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Congratulations to Gideon Parchomovsky on being awarded the Heshin Prize!

25 February, 2021

IIAS wishes warm congratulations to Prof. Gideon Parchomovsky (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem) who has been awarded the 2021 Heshin Prize. The prize, named after previous Supreme Court Justice Shneur Zalman Heshin, is awarded for academic excellence in the field of law, and we are thrilled to hear about his prestigious achievement.

Congratulations to Yuval Feldman and David Enoch on being awarded the Fattal Prize!

25 February, 2021

IIAS wishes warm congratulations to Prof. Yuval Feldman (Bar-Ilan University) and Prof. David Enoch (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem) who have been awarded this year's Fattal Prize. The prize, named after Judge Yosef Fattal, is awarded for excellence in law research, and we are delighted to hear about their well-deserved achievement.

Featured Story - Conversion to Islam in the Pre-modern Age

coverUriel Simonson (University of Haifa) and Luke Yarbrough (UCLA), organizers of the 2020–21 IIAS Research Group  “Cultural Brokerage in Pre-modern Islam,”  are celebrating the publication of a new book that they co-edited with Nimrod Hurvitz (Ben Gurion University) and Christian Sahner (University of Oxford).

Their book, Conversion to Islam in the Premodern Age: A Sourcebook, contains 57 primary-source passages that shed light on processes of conversion across the first millennium of Islamic history.   The selections are introduced and translated, from a dozen languages, by more than forty leading scholars.

The co-editors have contributed sweeping introductions on conversion to Islam as a historical phenomenon spanning eras and far-flung locales.

 

 

 

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Many of the selections in the sourcebook illustrate the kind of cultural change—namely, cultural brokerage—that Simonsohn, Yarbrough, and their Research Group are examining this year. “Cultural brokerage” has been invested with subtly different meanings in different academic disciplines. It involves the mediation of cultural change by agents who are deeply embedded in particular historical settings. This mechanism is amply attested in cases of conversion. For example, contributor Daphna Ephrat (Open University of Israel) translates excerpts from a hagiography about the thirteenth-century Sufi master ʿAbdallāh al-Yūnīnī, known as the “Lion of Syria.” Al-Yūnīnī was said to have led several Christians to convert by performing “miracles” that reflect his deep acquaintance with the local culture. In one instance, he reads a greedy Christian peasant’s mind, generously giving him all of his own possessions, which the peasant had been secretly coveting. The peasant converts to Islam in response. This account presents al-Yūnīnī as a cultural intermediary in the sense proposed by the sociologist Pierre Bourdieu: a figure who assigns value to particular aspects of culture, such as religious values, and convinces others to follow her or him. Tales like this one would have affected the way that contemporary Muslims and non-Muslims imagined the roles of gift-giving and performances of supernatural intuition in catalyzing religious change.

Cultural change is not, of course, always welcomed, particularly when it involves change as potentially profound as religious conversion. Another selection, provided by Ulrich Rebstock (University of Freiburg), highlights another side of conversion: its gradual and uncertain progress in particular regions, here the Songhay Empire on the Niger River. The author of the text is a Muslim firebrand of the fifteenth and sixteenth century named al-Maghīlī. In the text, al-Maghīlī attacks the allegedly insincere and backsliding converts that he observed in this region. In terms of “cultural brokerage,” the North African al-Maghīlī is imposing a new level of severity within what had clearly been a more fluid West African Islam. The people he criticized, meanwhile, were, by their practices, gently adjusting what it meant to practice Islam in their own West African setting.

The Research Group “Cultural Brokerage in Pre-modern Islam” brings together experts on pre-modern Islamic thought, administrative practice, advice literature, gender, trade, empire, and more in order to fine-tune a theory of “cultural brokerage” that is sensitive to the specific dynamics of Islamic history.

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Featured Story - Artist in Residence 2020/21 - Agi Mishol

Agi Mishol, one of Israel’s most prominent and popular poets, is the 2020/21 Artist in Residence at the IIAS.
We are delighted to share with you her recent poem, Corona in the Countryside II, which has also been translated into German and English.

Corona in the Countryside II

Now that death creeps round
and I’m peeled down
to a worn-out sweat suit,
down to lumps of cookie crumbs
and afterwards the striped toothpaste
that bursts from the tube

We have (temporarily) moved!

21 June, 2020
The IIAS offices have temporarily relocated to C5 of the Rachel and Selim Benin School of Computer Science and Engineering, while the Feldman Building is undergoing renovations. We look forward to returning to the newly renovated IIAS at the beginning of September.
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Michal Or-Guil

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Humboldt University
Michal Or-Guil is a Professor in the Department of Biology at Humboldt University.
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Ronald Gartenhaus

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University of Maryland
Ronald B. Gartenhaus is a Professor in School of Medicine at the University of Maryland. His research focuses on Hematologic malignancies, with a special interest in abnormal post-transcriptional/translational gene regulation and oncogenic signaling cascades.
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Nir Friedman

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Weizmann Institute
Nir Friedman is a Professor in Department of Immunology at Weizmann Institute of Science. His research focuses on systems immunology of T cells. Intercellular communication, differentiation and antigen specificity.
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Gur Yaari

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Bar-Ilan University
Gur Yaari is a Professor in the Faculty of Engineering at Bar-Ilan University. His research interest is developing computational and statistical tools to analyze high-throughput biological data. The main focus of Gur's research is in studying the adaptive immune system from a system perspective.
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Uri Hershberg

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Drexel University
Uri Hershberg is an Associate Professor at the School of Biomedical Engineering, Science and Health Systems and the Department of Immunology and Microbiology at the College of Medicine of Drexel University.
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Sol Efroni

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Bar-Ilan University
Sol Efroni is a Professor in Systems Biomedicine Lab at Bar-Ilan University. His research focuses on systems biology. Network analysis in the development of malignant diseases. Drug discovery, design and delivery research