Filtering by: 2025 - 2026
The Inaugural Rabbi Barry Cytron Lecture featuring Prof. Arnold Eisen
Jan
21
12:00 PM12:00

The Inaugural Rabbi Barry Cytron Lecture featuring Prof. Arnold Eisen

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Please join us for the inaugural Rabbi Barry Cytron Lecture featuring Prof. Arnold Eisen on Wednesday, January 21, at 12:00 p.m. ET, at 617 Kent Hall.

In this talk, Prof. Eisen will discuss the motivations behind writing the personal essay Seeking the Hiding God and the choices that shaped its form. He will give particular attention to the question of God’s role in history—a subject that has preoccupied and divided Jewish thinkers in Israel and the United States for more than half a century, and continues to spark debate today.

Arnold Eisen, one of the world’s foremost authorities on American Judaism, is Professor of Jewish Thought and Chancellor Emeritus at the Jewish Theological Seminary. During his tenure as Chancellor, Eisen oversaw curricular and programmatic innovations designed to give rabbinic, cantorial, and educational leaders the skills needed to cope with the unprecedented societal and spiritual challenges confronting Jews today. A popular and charismatic lecturer, Eisen has conducted frank discussions of faith, commandment, and community with hundreds of audiences at synagogues, universities, summer camps, and other venues throughout North America. Those conversations form the basis of Seeking the Hiding God.

Eisen is the author of a widely-read volume of personal reflection, Taking Hold of Torah: Jewish Commitment and Community in America. His scholarly publications include many dozens of articles on the contemporary Jewish situation as well as The Chosen People in America: A Study in Jewish Religious Ideology; Galut: Modern Jewish Reflection on Homelessness and Homecoming; Rethinking Modern Judaism: Ritual, Commandment, Community; and (with sociologist Steven M. Cohen) The Jew Within: Self, Family and Community in America. Eisen’s op-eds and blog posts have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Huffington Post, Time Magazine, and the Times of Israel, among other publications. His blog series, “On My Mind,” has reached many thousands of readers.

Seeking the Hiding God is his first published work of theology.

*Guests must register by Monday, January 19, to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address.

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Supported by the generosity of the Cytron family.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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The Abel Lecture on Antisemitism featuring Prof. Pam Nadell
Jan
27
6:00 PM18:00

The Abel Lecture on Antisemitism featuring Prof. Pam Nadell

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Please join us for the annual Abel Lecture on Antisemitism featuring Prof. Pam Nadell on Tuesday, January 27, at 6:00 p.m. ET, at 617 Kent Hall.

In this lecture, Prof. Nadell discusses her recent book, Antisemitism, an American Tradition, which investigates the depth of this fraught history. She explores how Jews fought antisemitism through the law and by creating organizations to speak for them. Jews would also fight back with their fists or join with allies in fighting all types of hate. This momentous work sounds the alarm on a hatred that continues to plague our country.

Prof. Pamela S. Nadell holds the Patrick Clendenen Chair in Women’s and Gender History at American University. Her book America’s Jewish Women: A History from Colonial Times to Today won the 2019 National Jewish Book Award’s Everett Family Foundation “Book of the Year”. A past president of the Association for Jewish Studies, she is a consultant to Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life museum, has testified multiple times before Congress, and lectures widely.

*Guests must register by Friday, January 23, to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address.

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Supported by the generosity of the Abel family.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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The 2026 Naomi Prawer Kadar Memorial Lecture with Jordan Finkin
Feb
2
12:00 PM12:00

The 2026 Naomi Prawer Kadar Memorial Lecture with Jordan Finkin

Please join us on Monday, February 2, at 12:00 p.m. ET on Zoom for the 2026 Naomi Prawer Kadar Memorial Lecture, “Snow and Herring: The Work of Modern Yiddish Culture,” featuring Dr. Jordan Finkin.

In its millennium-long history, Yiddish has appeared in many guises, which have only proliferated in the modern world. With its fabric torn in the middle of the twentieth century, the field of Yiddish today confronts the perturbations of rupture and renewal. The stuff of Yiddish today is culture work. What does that work look like? How do contemporary practitioners navigate the tensions between the work of cultural preservation and creative reinvention? What visions for the future emerge from such efforts?

Dr. Jordan Finkin is the Library Director and Rare Book and Manuscript Librarian at the Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati. A scholar of modern Yiddish literature, Dr. Finkin is the author of several scholarly monographs as well as numerous academic essays and articles. A productive literary translator from Yiddish, German, and French, Dr. Finkin is also the founder and director of Naydus Press, a non-profit publisher of Yiddish literature in English translation.

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Supported by the generosity of the Naomi Foundation.

The Naomi Prawer Kadar Annual Memorial Lecture provides an opportunity for the public to explore topics of Yiddish language and linguistics, the history of Yiddish, Yiddish children’s literature and education. The lecture is supported by the Naomi Prawer Kadar Foundation, Inc., which is dedicated to reimagining education. The Naomi Foundation champions Yiddish, Naomi’s lifelong passion, as a vibrant, rich, and contemporary language. The Naomi Foundation advances the teaching and learning of Yiddish, particularly in academic and scholarly settings.

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"Happy New Years," a book talk with author Maya Arad
Feb
18
12:00 PM12:00

"Happy New Years," a book talk with author Maya Arad

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IIJS is pleased to welcome author Maya Arad in conversation with IIJS’s own Prof. Ofer Dynes on Wednesday, February 18, at 12:00 p.m. ET, at 617 Kent Hall. The two will discuss Arad’s recent book, Happy New Years.

After emigrating to the United States in the mid-1960s, Leah maintains her connection to Israel by writing an annual letter on the Jewish new year to her old friends from a women’s teaching college. Comprising five decades of correspondence, the novel skillfully weaves together Leah’s high hopes and deep disappointments as she navigates relationships, marriage, divorce, single motherhood, financial struggles, and professional ups and downs. Leah’s relentless optimism and cheerfulness conceal disturbing truths behind her carefully crafted words. As her letters turn increasingly introspective, the secrets and shame that shaped her trajectory unravel. This is the epistolary novel at its best, inviting the reader to play detective and probe between the lines of Leah’s insistently rosy portrayal of her life. Gradually piecing together her true circumstances, we are charmed into forgiving her minor deceptions and richly rewarded with the profound insights that Leah’s self-constructed narrative reveals.

