Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Jewish studies: Posthumously awarded prize, three years after his death. First recipient of the prize for Jewish studies. Haim Hazaz: Literature: One of first two recipients of the prize for Literature. Ya'akov Cohen: Also awarded the Israel Prize in 1958. One of first two recipients of the prize for Literature. Dina Feitelson-Schur: Education
Prominent winners include Shmuel Yosef Agnon, Martin Buber, Abba Eban, A. B. Yehoshua, Israel Aumann, Golda Meir, Amos Oz, Ephraim Kishon, Naomi Shemer, David Benvenisti, Leah Goldberg (posthumously) and Teddy Kollek, and organizations such as Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, Jewish Agency, Yad Vashem and Jewish National Fund. Though the prize is ...
Goldberg encouraged him to write in Hebrew and became a mentor and a close friend. [4] Indeed, she was instrumental in publishing his first Hebrew poem, which appeared in the Davar newspaper in 1950. Ruebner's first book of Hebrew poetry was published in 1957, and his first one in German in 1990.
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel's Dan David Prize on Tuesday named nine historians as the 2024 winners of the prestigious award, with each of them receiving $300,000 to advance their research. The winners' areas of study are vast, from the birth of democracy in India, to the underground archive that Jews kept in the Warsaw Ghetto during World War II ...
The Sokolov Award, also known as Sokolov Prize, is an Israeli journalism award, awarded by the Tel Aviv municipality, in memory of Nahum Sokolow. [ 1 ] The award has been granted since 1956, initially to print journalists and since 1981 to journalists from the electronic media.
It was founded in 1918, making it the longest running newspaper currently in print in Israel. The paper is published in Hebrew and English in the Berliner format, and is also available online. In North America, it is published as a weekly newspaper, combining articles from the Friday edition with a roundup from the rest of the week. Haaretz is ...
Schrader was born in Seattle, Washington, and raised in Los Angeles, California.She has a mixed Christian and Jewish background, [5] and identifies as Jewish. [6] [7]Schrader studied at the University of Southern California, majoring in political science, and obtained her master's degree at Tel Aviv University in political communications. [5]
In 1946, Shlonsky received the Tchernichovsky Prize for exemplary translation, for his translations of the novel Eugene Onegin by Alexander Pushkin and the play Hamlet by Shakespeare. In 1959, he was awarded the Bialik Prize for literature (jointly with Eliezer Steinman). [8] In 1967, he was awarded the Israel Prize, for literature. [9]