NYU Wordpress Theme

Zoya Teirstein Discusses Interning in Tel Aviv Affirming Her Environmental Journalism Plans

Zoya Teirstein studied at NYU Tel Aviv in the spring of 2016. She managed two internships while there and shares her experiences with us.

What is your school affiliation and what year are you? What is your major?

I am a senior at Gallatin concentrating in Environmental Reporting.

What inspired you to study in Tel Aviv?

I signed up for the NYU Tel Aviv program just in the nick of time. I was planning on doing a backpacking semester in California, but it fell through at the last minute and I chose to go to Israel instead kind of on a whim. I had been to Israel a few years earlier on a summer program and loved it, so that definitely factored into my decision. I was also interested in journalism and politics–Tel Aviv has a lot of both. The semester in California was supposed to be all about sustainability, which is the second component of my concentration. While I was excited about studying journalism in Tel Aviv, I was disappointed that I wouldn’t be able to immerse myself in environmental issues like I had planned. But I ended up interning for an environmental NGO and wound up learning a lot about what sustainability looks like in the Middle East.

How was your experience? What was most inspiring, surprising, or moving about your time there? What did you find challenging?

Tel Aviv is a lot like New York City in the sense that there’s always something going on. I was surprised how easy it was to feel comfortable there. When you move to a different place you expect to feel isolated, at least in the beginning. But that just wasn’t the case in Tel Aviv. Israelis are some of the most curious and friendly people, and I met interesting people almost every time I left the house. Unlike NYC, its sunny and warm almost every day, which is another incentive to go do things you wouldn’t normally do. I bought a used bike my first week there and used it to go to lectures at Tel Aviv University and find cool beaches, something I definitely wouldn’t be doing in New York in the middle of February.

I understand that you interned with the Haaretz Daily and the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel while at NYU Tel Aviv. Can you tell us about how you came to intern at both places? Were these academic internships or non-credit internships?

I interned with Haaretz and SPNI during my semester in Tel Aviv, which took place in Spring 2016. I found out about SPNI through Ilana Goldberg, who is the internship coordinator at NYU Tel Aviv and an amazing resource for people looking to intern abroad. I interviewed during my first couple weeks in Tel Aviv and started working there shortly after. Haaretz is Israel’s leading newspaper and getting an internship there is hard to do. Haaretz doesn’t advertise its internships on its website, and finding a contact at the newspaper who can set you up with an internship is difficult. Also, Haaretz normally finds interns through third party organizations, usually jewish groups that specialize in setting students up with long-term internships in Israel. The only reason I got that internship is because I went to a Haaretz event in NYC the previous semester and spoke to some Haaretz journalists who were willing to help me out.

What did your work at each involve? How did you find the experiences?

Both experiences were pretty amazing. Working at Haaretz was cool because its a major newspaper in a relatively small country that has breaking news events on a daily, if not hourly, basis. The Middle East is extremely volatile, and the newsroom would often have to drop everything to cover a developing crisis (this happened almost every time I went into work). During my first month at Haaretz, there were a string of stabbings in Jerusalem. It would be like 5 p.m. on a Thursday and just as most of our journalists were getting ready to leave for the weekend (Friday is not a work day in Israel) we’d get a report through the wires that there was another stabbing and everything would dissolve into chaos for 30 minutes. I was learning how to write breaking news headlines during this time, which was stressful and often really sad.

My experience at SPNI was definitely less intense, but equally if not more rewarding. My first day there I was put in charge of monitoring and documenting fracking in the Golan Heights for the SPNI English website. A small company called Afek Oil and Co. was trying to drill for commercial oil in some of Israel’s most beautiful terrain, and SPNI was doing everything it could to block it. This story has all the makings of a great thriller (some of the people on the board of this tiny company include Rupert Murdoch, Dick Cheney, and Israel’s former housing minister). I won’t go into it here, but you can read my work on this campaign using this link: http://natureisrael.org/What-We-Do/golandrillingcampaign/golandrilling

I got to travel around Israel and interview water experts, environmental lawyers, and community activists. In America, an oil company might spill a few hundred thousand gallons of oil into a river and it can take years to get that company to pay for the damage it caused. Israel is much smaller than the United States, about the size of New Jersey, which means that when a community gets organized and tries to stop a corrupt company from exploiting natural resources, the federal government hears about it relatively quickly. This happened in the Judean lowlands, where a fracking company was stopped in its tracks by a coalition of informed civilians. I’d recommend interning at SPNI to almost anyone, regardless of how interested you are in saving the environment.

Do you feel as though the work you did as an intern has been valuable? Has working for the Haaretz Daily changed your understanding of journalism? And has your work with the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel influenced how you think about environmental issues? If so, can you describe how?