Maya Arad is the author of twelve books of Hebrew fiction, as well as studies in literary criticism and linguistics. Born in Israel in 1971, she received a PhD in linguistics from University College London and for the past twenty years has lived in California where she is writer in residence at Stanford University’s Taube Center for Jewish Studies.

*Guests must register by Monday, February 16, to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address.

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Supported by the generosity of the Kaye and Radov families.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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"The Great Dictionary of the Yiddish Language"
Mar
5
6:00 PM18:00

"The Great Dictionary of the Yiddish Language"

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Join IIJS and the Yiddish Studies Program at the Germanic Languages Department for a special screening of the opera, The Great Dictionary of the Yiddish Language, on Thursday, March 5, at 6:00 p.m. ET, at 617 Kent Hall. Composer Alex Weiser and librettist Ben Kaplan will share an excerpt from the ambitious new opera, followed by a discussion on The Great Yiddish Dictionary and writing a 21st-century opera on Yiddish.

The Great Dictionary of the Yiddish Language tells the tragi-comic story of Yiddish linguist Yudel Mark’s unfinished effort to create the first comprehensive Yiddish dictionary. The Great Dictionary invites audiences to contemplate the surprisingly grand ambition of Yiddish culture after its decimation during the Holocaust and to consider the power of language to transform and shape us.

IIJS’s own Prof. Ofer Dynes reviewed the opera for In Geveb, describing “...an ambitious, larger-than-life spectacle befitting the dazzling ambitions of the creators of the Yiddish dictionary…Composer Alex Weiser and librettist Ben Kaplan endow enchantment and glamor… In recreating the Yiddishist polemics on stage, Kaplan and Weiser excel at capturing the paradoxical nature of postwar Yiddishism, which was simultaneously petty and visionary, cosmopolitan and parochial, messianic, but also highly pragmatic, lachrymose and uplifting, tragic and comic, and everything in between.”

Broad gestures and rich textures are hallmarks of the “compelling” (The New York Times), “deliciously wistful” (San Francisco Classical Voice) music of composer Alex Weiser. Born and raised in New York City, Weiser creates acutely cosmopolitan music combining a deeply felt historical perspective with a vibrant forward-looking creativity hailed as “personal, expressive, and bold” (I Care If You Listen). Weiser’s debut album, and all the days were purple, was named a 2020 Pulitzer Prize Finalist and cited as “a meditative and deeply spiritual work whose unexpected musical language is arresting and directly emotional.” Released by Cantaloupe Music in April 2019, the album includes songs in Yiddish and English. Active as an opera composer, Weiser is currently working on Tevye's Daughters with librettist Stephanie Fleischmann. A commission from American Lyric Theater, Tevye’s Daughters is based on Sholem Aleichem’s iconic Yiddish stories and explores the tragic death of Tevye’s lesser-known daughter, Shprintse. The opera also traces the lasting impact of Shprintse’s fate on her sisters, who are now elderly and living in New York.

Born in Brooklyn, NY, librettist Ben Kaplan studied literature and theater at Williams College. He currently serves as Director of Education at the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research, where he directs programs that teach Jewish history and culture to a broad and diverse audience. These programs include the YIVO-Bard Uriel Weinreich Summer Program in Yiddish Language, Literature, and Culture and the YIVO-Bard Winter Program on Ashkenazi Civilization. He is currently a Wexner Davidson Fellow and an MA-MPA candidate in the Dual Degree in Jewish Communal Leadership at NYU. As a librettist, he creates historically informed dramatic works that chronicle turning points in history lost to contemporary cultural discourse. Recent projects include the libretto for another collaboration with composer Alex Weiser: State of the Jews, based on the life of Theodor Herzl. He is currently writing his next libretto based on a story centered around the Jewishness of Jesus of Nazareth.

View the opera’s trailer below.

The Great Dictionary of the Yiddish Language trailer

*Guests must register by Tuesday, March 3, to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address

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This event is co-sponsored by the Yiddish Studies Program in the Department of Germanic Languages.

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“Printed in Ishmael’s Realm: Hebrew Printing in Early Ottoman Constantinople”
Mar
9
12:00 PM12:00

“Printed in Ishmael’s Realm: Hebrew Printing in Early Ottoman Constantinople”

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Please join us for a lecture given by Dr. Noam Sienna. The event will take place at IIJS in 617 Kent Hall, on Monday, March 9, at 12:00 p.m. ET.

Within two years of the Expulsion from Spain, a family of Sephardi exiles in Ottoman Constantinople had established a printing press, which produced the first book known to have been printed with movable type in the Islamic world: the Arba’a Turim (Istanbul, 1493). The Ibn Nahmias family and their collaborators continued to print books for the following four decades, creating an invaluable window into the experience of Sephardi Jewish life in the Ottoman Empire in the first half of the sixteenth century.

In this presentation, Dr. Sienna explores the work of the Ibn Nahmias press in Constantinople, surveying not only the content of the books they produced but also the significance of their physical and visual forms, as windows into the connections and transformations of Mediterranean Sephardi communities between the Iberian Peninsula, Italy, North Africa, and the Ottoman Empire. Focusing on the role of printing in the religious and social transformations of the early modern world, this presentation will offer a glimpse into the unique atmosphere of an early modern Jewish print house in the Islamic world.

Noam Sienna is currently the Aresty Visiting Scholar at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, with the Bildner Center for the Study of Jewish Life and the Rutgers Initiative for the Book. He researches Jewish book cultures in the medieval and early modern Islamic worlds, and is currently working on a socio-bibliographic study of the first Hebrew press in the Ottoman Empire. He received his PhD in History and Museum Studies from the University of Minnesota, and is also a Senior Fellow with the Andrew W. Mellon Society of Fellows in Critical Bibliography. His first monograph, Jewish Books in North Africa: Between the Early Modern and Modern Worlds, appeared from Indiana University Press in 2025, and received the 2025 Book Award from the Middle East Librarians Association. He is also a practicing book artist whose work brings together historical and contemporary expressions of Jewish visual and textual culture, focusing on reviving and preserving traditions of Hebrew calligraphy and Jewish letterpress printing

*Guests must register by Thursday, March 5, to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address.

