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Judaism

The 100-year-old university that helped a language to be reborn

The founding of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem 100 years ago marks a turning-point in the modern revival of Hebrew,

August 16, 2018 11:54
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By

professor david aberbach,

professor david aberbach

3 min read

The founding of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem 100 years ago marks a turning-point in the modern revival of Hebrew, which until the late 19th century had no native speakers. No other language in history has been resurrected with such spectacular success.

As the first university with Hebrew as its language of instruction, the Hebrew University was the embodiment of a national identity, with room for an exceptionally broad spectrum of Jewish identities, their variety a sign of dynamic creativity, not inward- looking as in the past, but reaching out to the world of knowledge. It was the only institution in the world in which thinkers as diverse as Albert Einstein and Sigmund Freud, Gershom Scholem and Saul Lieberman could feel they were engaged in a common endeavour.

In defining Jewish culture primarily in terms of the secular modern world, the Hebrew University marks a revolutionary point of departure. The Orthodox Jewish world mostly rejected university education, not without cause.

Though rabbinics and Kabbalah were reviled in academia as part of the antisemitic contempt for Jewish learning, Hebrew as the language of Holy Scripture was blessed by the German academic world with status not inferior to Latin and Greek and, therefore, suitable as a vehicle for Jewish assimilation. But this was a secular status.

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