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  1. 4 de sept. de 2024 · Following the “War of the Languages” in 1913, the Hebrew and Jewish character of the nascent university had already been envisaged and programmed by its first chancellor Judah Leon Magnes, together with Chaim Weizmann and Samuel (Schmuel) Hugo Bergmann.

  2. 11 de sept. de 2024 · This is the university that was once headed by giants of scholarship and conscience such as Haim Yehuda Roth, Hugo Bergmann, Judah Leon Magnes, Nathan Rottenstreich and more....

  3. 17 de sept. de 2024 · In his voluntarist pessimism, the Israeli historian, who claims to be a realist and rejects utopia, remains convinced that Jews and Palestinians are “condemned to live together, otherwise they will disappear together”. Sand explains the reality on the ground convinced him that only a federation or confederation was viable (supplied)

  4. Hace 6 días · The idea of a “bi-national state” was in vogue in the 1930s. Its main advocates were well-meaning intellectuals, many of them luminaries of the new Hebrew University, like Judah Leon Magnes and Martin Buber. They were reinforced by the Hashomer Hatza’ir kibbutz movement, which later became the Mapam party. It never gained any ...

  5. Hace 2 días · Judah Leon Magnes (1877–1948) Rabbi, Pacifist and university chancellor Doctorate 1902 First Chancellor of Hebrew University of Jerusalem: Vera Lüth: Physicist 1966–1974 Experimental particle physicist and professor emerita at Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, senator of the Helmholtz Association [62] Golo Mann (1909–1994) Writer and ...

  6. 17 de sept. de 2024 · Its main advocates were well-meaning intellectuals, many of them luminaries of the new Hebrew University, like Judah Leon Magnes and Martin Buber. They were reinforced by the Hashomer Hatza’ir kibbutz movement, which later became the Mapam party.

  7. 9 de sept. de 2024 · We'll follow with Fatima Amara’s intimate view of how diversity works in Middle Eastern communities if you don’t bump them too hard, and conclude with Judah L. Magnes' vision of a bi-national state in Palestine, rejected at the time but perhaps still instructive today.