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Supported by the generosity of the Kaye family.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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"Jews in the Soviet Union, Volume 1: Revolution, Civil War, and New Ways of Life" a book talk with Elissa Bemporad
Mar
11
12:00 PM12:00

"Jews in the Soviet Union, Volume 1: Revolution, Civil War, and New Ways of Life" a book talk with Elissa Bemporad

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IIJS is pleased to welcome Elissa Bemporad for a talk on her recent book, Revolution, Civil War, and New Ways of Life. Please join us on Wednesday, March 11, at 12:00 p.m. ET, at 617 Kent Hall.

Jews in the Soviet Union, a new multi-volume history, is an unprecedented undertaking. This groundbreaking work draws on rare access to documents from the Soviet archives, allowing for the presentation of a sweeping history of Jewish life in the Soviet Union from 1917 through the early 1990s. Authored by Elissa Bemporad, Volume 1, Revolution, Civil War, and New Ways of Life, tells the story of the ways in which Jews endured, adjusted to, and participated in the Soviet system both as individuals and as part of a Jewish collectivity during the first decade of its existence. The volume explores Jewish cultural, political, and social life in the different regions of the Soviet Union, integrating gender and women’s issues, narratives of historical elites and ordinary folk. It focuses on everyday life and discusses the fate of Jews in the Soviet Union both as Soviet citizens and as Jews. Chronicling the ways in which different Jews became Soviet in the 1920s, the volume reveals how the lines of contact between Jews in the Soviet Union and the outside world fluctuated between open antagonism and impassioned support.

Elissa Bemporad is Professor of History and Chair in East European Jewish History and the Holocaust at Queens College and the Graduate Center - CUNY. She is a two-time winner of the National Jewish Book Award. Bemporad is the author of three monographs, including Legacy of Blood: Jews, Pogroms, and Ritual Murder in the Lands of the Soviets (Oxford University Press, 2019), and the editor of several volumes, including, most recently, Pogroms: A Documentary History (Oxford University Press, 2021) and The Destruction of Dubova: Chronicle of a Dead City (Bloomsbury 2025). Her work has appeared in different languages, including French, Hebrew, Yiddish, Italian, and Russian. 

*Guests must register by Monday, March 9, to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address.

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Supported by the generosity of the Kaye and Radov families.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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The 2026 Professor Dan Miron Lecture in Hebrew Literature with Ilana Szobel: "Toward a Poetic Genealogy of Israeli Women Poets with Disabilities"
Mar
25
6:00 PM18:00

The 2026 Professor Dan Miron Lecture in Hebrew Literature with Ilana Szobel: "Toward a Poetic Genealogy of Israeli Women Poets with Disabilities"

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Join us for the 2026 Professor Dan Miron Lecture in Hebrew Literature with Professor Ilana Szobel. Her lecture, “Toward a Poetic Genealogy of Israeli Women Poets with Disabilities” will take place on Wednesday, March 25, at 6:00 p.m. ET, at 617 Kent Hall.

This talk explores the emergence of an Israeli tradition of poetry written by disabled women. Focusing on the works of Orit Marton and Inbal Eshel Cahansky, it examines how contemporary Israeli poets with physical disabilities engage with questions of gender, illness, and embodiment as part of their self-exploration and artistic practice. In tracing their longing for connection to poetic ancestors whose disability legacies have only recently become visible, the talk shows how these poets reclaim a neglected literary lineage and assemble a dispersed poetic archive. Through their engagement with this newly cohering tradition, they imagine new cultural possibilities and articulate compelling visions of disability futurities.

Ilana Szobel is Professor of Modern Hebrew Literature, holding the Joseph H. and Belle R. Braun Chair in the Near Eastern and Judaic Studies Department, Core Faculty in the Department of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, and the Interim Director of the Mandel Center for the Humanities at Brandeis University.

She is the author of A Poetics of Trauma: The Work of Dahlia Ravikovitch (Brandeis University Press, 2013), Flesh of My Flesh: Sexual Violence in Modern Hebrew Literature (SUNY Press, 2021), which was a finalist for the Concordia University Library–Azrieli Institute Award for Best Book in Israel Studies, and The Un-Chosen Body: Disability Culture in Israel (Wayne State University Press, 2025).

Szobel has also published a poetry book, Once Upon a Days (בשכבר הימים הבאים) (Iton 77 Publishing House, 2023), and edited two poetry collections by Tsvia Litevsky: Core of Stillness (עין הדומיה) (Carmel Publishing House, 2021) and Nothingness in Its Entirety (הריק ומלואו) (Afik Books Publishing House, 2024).

*Guests must register by Monday, March 23, to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address.

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Supported by the generosity of the Knapp family.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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"The Wandering Jew in Israel, 1952-1955", with Yair Mintzker
Apr
20
12:00 PM12:00

"The Wandering Jew in Israel, 1952-1955", with Yair Mintzker

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Join IIJS for an illuminating lecture with Professor Yair Mintzker, “The Wandering Jew in Israel, 1952–1955,” on Monday, April 20, at 12:00 p.m. ET, at 617 Kent Hall.

The origin of the expression “Wandering Jew” is a mysterious pamphlet published anonymously in German in the year 1602. The pamphlet describes in great detail the story of a Jew named Ahasversus, who lived at the time of the Second Temple and was cursed by Jesus to eternal wanderings after refusing to help him as he was led to Calvary. For more than four hundred years, many otherwise reliable witnesses have claimed to have met the Wandering Jew in person. Though appearing in different times and places, he is always described in the same exact way. The lecture recounts one of the most recent apparitions of the Wandering Jew. It took place in Israel of the early 1950s.

Yair Mintzker is Professor of European History at Princeton University. He is a specialist in the history of early modern and modern Germany, and the author or editor of five books and many articles in the field. His latest monograph, I, Wandering Jew (Princeton UP, 2016), combines history and memoir to retell the legend of the Wandering Jew across five centuries. Mintzker’s previous book, The Many Deaths of Jew Süss (2017), won the National Jewish Book Award in History and was chosen by the Financial Times as one of the best books of 2017.

*Guests must register by Thursday, April 16, to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus.

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Supported by the generosity of the Kaye family.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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"Games of Inheritance: Kabbalah, Tradition, and Authorship in Jorge Luis Borges" with Yitzhak Lewis
Dec
10
12:00 PM12:00

"Games of Inheritance: Kabbalah, Tradition, and Authorship in Jorge Luis Borges" with Yitzhak Lewis

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Join IIJS and MESAAS in welcoming Yitzhak Lewis on Wednesday, December 10, at 12:00 p.m. ET. His book talk on Games of Inheritance: Kabbalah, Tradition, and Authorship in Jorge Luis Borges will take place in person at 617 Kent Hall.

