jewish studies brochure

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College of Arts and Sciences Jewish Studies Prof. Martin Shichtman 612 Pray Harrold Ypsilanti, MI 48197 734-487-4220 [email protected] The Future EMU students are white, black, Latino/a, Native American, Middle Eastern, Asian. They include—but are no means limited to—Christians, Buddhists, Muslims, Hindus, Mormons, and Jews. Across all of these groups there is interest in Judaism, in Jewish life and culture. EMU will continue to provide leadership offering Jewish programming for our students, as well as for our many communities, celebrating the significance of Judaism, about how this faith and those who practice it have changed the world. Jewish Community Relations EMU Jewish Studies is deeply committed to creating relationships between the university and the Southeast Michigan Jewish community. As part of its Jewish Studies Lecture Series, Eastern has sponsored presentations by Ilan Troen, Director of Brandeis University ‘s Schusterman Center for Israel Studies; Aaron Lansky, Founder and President of the National Yiddish Book Center; Israeli scholar and statesman, Elie Rekhess; Sharon Pomerantz, winner of the Foundation for Jewish Culture ‘s Goldberg Prize for Outstanding Debut Fiction; New York Times bestselling author Jonathan Tropper; and Ira Berkow, Pulitzer Prize- winning New York Times sportswriter and author of the film, Jews and Baseball: An American Love Story. The Jewish Studies program is home to Nineteenth-Century Jewish Life, an online resource that explores a period of Jewish efflorescence, during which many Western European Jews became enfranchised and many Eastern European Jews, seeking religious freedom, immigrated to the United States. EMU Jewish Studies partners with the Holocaust Memorial Center Zekelman Family Center of Farmington Hills to offer summer seminars for teachers and with local synagogues to bring college-level classes to their institutions. For More Information To Make a Gift Interested in making a gift to the Jewish Studies program at Eastern Michigan University? Please visit www.emufoundation.org EMU at Terezin Memorial, Terezin, Czech Republic

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Jewish Studies Brochure, 2011

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Page 1: Jewish Studies Brochure

College of Arts and SciencesJewish Studies

Prof. Martin Shichtman612 Pray HarroldYpsilanti, MI [email protected]

The FutureEMU students are white, black, Latino/a, Native American, Middle Eastern, Asian. They include—but are no means limited to—Christians, Buddhists, Muslims, Hindus, Mormons, and Jews. Across all of these groups there is interest in Judaism, in Jewish life and culture. EMU will continue to provide leadership offering Jewish programming for our students, as well as for our many communities, celebrating the significance of Judaism, about how this faith and those who practice it have changed the world.

Jewish CommunityRelationsEMU Jewish Studies is deeply committed to creating relationships between the university and the Southeast Michigan Jewish community. As part of its Jewish Studies Lecture Series, Eastern has sponsored presentations by Ilan Troen, Director of Brandeis University ‘s Schusterman Center for Israel Studies; Aaron Lansky, Founder and President of the National Yiddish Book Center; Israeli scholar and statesman, Elie Rekhess; Sharon Pomerantz, winner of the Foundation for Jewish Culture ‘s Goldberg Prize for Outstanding Debut Fiction; New York Times bestselling author Jonathan Tropper; and Ira Berkow, Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times sportswriter and author of the film, Jews and Baseball: An American Love Story. The Jewish Studies program is home to Nineteenth-Century Jewish Life, an online resource that explores a period of Jewish efflorescence, during which many Western European Jews became enfranchised and many Eastern European Jews, seeking religious freedom, immigrated to the United States. EMU Jewish Studies partners with the Holocaust Memorial Center Zekelman Family Center of Farmington Hills to offer summer seminars for teachers and with local synagogues to bring college-level classes to their institutions.

For More Information

To Make a GiftInterested in making a gift to the Jewish Studies program at Eastern Michigan University? Please visit www.emufoundation.org

EMU at Terezin Memorial, Terezin, Czech Republic

Page 2: Jewish Studies Brochure

Why Jewish Studies at Eastern Michigan?Judaism is the first of the Abrahamic religions, the foundation on which both Christianity and Islam are built. Nevertheless, most EMU students know very little about Judaism, about Jewish culture, or even about Jewish contributions to the American experience. Many of our students—both from large cities and from small towns— may not even be aware of ever having met someone who is Jewish. Jewish Studies is important to Eastern’s identity as a diverse community, offering opportunities for students to learn about and appreciate the remarkable impact Jews have had on the arts, the humanities, the sciences, education, technology, entrepreneurship, and philanthropy.

Our MissionJewish Studies at Eastern Michigan University offers courses concerned with the history of the Jewish people, a story of survival under extraordinary circumstances. It considers the cultural and intellectual gifts Jews have given the world. It focuses on the Jewish faith, its richness, its intricacy, its demands, as well as its complex and fascinating relationships with other religions. Interdisciplinary in its design, EMU Jewish Studies draws on faculty expertise from throughout the university. It also engages students in a wide realm of co-curricular activities including lectures, study abroad, and internships. It provides a home for the online resource, Nineteenth-Century Jewish Life. EMU’s program in Jewish Studies provides a gathering place for EMU’s numerous ethnic communities to learn more about Jews and Judaism, a space to build bridges, to open and engage in discourse, to create new understandings between Jews and the many other groups that comprise the diverse culture of Southeast Michigan.

An Innovative Interdisciplinary ProgramJewish Studies is an interdisciplinary program that draws faculty from throughout the university. It includes classes in Art, History, Literature, Philosophy, Political Science, Psychology, Theater, and World Languages. Among the classes offered by EMU Jewish Studies is Representing the Holocaust, a Study Abroad course that asks students: “what does it mean to visit Europe today, as an American, reading the past through literature, museums, and historical monuments that are meant to keep alive the unthinkable?” It is a class that teaches students about the horror of Nazi genocide as well showing them the extraordinary renaissance of Jewish life and culture that has energized Europe following World War II.

Warsaw Ghetto Memorial, Poland (above) following a moving visit by President Barack Obama

EMU Jewish Studies students at the Spanish Synagogue, Prague, Czech Republic

emich.edu

In 1980, at the age of 24, Aaron Lansky began rescuing unwanted and abandoned Yiddish books. The NationalYiddish Book Center has since recovered more than one million volumes, in what has been described as “the greatest cultural rescue effort in Jewish history.”

Tuesday, December 7, 2010, at 7:30 p.m.Auditorium, Student Center, Eastern Michigan UniversityFREE

Lecture Sponsors• Division of Academic Affairs • Detroit Jewish News• College of Arts and Sciences • Hillel at EMU

For more information, please contact:[email protected]

A book signing will follow the presentation.

Eastern Michigan UniversityJewish StudiesPresents

An Evening With

Aaron LanskyFounder and Director of The National Yiddish Book Center

“GEVALT!: The Last Minute Rescue of ModernJewish Culture”

Aaron Lansky, Jewish Studies guest speaker