|
|
Leibowitz, Nechama (1905-1997)
Bible
Scholar, Commentator, and Teacher
Nechama Leibowitz (sister of Yeshayahu) was born in Riga, educated in
Berlin, and moved to Eretz Yisrael in 1930. She taught for many years
at the Mizrachi Women Teachers Seminary, at Tel Aviv University, and at
numerous other schools, including Hesder yeshivot. In 1942 she began to
distribute stenciled pages of questions on the weekly Torah portion, and
over the years the "Pages," which became her trademark, reached increasingly
wider audiences. Leibowitz was a frequent radio commentator on the Israel
Broadcasting System, and she was awarded the Israel Prize for Education
in 1956. She died in Jerusalem in 1997.
Although appointed professor at Tel Aviv University in 1968 and recognized
publicly on numerous occasions, Leibowitz, known simply as "Nechama" to
her students, preferred the title of teacher to other distinctions. Her
approach to the Bible was an active one, and through her thought-provoking
questions, she demanded that her students adopt a similar active role
towards the text. For many years, Leibowitz's "Pages" consisted only of
questions, and it was only at the insistence of many students that she
later agreed to publish answers along with the questions, yet still appending
questions for further study. Her interpretations reflect her vast knowledge
of traditional and modern Biblical commentaries, and display a sensitivity
to the religious, literary, and psychological meanings of the text. She
sought to infuse her students with a love of the Bible as well as the
belief that its levels of meanings were to be probed by its readers.
Leibowitz's "Pages" were translated into many languages and reached
students and educators alike around the world. They were later collected
into book form and published as Studies in the Weekly Sidra and Studies
in Bereshit (with similar volumes for the other books of the Torah). She
is recognized as one of the leading teachers of the Torah of the twentieth
century, as well as a role model for Orthodox women who are professional
Jewish scholars and teachers.
Consult Nehama's
Gilyonot
[Top] [People]
[ Zionist Century] [Homepage]
|
|