In his recent book, Yitzhak Lewis explores the thought of Argentine author and public intellectual Jorge Luis Borges (1899–1986) on questions of authorship and literary tradition. The book focuses on Borges’ engagement with Jewish literary and intellectual traditions, highlighting the role of this engagement in developing and expressing his views on these questions. The book argues that the primary relevance of Borges’ persistent reference to “the Judaic” is not for understanding his attitude towards Jews and Judaism but for understanding his position in contemporary Argentinian debates about nationalism and literature, empire and postcolonialism, populism and aesthetics. By broadening the frame of “Borges and the Judaic,” this book shifts the scholarly focus to the poetic utility of Borges’ engagement with Jewish literary and intellectual traditions. This allows a better understanding of the nuance of his views on the issues that most animate his oeuvre: authorship and writing, literature and tradition.

Yitzhak Lewis is Associate Professor of Humanities at Duke Kunshan University. He received his PhD from Columbia University in 2016. His research interests include comparative literature in Hebrew, Spanish, and Yiddish, literary and cultural theory, transnational writing, and world literature. His book, A Permanent Beginning: Nachman of Braslav and Jewish Literary Modernity (SUNY, 2020), explores the connections between the storytelling of Nachman of Braslav and imperial modernization processes in Eastern Europe at the turn of the 18th century. His book Games of Inheritance: Kabbalah, Tradition, and Authorship, in the Writing of Jorge Luis Borges (Rutgers, 2025), explores the central role of Jewish literary and intellectual traditions in the writings of Argentine author Jorge Luis Borges. He has edited a volume on “Yiddish and the Transnational in Latin America” for In Geveb: A Journal of Yiddish Studies (2021) and is currently co-editing a collection titled One Hundred Years of Yiddish Literature in China about the reception history of Jewish literature in China from World War I until today. His work has been published in Variaciones Borges, In Geveb: A Journal of Yiddish Studies, Theoretical Studies in Literature and Art, and Journal of Latin American Jewish Studies.

*Guests must register by Monday, December 8 to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address.

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This event is co-sponsored by MESAAS

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"The Jew, the Beauty, and the Beast: Gender and Animality in Modernist Hebrew Fiction" with Naama Harel
Dec
3
5:00 PM17:00

"The Jew, the Beauty, and the Beast: Gender and Animality in Modernist Hebrew Fiction" with Naama Harel

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Please join us on Wednesday, December 3, at 5:00 p.m. ET, for a book talk with IIJS’s own Professor Naama Harel. She will be joined by Professor Beth Berkowitz to discuss her recent book, The Jew, the Beauty, and the Beast: Gender and Animality in Modernist Hebrew Fiction. This talk will be held in person at 617 Kent Hall.

Jews, women, and animals have been notoriously considered in Western thought as antithetical to the “civilized,” and therefore parallel. The trope of the womanized Jewish man has been widely recognized as a staple in otherizing portrayals of European Jews, as well as their self-perception. Similarly, ecofeminist critique has addressed the ubiquitous depiction of the animalized woman throughout history. Yet, the interconnection between the effeminization of Jews and the animalization of women has been overlooked. 

The Jew, the Beauty, and the Beast critically explores the tangled interplay between Jewishness, gender, and animality and its manifestation in modernist Hebrew fiction. Through interdiscursive analysis and close readings, the effeminate Jew is examined vis-à-vis the animalized woman. Intertwining cutting-edge theoretical frameworks of posthumanism and animal studies with established scholarship of Hebrew literature, Jewish studies, and gender studies, Naama Harel offers new Hebrew literary historiography and innovative perspectives on canonical works by Shmuel Yosef Agnon, Devorah Baron, Micha Yosef Berdichevsky, Yosef Haim Brenner, Uri Nissan Gnessin, and David Vogel.

Naama Harel directs Columbia’s Hebrew program and co-chairs the University Seminar for Human-Animal Studies. Her scholarship lies at the intersection of Modern Jewish & Hebrew literature and Human-Animal Studies. She is the author of Kafka’s Zoopoetics: Beyond the Human/Animal Barrier (University of Michigan Press, 2020) and The Jew, the Beauty, and the Beast: Gender and Animality in Modernist Hebrew Fiction (Rutgers University Press, 2025).

Beth A. Berkowitz is Ingeborg Rennert Chair of Jewish Studies and Professor in the Department of Religion at Barnard College. She has authored books such as Execution and Invention: Death Penalty Discourse in Early Rabbinic and Christian Cultures (Oxford University Press, 2006; winner of the Salo Baron Prize for Outstanding First Book in Jewish Studies), and is co-editor of Religious Studies and Rabbinics: A Conversation (Routledge, 2017). Her area of specialization is classical rabbinic literature, and her interests include animal studies, Jewish difference, rabbinic legal authority, and Bible reception history.

*Guests must register by Monday, December 1 to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address.

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Supported by the generosity of the Kaye and Appel families.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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IIJS Film Series: "From Darkness to Light"
Dec
1
6:00 PM18:00

IIJS Film Series: "From Darkness to Light"

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Our fall film series concludes with From Darkness to Light on Monday, December 1, at 6:00 p.m. ET. Join us for an in-person screening at 617 Kent Hall, introduced by IIJS Film Programmer Stuart Weinstock and followed by a Q&A with IIJS’s own Jeremy Dauber.

