The Leo Baeck Institute Jerusalem for the Study of German and Central European Jewry, founded in 1955, is a research institute based in Jerusalem, Israel. While affiliated with the Leo Baeck Institute and its affiliates in New York/Berlin (Leo Baeck Institute New York) and London (Leo Baeck Institute London), it is an independent organization under Israeli law. Since 2019, the institute has been led by Galili Shaḥar.
Formation | 1955 |
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Type | Research institute |
Location |
|
Chairman | Galili Shaḥar |
Affiliations | Leo Baeck Institute, Leo Baeck Institute New York, Leo Baeck Institute London |
Website | www |
History
editAs the second generation took over, the LBI Jerusalem transformed from a memorial community to a research centre. Almost all members of the LBI Jerusalem’s second generation were professional historians; most had left Germany as children or adolescents and had either little of no share at all in the founders memories. For this reason the “memorial function” of the historiography now lost significance. In its place came more strictly scholarly aspirations.[1]
Through their publications, scholarly seminars, academic and cultural events, alongside an archive, the Leo Baeck Institute Jerusalem has been the leading venue for German-Jewish historiography and documentation in Israel. Its archives consist of a microfilm collection of Jewish newspapers from the 19th and 20th centuries as well as a collection of family papers, genealogical materials and community histories.
Leadership
editChairpersons of Leo Baeck Institute, Jerusalem, have been:
- 1956–1979: Hans Tramer
- 1981–1992: Jacob Katz
- 1993–1994: Josef Walk
- 1995–1997: Avraham Barkai
- 1997–2003: Robert Liberles
- 2003–2007: Zvi Bacharach
- 2008–2019: Shmuel Feiner
- 2019-present: Galili Shaḥar
References
edit- ^ Nattermann 2008, pp. 59–60.
Bibliography
edit- Hoffmann, Christhard, ed. (2008). Preserving the Legacy of German Jewry: A History of the Leo Baeck Institute, 1955–2005 (Schriftenreihe wissenschaftlicher Abhandlungen des Leo Baeck Instituts, Bd. 70.). Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. ISBN 978-3-161-49668-4. OCLC 257584531.
- Nattermann, Ruth. "Diversity within Unity: The Community of Founders". In Hoffmann (2008), pp. 59–100.
External links
edit- Official website (in English and Hebrew)