palestine, and Arabic and Hebrew, as historically linked, it promises to create needed conversations and innovative approaches to the research and study of the region,鈥 Bahoora said. 鈥淚t has the potential to be groundbreaking.鈥
Benjamin Scissors, a student majoring in international affairs, said the professorship is a 鈥渘ecessary step in the evolution of Middle Eastern studies.鈥
Scissors said the initiative reflects Shneer鈥檚 鈥渧oracious appetite for knowledge and steadfast insistence on digging for deeper truths in a region characterized by so much strong political rhetoric.鈥
The program fosters substantive inquiry about this important region as students wrestle with difficult questions such as what it means to call Israel a 鈥渄emocratic鈥 and 鈥淛ewish鈥 state, how to define the relationship between religion and politics, and what the future may bring in Israel/Palestine.
The eight-year-old Program in Jewish Studies also provides educational opportunities, seminars, and salons for the local community to engage in dialogue and learning with students and faculty on a range of topics connected to Jewish Studies.
The Program in Jewish Studies hosted听an open, public conversation about the new professorship on Wednesday, April 29, 2015听for those interested in learning more and becoming involved.