In 1972, movie legend and comedy auteur Jerry Lewis gambled his career and his own money to direct and star in a Holocaust film called The Day the Clown Cried. A series of troubles ensued and the film never saw the light of day, becoming an object of fascination for 50+ years. The documentary From Darkness to Light chronicles the doomed production comprehensively (including new interviews with Lewis before his death) and breaks new ground in film history by including fully-edited scenes from The Day the Clown Cried -- the first time they have ever been publicly seen. Was Lewis' film ahead of its time or a fool's errand? See From Darkness to Light and decide for yourself.
(108 minutes; English and French with English subtitles)

Jeremy Dauber is the Atran Professor of Yiddish Language, Literature and Culture and, for a decade, directed the Institute of Israel and Jewish Studies at Columbia University, where he also teaches in the American studies program. For twelve years, he co-edited Prooftexts: A Journal of Jewish Literary History with Barbara Mann. His books include Antonio's Devils: Writers of the Jewish Enlightenment and the Birth of Modern Hebrew and Yiddish Literature (Stanford University Press, 2004); In the Demon's Bedroom: Yiddish Literature and the Early Modern (Yale University Press; 2010); The Worlds of Sholem Aleichem (Schocken Books, 2013); Jewish Comedy: A Serious History (W.W. Norton, 2017); American Comics: A History (W.W. Norton, 2021); and Mel Brooks: Disobedient Jew (Yale University Press: 2023). His most recent book, American Scary: A History of Horror from Salem to Stephen King (Algonquin: 2024), was named a best book of 2024 by the Boston Globe.

From Darkness to Light trailer

*Guests must register by Wednesday, November 26 to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address.

Click here to register for this event

Supported by the generosity of the Radov and Kaye families.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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Yosef Yerushalmi Annual Memorial Lecture with Naomi Seidman and Clémence Boulouque
Nov
19
6:00 PM18:00

Yosef Yerushalmi Annual Memorial Lecture with Naomi Seidman and Clémence Boulouque

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Join the Institute on Wednesday, November 19, at 6:00 p.m. ET for this year’s Yosef Yerushalmi Annual Memorial Lecture, “The Jewish Unconscious before and after Freud, featuring Professor Naomi Seidman in conversation with IIJS’s own Clémence Boulouque. The lecture will be held in person at 617 Kent Hall.

The annual Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies Yerushalmi Lecture honors the legacy of historian Yosef Hayim Yerushalmi, whose work transformed the study of Jewish history and memory. This year’s program will feature a conversation between Naomi Seidman and Clémence Boulouque, exploring questions of Jewish translation, storytelling, and cultural transmission. The event offers an engaging opportunity to reflect on Yerushalmi’s enduring influence and the vibrant scholarship it continues to inspire.

Naomi Seidman is the Chancellor Jackman Professor of the Arts in the Department for the Study of Religion and the Centre for Diaspora and Transnational Studies at the University of Toronto. She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2016 and a National Jewish Book Award in 2019. Her writings include the 2006 Faithful Renderings: Jewish—Christian Difference and the Politics of Difference; The Marriage Plot, Or, How Jews Fell in Love with Love, and with Literature (2016); and the 2019 Sarah Schenirer and the Bais Yaakov Movement: A Revolution in the Name of Tradition. Her podcast, "Heretic in the House," was released in 2022. Translating the Jewish Freud (2024) is her fifth book.

Clémence Boulouque received her Ph.D. in Jewish Studies and History from New York University in 2014 and took postdoctoral training at the Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies, University of Pennsylvania. Her interests include Jewish thought and mysticism, interreligious encounters, intellectual history and networks with a focus on the modern Mediterranean and Sefardi worlds, as well as the intersection between religion and the arts, and the study of the unconscious.

*Guests must register by Monday, November 17 to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address.

Click here to register for this event

Supported by the generosity of the Kaye and Radov families.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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"'Tsniut,' between Gender, Law, and Ideology" with Dr. Emmanuel Bloch
Nov
5
12:00 PM12:00

"'Tsniut,' between Gender, Law, and Ideology" with Dr. Emmanuel Bloch

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IIJS invites you to a seminar with Dr. Emmanuel Bloch on Wednesday, November 5, at noon ET. His talk, titled “Tsniut, between Gender, Law, and Ideology,” will take place in person at 617 Kent Hall.

Dr. Bloch’s research examines the evolution of tsniut (traditional female modesty) in modern Jewish contexts, with particular attention to its formalization within halakhic discourse during the mid-twentieth century. Historically, tsniut functioned as a mimetic practice: an embodied, informal mode of transmission embedded in everyday life. It was not articulated in explicitly legal terms. The shift toward codifying tsniut as a legal category has had far-reaching implications for the Orthodox, and at times non-Orthodox, Jewish worlds - implications that remain significantly understudied.

In this presentation, Dr. Bloch offers a broad overview of this transformation and explore its wider significance in several domains: the role of halakhah in shaping modern Judaism; the construction of gender and gender ideology within contemporary Jewish frameworks; and the strategies through which Orthodox Judaism engage with complex modern issues such as gender dynamics, legal authority, sexuality, and embodiment, all while attempting to preserve an image of seamless social, religious, and political continuity.

Emmanuel Bloch holds a Ph.D. in Jewish Studies from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His recently completed dissertation, co-supervised by Professors Suzanne Last Stone and Benjamin Brown, explores the transformation of the concept of female modesty (tsniut)—traditionally understood as a mimetic way of life—into a distinct legal category. Prior to his academic career, Bloch practiced as an attorney-at-law in Europe. A native French speaker, he currently teaches courses on Jewish law and modern Jewish philosophy at the Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS).

*Guests must register by Monday, November 3 to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address.

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Supported by the generosity of the Kaye family.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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"Your Story, My Story, and the True Story: The challenge of writing Israeli history"
Oct
30
5:30 PM17:30

"Your Story, My Story, and the True Story: The challenge of writing Israeli history"

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Journalist, historian, and professor Gershom Gorenberg joins IIJS for his lecture, “My Story, Your Story, the True Story,” examining how competing narratives influence journalism, the writing of history, and the search for a truthful account of the past. This lecture will take place in-person at 617 Kent Hall on Thursday, October 30, at 5:30 p.m. ET.

Gershom Gorenberg is an Israeli historian and journalist and the author, most recently, of War of Shadows: Codebreakers, Spies and the Secret Struggle to Drive the Nazis from the Middle East. Based on documents that remained classified for decades, War of Shadows solves the mystery of the World War II spy affair that nearly brought Rommel’s army and SS death squads to Cairo and Jerusalem. Gorenberg previously wrote three critically acclaimed books on Israel’s history and politics - The Unmaking of Israel, The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Settlements, 1967-1977, and The End of Days: Fundamentalism and the Struggle for the Temple Mount. He co-authored Shalom Friend, a biography of Yitzhak Rabin and winner of the National Jewish Book Award.

