Shalem Center: Difference between revisions

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The '''Shalem Center''' is a research and educational organization in [[Israel]], which has had a nontraditional development pattern, starting with a research and graduate fellowships, then graduate education, and eventually the first [[liberal arts]] college in the country. It has the goal of "developing ideas capable of sustaining and unifying the Jewish people, and enriching and strengthening the State of Israel."<ref name=History>{{citation
The '''Shalem Center''' is a research and educational organization in [[Israel]], which has had a nontraditional development pattern, starting with a research and graduate fellowships, then graduate education, and eventually the first [[liberal arts]] college in the country. It has the goal of "developing ideas capable of sustaining and unifying the Jewish people, and enriching and strengthening the State of Israel."<ref name=History>{{citation
  | url = http://www.shalemcenter.org.il/about.php?did=70
  | url = http://www.shalemcenter.org.il/about.php?did=70
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After a 2004 conference on political Hebraism, led by [[Meirav Jones]], to starta movement within academia to reconsider the nature and scope of the Jewish contribution to the core ideas of Western civilization. Following the conference, Shalem begins to publish ''Hebraic Political Studies'', the first scholarly, peer-reviewed journal in this field.
After a 2004 conference on political Hebraism, led by [[Meirav Jones]], to starta movement within academia to reconsider the nature and scope of the Jewish contribution to the core ideas of Western civilization. Following the conference, Shalem begins to publish ''Hebraic Political Studies'', the first scholarly, peer-reviewed journal in this field.
==Archeology===
==Archeology==
Shalem enters the field of archaeology in 2006, sponsoring an excavation in the City of David by senior fellow [[Eilat Mazar]]. Their dig finds a massive structure dating to the 10th-century B.C.E., the time of David and Solomon, which might well correspond to the palace of David described in the Bible.
Shalem enters the field of archaeology in 2006, sponsoring an excavation in the City of David by senior fellow [[Eilat Mazar]]. Their dig finds a massive structure dating to the 10th-century B.C.E., the time of David and Solomon, which might well correspond to the palace of David described in the Bible.
==Undergraduate education==
==Undergraduate education==

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The Shalem Center is a research and educational organization in Israel, which has had a nontraditional development pattern, starting with a research and graduate fellowships, then graduate education, and eventually the first liberal arts college in the country. It has the goal of "developing ideas capable of sustaining and unifying the Jewish people, and enriching and strengthening the State of Israel."[1] It is fair to say that such a mission statement will not be likely to attract critics of Israel.

Journals

It opened in 1995, founded by people inside and outside Israel, led by Yoram Hazony and Daniel Polisar, with twelve graduate fellows. In 1996, it created the English-language journal of culture and public affairs, Azure, and a Hebrew-language Techelet, under editor-in-chief Ofir Haivry. They are now quarterly, and Techelet has the largest circulation of a general interet journal in Israel.

Books

Publishing extended, in 1997, to Shalem Press, the first Hebrew translations of books including Friedrich Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom. The Federalist Papers, Alexis de Tocqueville's Demoracy in America, and John Stuart Mill's On Liberty followed.

A Senior Fellows program intended to support the writing of books, focused on Zionist History and Thought. Initially, Michael Oren wrote a history of the Six Days War. Next, in 1999, the Bernstein Memorial Lecture in Jewish Political Thought began, with the initial speakers being Irving Kristol, Ruth Wisse, Ruth Gavison, and Fania Oz-Salzberger.

Controversy

A book imprint of The New Republic publishes Yoram Hazony’s The Jewish State, a retelling of Zionist intellectual history that becomes the most widely discussed Jewish book in North America that year. In Israel, its publication ignites a controversy over the drift towards post-Zionism in the Israeli school system. The Knesset holds hearings, the Education Ministry appoints an evaluating committee, and in the end adopts guidelines for presenting to students a more positive perspective on Zionist history.

Comparative philosophy

In 2001, the Institute for Philosophy, Political Theory and Religion, started building an innovative approach to the disciplines that form the heart of the modern humanities curriculum. By studying the Western tradition side-by-side with classical Jewish sources, the institute aims to provide a more fruitful environment for the development of philosophical and historical syntheses capable of informing and enriching the lives of Jews and non-Jews alike.

Publishing development

Michael Oren's Six Days of War is republished by Oxford University Press, while the Shalem Press issues a Hebrew edition of Samuel Harrington's The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order, followed by works by Henry Kissinger, Alain Finkielkraut, and Natan Sharansky.

After a 2004 conference on political Hebraism, led by Meirav Jones, to starta movement within academia to reconsider the nature and scope of the Jewish contribution to the core ideas of Western civilization. Following the conference, Shalem begins to publish Hebraic Political Studies, the first scholarly, peer-reviewed journal in this field.

Archeology

Shalem enters the field of archaeology in 2006, sponsoring an excavation in the City of David by senior fellow Eilat Mazar. Their dig finds a massive structure dating to the 10th-century B.C.E., the time of David and Solomon, which might well correspond to the palace of David described in the Bible.

Undergraduate education

2006 saw the completion of the first year of a pilot program to offer semester-length courses in Hebrew to Israeli undergraduates. After opening with 40 students in three courses, the program attracts more than 1,000 applicants in its second and third years, of whom nearly 200 take part in over a dozen courses on subjects ranging from Jewish thought and political philosophy, to constitutional development and economic policy.

In 2008, a detailed time line is published for launching Israel’s first liberal arts college, and faculty recruiting and curriculum development begin. These preparations are undertaken with the aim of submitting to the Council on Higher Education in 2009 an application to accredit a four-year, BA-granting institution in Jerusalem.

Strategic studies

With the support of Sheldon and Miriam Adelson, Natan Sharansky establishes the Adelson Institute for Strategic Studies at the Shalem Center. Sharansky, whose aim is to develop the strategies needed by Israel and the West to grapple with an increasingly challenging international climate, is joined at the Institute by former IDF chief-of-staff Moshe Ya’alon and by Prof. Martin Kramer, and by Arab affairs commentator Ehud Ya’ari.

References

  1. History of Shalem, Shalem Institute