Gorenberg is a contributing writer for The Atlantic. He has written for The New York Times, Washington Post, The New York Review of Books, Foreign Policy, The New Republic and Prospect Magazine (UK) and in Hebrew for Haaretz and Maariv. In recent years he has spent spring semesters at Columbia as the Knapp Senior Research Scholar at IIJS and adjunct professor at the Graduate School of Journalism, teaching a workshop on writing history. He lives in Jerusalem.

*Guests must register by Tuesday, October 28 to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus. Each guest must register individually using a unique email address.

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Supported by the generosity of the Kaye and Appel families.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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IIJS Israeli Film Series: "Real Estate"
Oct
27
6:00 PM18:00

IIJS Israeli Film Series: "Real Estate"

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Join the Institute on Monday, October 27, at 6:00 p.m. ET for an in-person screening of Israeli film Real Estate at 617 Kent Hall. IIJS Film Programmer Stuart Weinstock will lead an audience discussion after the screening.

20-something couple Tamara and Adam (Victoria Rosovsky and Leib Lev Levin of Delegation) are struggling with "adulting" and have a baby on the way. Facing eviction in Tel Aviv, they venture to Haifa, Adam's hometown, to seek a new home. Over a long day of apartment hunting, they face their future together. Nominated for three Ophir Awards (Israel's Oscars) including Best Actor, and winner of Best Script and Best Israeli Film at the Haifa International Film Festival, Real Estate offers a fresh take on the shared experience of begrudgingly growing up.
(99 minutes; Hebrew with English subtitles)

Real Estate trailer

*Guests must register by Thursday, October 23 to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus.

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Supported by the generosity of the Radov and Kaye families.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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Steven Zipperstein Discusses his Book "Philip Roth: Stung by Life"
Oct
27
12:00 PM12:00

Steven Zipperstein Discusses his Book "Philip Roth: Stung by Life"

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IIJS and the Center for American Studies welcome Professor Steven Zipperstein for a talk on his recent book, Philip Roth: Stung by Life, the landmark biography of one of our most prominent chroniclers of American life. He will be joined in conversation by IIJS Director Emeritus Professor Jeremy Dauber on Monday, October 27, at Noon ET in 617 Kent Hall.

In this groundbreaking literary biography, Steven J. Zipperstein captures the complex life and astonishing work of Philip Roth (1933–2018), one of America’s most celebrated writers. Born in Newark, New Jersey—where his short stories and books were often set—Roth wrote with ambition and awareness of what was required to produce great literature. No writer was more dedicated to his craft, even as he was rubbing shoulders with the Kennedys and engaging in a spate of famous and infamous romances. And yet, as much as Roth wrote about sex and self, he viewed himself as socially withdrawn, living much like an “unchaste monk” (his words).

Zipperstein explores the unprecedented range of Roth’s work—from “Goodbye, Columbus” and Portnoy’s Complaint to the Pulitzer Prize–winning American Pastoral and The Plot Against America. Drawing upon extensive archival materials and over one hundred interviews, including conversations with Roth about his life and work, Zipperstein provides an intimate and insightful look at one of the twentieth century’s most influential writers, placing his work in the context of his obsessions, as well as American Jewishness, freedom, and sexuality.

Steven J. Zipperstein is the Daniel E. Koshland Professor in Jewish Culture and History at Stanford University. He is the author and editor of ten books, including Rosenfeld’s Lives: Fame, Oblivion, and the Furies of Writing and Pogrom: Kishinev and the Tilt of History.

Jeremy Dauber is the Atran Professor of Yiddish Language, Literature and Culture and, for a decade, directed the Institute of Israel and Jewish Studies at Columbia University, where he is also the Mendelson Family Professor of American Studies and Director of the Center for American Studies.

*Guests must register by Thursday, October 23 to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus.

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This event is co-sponsored by the Center for American Studies.

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Ayelet Tsabari on "Songs for the Brokenhearted"
Oct
22
12:00 PM12:00

Ayelet Tsabari on "Songs for the Brokenhearted"

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Join IIJS in welcoming Ayelet Tsabari on Wednesday, October 22, at noon ET. Her book talk on Songs for the Brokenhearted will take place in person at 617 Kent Hall.

Author of the award-winning Songs for the Brokenhearted, Ayelet Tsabari will speak of growing up Yemeni in Israel, about re-finding and reclaiming that identity through writing and through extensive research into Yemeni culture and traditions. Tsabari will share audio and images from her research into the Yemeni women's songs, and speak of some of the unique challenges she has faced writing about Israel in English, her second language. This lecture will explore the many ways in which a writer's cultural background, mother tongue, and origins influence and inform her writing, in terms of both content and style.

Ayelet Tsabari was born in Israel to a large family of Yemeni descent. She is the author of The Art of Leaving, winner of the Canadian Jewish Literary Award for memoir, finalist for the Writers' Trust Hilary Weston Prize, and an Apple Books and Kirkus Review Best Book of 2019. Her first book, The Best Place on Earth, won the Sami Rohr Prize for Jewish Literature and the Edward Lewis Wallant Award, and was long-listed for the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award. The book was a New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice, a Kirkus Review Best Book of 2016, and has been published internationally. Tsabari is the co-editor of the anthology Tongues: On Longing and Belonging Through Language. Her most recent book, Songs for the Brokenhearted (2024) has won the National Jewish Book Award for Fiction and the Association of Jewish Libraries' Fiction Award.

Ayelet has taught creative writing at Guelph MFA in Creative Writing, The University of King's College MFA, Tel Aviv University, and at Bar Ilan University.

*Guests must register by Monday, October 20 to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus.

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Supported by the generosity of the Kaye and Appel families.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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"It ain't Europe here: Theorizing Israel as a Middle Eastern Society" with Prof. Dr. Johannes Becke
Oct
20
11:15 AM11:15

"It ain't Europe here: Theorizing Israel as a Middle Eastern Society" with Prof. Dr. Johannes Becke

Prof. Dr. Johannes Becke joins IIJS to discuss Zionism in the wake of October 7th. This lecture will be held virtually via Zoom on Monday, October 20, at 11:15 a.m. ET, and is open to all.

Johannes Becke serves as Ben Gurion Professor for Israel and Middle East Studies at the Heidelberg University for Jewish Studies, where he specializes in exploring Israel in a Middle Eastern context. His latest publications include "The Land Beyond the Border: State Formation and Territorial Expansion in Syria, Morocco, and Israel" (SUNY 2021) and "It ain't Europe here: How Israel became a Middle Eastern society" (Wallstein 2025, in German).

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Supported by the generosity of the Kaye and Appel families.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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Framing October 7: An Inflection Point in Jewish History — Perspectives from three Israeli Scholars
Oct
5
12:00 PM12:00

Framing October 7: An Inflection Point in Jewish History — Perspectives from three Israeli Scholars

Join the Institute on Zoom on Sunday, October 5, at 12:00 PM for a discussion with Jonathan Dekel-Chen, Nadav Eyal, and Avi Shilon.

On October 7, 2023, Hamas invaded Israel and carried out the deadliest assault on Jews since the Holocaust. The attack not only shattered assumptions about Jewish sovereignty, security, and politics but also reshaped Israel’s relationship with the wider world. In the months that followed, the war in Gaza and the intensifying debates it provoked deeply influenced global perceptions of Israel, the Jewish diaspora, and the boundaries of antisemitism.

As scholars continue to assess the aftermath, new questions emerge. How should October 7 and its consequences be integrated into the broader trajectory of Jewish history? What insights do Jewish historical experience and memory offer for understanding this moment? In what ways are shifting international responses to the Hamas–Israel conflict reshaping Jewish life worldwide?

The Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies continues this vital conversation with the next event in our series, Framing October 7.

Jonathan Dekel-Chen is a member of Kibbutz Nir Oz. The Hamas attack on his kibbutz on October 7, 2023 resulted in the massacre of dozens of its members, the captivity of many dozens more as well as the physical destruction and looting of Nir Oz. His 37 year-old son Sagui – a father of three young girls – was among the hostages from Nir Oz; he was released on February 14, 2025.

Since the Hamas attack on his kibbutz, Dekel-Chen has advocated in the US and Israel for release of the hostages, including many meetings with senior officials in both the Biden and Trump administrations, as well as members of Congress. He has also made hundreds of media appearances to inform the public about the plight of the hostages.

Dekel-Chen is the Rabbi Edward Sandrow Chair in Soviet & East European Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where he holds a dual appointment in the Department of Jewish History and in the Department of General History; he is also the Academic Chairman of the Leonid Nevzlin Research Center for Russian & East European Jewry. Dekel-Chen’s research deals with modern Jewish history, modern Israel, transnational philanthropy and advocacy, non-state diplomacy, agrarian history and migration.

Together with Sagui, his older son Etai, and the late Tamar Kedem Siman-Tov, in 2014 Jonathan co-founded the Bikurim Youth Village for the Arts in Eshkol. Relocated to Ein Gedi in 2020, Bikurim provides world-class artistic training for underserved high school students from throughout Israel.

Nadav Eyal is a leading Israeli journalist, Adjunct Professor at Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs and Senior Scholar. He is winner of the Sokolov Award (Israel’s equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize) and recipient of the B'nai B'rith World Center Award for Journalism. He writes columns for Yediot Ahronot and Ynet, and serves as a commentator for Channel 12. 

Nadav chaired the Movement for Freedom of Information, which promotes transparency and accountability in Israel from 2021-2026. His recent book HOW DEMOCRACY WINS (if it does) (2023), was lauded by Haaretz as a major contribution to the study of democracy. He has also produced major documentary projects, including: Trumpland (2016), Syrian refugee crisis (2015), and Hate on rising anti-Semitism (2014). 

Since October 7, 2023, he has focused on covering the Hamas attack, Gaza war, and northern border, including field reporting and victim accounts.

Avi Shilon is a historian who specializes in Israel Studies. His PhD dissertation focuses on the attitudes of the leaders of the Revisionist Movement toward Jewish religion from 1925 to 2005.

He is the author of Menachem Begin’s biography, Menachem Begin: A Life (Yale University Press, 2013); Ben Gurion: His Later Years in the Political Wilderness (Rowman & Littlefield, 2016); and The Decline of the Left-wing in Israel: Yossi Beilin and the Politics of the Peace Process (I.B. Tauris, 2020).

Shilon was a visiting scholar at NYU from 2019 to 2022, teaching courses at the Hebrew University and Ben-Gurion University in Israel, as well as at NYU and Rutgers University in the U.S, and Tsinghua University in Beijing. Last year, he taught at Columbia University.

Shilon is also the editor of the non-fiction section at Am-Oved Publishing House and writes op-ed columns for Yedioth Ahronoth. He is currently teaching at the Tel-Hai Academic College in Israel.

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Supported by the generosity of the Kaye and Appel families.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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IIJS Film@Home: "Running on Sand"
Sep
30
12:00 PM12:00

IIJS Film@Home: "Running on Sand"

Our Fall Film Series begins with Running on Sand. The film will be available to stream beginning Friday, September 26, through Tuesday, September 30. We then invite you to join us online Tuesday, September 30, at noon ET for a Q&A with director and producer Adar Shafran, led by IIJS Film Programmer Stuart Weinstock.

Aumari, a young Eritrean refugee living in Israel, is about to be deported. At the airport, he is mistaken for Maccabi Netanya's new star player from Nigeria. Despite having no soccer skills, Aumari seizes the opportunity and finds himself lifting up the floundering team while bonding with the team's female CEO. Nominated for four Ophir Awards (Israel's Oscars), including Best Film, and winning the Audience Award at both the Palm Springs International Film Festival and the Boca International Jewish Film Festival, Running on Sand combines Ted Lasso-style humor with an empathic depiction of refugees' struggles, shedding light on the unseen and unheard in Israeli society.

(104 minutes; Hebrew and English with English subtitles)

Adar Shafran is a producer and co-owner of Firma Films, a Tel-Aviv-based production company making feature films, television series, and short-form content. He has produced films and a series with Haredi filmmaker Rama Burshtein (Fill the Void, The Wedding Plan, and Fire Dance) and with the comedy duo Guy Amir and Hanan Savyon (Maktub, Forgiveness, and Bros), among others. Running on Sand is Adar's first feature film as director.

Running on Sand trailer.

Please register for the event below. You will receive an email with a link to watch the film on Friday, September 26. The link will remain active until Tuesday, September 30.

A separate email with the Zoom link to the Q&A will be sent the morning of Tuesday, September 30, ahead of the discussion at noon.

Please email iijs@columbia.edu with any questions.

Clicker here to register for this event

Supported by the generosity of the Appel and Kaye families.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

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David Ruderman: "The Making of an Anglo-Jewish Scholar," in Conversation with Rebecca Kobrin & Francesca Bregoli
Sep
18
12:00 PM12:00

David Ruderman: "The Making of an Anglo-Jewish Scholar," in Conversation with Rebecca Kobrin & Francesca Bregoli

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The Institute’s fall 2025 programming series opens on Thursday, September 18, at noon ET with a book talk on David Ruderman’s The Making of an Anglo-Jewish Scholar. Join Professor Ruderman, along with Professor Francesca Bregoli and IIJS Co-Director Rebecca Kobrin at 617 Kent Hall, where the conversation will take place.

This book is a study of the life and thought of the Polish Jew Solomon Yom Tov Bennett (1767-1838), who immigrated to London, where he spent the last forty years of his life. In focusing on Bennett’s learned life, it underscores the significance of this singular writer, artist, and public figure, especially his remarkable dual interests in art and thought, his biblical scholarship, his social and intellectual connections with some of the most famous and accomplished Christian intellectuals of London, and his self-determination to complete his life-long ambition of serving Western civilization by correcting and rewriting the entire standard edition of the English Old Testament.

Bennett’s Christian associates respected his learning and were willing to accept him as a Jew in their ranks. His integration into the upper echelons of the Christian literary establishment—dukes, jurists, theologians, and other scholars—did not impede his loyalty to his faith. On the contrary, Bennett’s Christian friends made him more Jewish, more convinced of Judaism’s moral force, and more secure in his own skin as a member of a proud minority among Christian elites supposedly liberated, so he hoped, from the dark hostility of the Christian past. His supreme act of translating the Bible constituted the ultimate payback he could offer the altruistic Christians he had met, open to welcoming him not despite his Jewishness but because of it. Bennett’s transformation from a Polish Jewish immigrant to a proud Anglo-Jew exemplifies a unique path of modern Jewish life and self-reflection, one ultimately shaped by the particular ambiance of his newly adopted country.

David B. Ruderman is the Joseph Meyerhoff Professor of Modern Jewish History, Emeritus, and served for twenty years (1994–2014) as the Ella Darivoff Director of the Herbert D. Katz Center for Advanced Judaic Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. He has held endowed chairs at Yale University and the University of Maryland, where he was instrumental in establishing Judaic studies programs.

A leading scholar of early modern Jewish history, Professor Ruderman is the author or editor of numerous influential books, including The World of a Renaissance Jew (winner of the National Jewish Book Award in History, Hebrew Union College Pres), Kabbalah, Magic, and Science (Harvard University Press), Jewish Thought and Scientific Discovery in Early Modern Europe (Yale University Press), Jewish Enlightenment in an English Key (winner of the Koret Award, Princeton University Press), Early Modern Jewry (winner of the National Jewish Book Award in History, Princeton university press), and A Best-Selling Hebrew Book of the Modern Era (University of Washington Press). His works have been translated into multiple languages, and he has produced two courses on Jewish history for The Great Courses.

Professor Ruderman earned his rabbinical degree from Hebrew Union College–Jewish Institute of Religion and his Ph.D. in Jewish History from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He has been recognized with numerous honors, including the National Foundation for Jewish Culture’s lifetime achievement award, the Charles Ludwig Distinguished Teaching Award, and the Alexander von Humboldt Research Award. He has served as president of the American Academy for Jewish Research, held fellowships at leading international institutions, and in 2014, thirty-one of his colleagues and former students presented him with Jewish Culture in Early Modern Europe: Essays in Honor of David B. Ruderman, eds. Richard Cohen, Natalie Dohrmann, Adam Shear, and Elhanan Reiner (Pittsburgh, Pa., University of Pittsburgh/Hebrew Union College Press).

Francesca Bregoli holds the Joseph and Oro Halegua chair in Greek and Sephardic Jewish Studies and is Associate Professor of History at Queens College and the CUNY Graduate Center. Her research focuses on eighteenth-century Italian and Sephardic Jewish history. She is the author of Mediterranean Enlightenment: Livornese Jews, Tuscan Culture, and Eighteenth-Century Reform (2014), and co-editor of Italian Jewish Networks from the Seventeenth to the Twentieth Centuries: Bridging Europe and the Mediterranean (2018) and Connecting Histories: Jews and their Others in Early Modern Europe (2019). Her current project, influenced by the history of the family and the history of emotions, looks at the creation and preservation of affective and business ties in transregional Jewish merchant families, and at overlaps between family, commerce, and Judaism. Francesca directs the Center for Jewish Studies at the CUNY Graduate Center.

Rebecca Kobrin is the Russell and Bettina Knapp Associate Professor of American Jewish History, in Columbia University’s Department of History where she teaches in the field of American Jewish History, specializing in modern Jewish migration. She is also the Co-Director of the Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies at Columbia.

Her research, teaching, and publications engage in the fields of international migration, urban history, Jewish history, American religion, and diaspora studies. She received her B.A. (1994) from Yale University. She earned a Ph.D. (2002) from the University of Pennsylvania. She served as the Blaustein Post-Doctoral Fellow at Yale University (2002-2004) and the American Academy of Jewish Research Post-Doctoral Fellow at New York University (2004-6). Her book Jewish Bialystok and Its Diaspora (Indiana University Press, 2010), was awarded the Jordan Schnitzer prize (2012). She is the editor of Chosen Capital: The Jewish Encounter with American Capitalism (Rutgers University Press, 2012), and is co-editor with Adam Teller of Purchasing Power: The Economics of Jewish History (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015). In 2015, she was awarded Columbia University’s Lenfest Distinguished Faculty Award for her outstanding teaching and her inspirational mentoring of her students.

Her forthcoming book, A Credit to the Nation: Jewish Immigrant Bankers and American Finance, 1870-1930 (Harvard University Press), brings together scholarship in Jewish history, American immigration studies, and American economic history. She is one of the principal investigators leading the award-winning digital humanities Historical NYC Project, an award-winning map that visualizes the demographic and spatial changes wrought in New York City between 1850 and 1940.

*Guests must register by Tuesday, September 16 to be approved for campus access; unregistered guests will not be permitted on campus.

Click here to register for this event

Supported by the generosity of the Kaye family.

While all IIJS events are free and open to the public, we do encourage a suggested donation of $10.

View Event →