Definitely. I had worked in a newsroom before going to Tel Aviv, but Haaretz is on a completely different playing field. Haaretz is considered far left of center, something a lot of Israeli’s don’t like. I learned early on not to tell people where I worked. An old lady yelled at me on the bus one time because she thought Haaretz was “tearing our country apart.”  But I think the work they do is important. Unlike a lot of other newspapers in Israel, Haaretz covers issues on both sides of the conflict and gives precedence to newsworthy issues that have to do with Palestinian rights. America is just starting to confront the reality of a Trump presidency, but Israelis have been dealing with right-wing extremism for a long time. Benjamin Netanyahu, a proponent of settlement expansion, began his fourth term as Israel’s Prime Minister in 2015. Haaretz has been trying to hold him accountable since his first day in office. I also learned how much work goes into combating environmental degradation during my internship with SPNI. You’d think even the most money-hungry oil company would look at the Golan Heights, see its importance as an agricultural hub, its propensity for seismic activity, and the enormous reservoir right at its center, and stop to do an environmental impact report before blasting chemicals hundreds of meters into the ground. SPNI had to employ slews of experts, lawyers, and community leaders in its effort to combat Afek, and that’s just one campaign! I have a lot of appreciation for the work journalists and environmentalists do on a daily basis.

How do you feel your internship experience has complemented your academic experience at NYU Tel Aviv?

NYU Tel Aviv is amazing, but it’s insular. The campus is in the north, far from the busy center of the city, and there was a tendency, at least in my semester, to hang out on campus. If you chose to study abroad chances are you planned on doing more than drinking beers in the NYU Tel Aviv courtyard with the kids on your program. Getting an internship is a great way to get out of the bubble and see new things.

Has your time studying at NYU Tel Aviv or your experience in either internship informed your thinking about your future plans? If so, how?

It renewed my conviction to pursue environmental reporting, something I hope to pursue (maybe in Israel).

Marissa Adler Reflects on Personal Growth Through Interning while at NYU Tel Aviv

Marissa enjoying ice cream in Tel Aviv.

Today we are in conversation with Marissa Adler, discussing her experience interning while at NYU Tel Aviv.

What is your school affiliation and what year are you? What is your major?

I am a junior in the College of Arts and Science, majoring in Politics.

What inspired you to study in Tel Aviv?

I think I always felt that if I was going to study abroad, it would be in Israel. Not only do I feel a religious connection (I’m Jewish), but I’ve been there a few times before, with family, friends, and school too. The only thing missing from those visits was the fact that I had never felt like I actually had the opportunity to live there. By spending 4 months there over the course of a semester, I felt like I had the opportunity to experience Israel not just as a visitor, but as an Israeli, which was really amazing for me.

How was your experience? What was most inspiring, surprising, or moving about your time there? What did you find challenging?

In short, my experience really was incredible. It might sound over the top, but honestly, there was something inspiring, surprising, and moving about every activity we did. NYU took us on amazing trips to Jerusalem, the North, the desert, and all over the country. I got to see gorgeous waterfalls while hiking the Israeli-Syrian border and then swim in a nature reserve in the Mediterranean in the North. But if I had to pick a specific moment that I know I will never forget, I think it would have to be the night of the holiday Yom Kippur. Yom Kippur is a fast day and one of the holiest days for Jews. In Israel, everything shuts down. No stores are open, no one drives, there’s nothing really on TV; everyone just spends time with friends and relatives. So that night, after I had come back from synagogue with my friends (some of whom weren’t Jewish and just wanted to experience the holiday), we decided to play cards because that doesn’t involve using electronics. We played cards long into the night, and then at around midnight, someone had an idea: “wait, there’s no cars guys, let’s play in the middle of the street!” So there we were, at midnight, sitting on a spare sheet, while kids rode by us on their bikes, laughing and playing cards in the middle of the street. I can’t tell you how amazing that was because it just made me feel like I was exactly where I belonged; I felt so at home.

I understand that you interned with the Israel Religious Action Center while at NYU Tel Aviv. Can you tell us about the organization and how you came to intern there? Was this an academic internship or a non-credit internship?

The Israel Religious Action Center started out as an arm of the United Reform Judaism organization and advocating for the Reform community in Israel. It was, and still is, difficult for Reform congregations to get recognized in Israel, so IRAC (our acronym) is there to support them. As the organization has progressed, their legal advocacy has expanded to other minority groups with a presence in Israel like the Israeli-Arab community, LGBTQ community, women, and several other groups. Our main goal was always, first and foremost, to obtain equality for all people living in Israel.

I was fortunate enough to get this opportunity through Ilana Goldberg. She and I discussed my interests over the course of the summer, and she reached out to several organizations she thought would coincide best with my interests. When she suggested IRAC and advised me to research their work, I immediately knew that it was where I wanted to be. It was also a for-credit internship.

Signs for the march against hatred that Marissa helped to organize while at IRAC.

What did your work at IRAC involve? How did you find the experience?

My primary work at IRAC was to research and develop a process by which a college student could create an on-campus group that is affiliated with IRAC. Throughout the course of the semester, I was in contact with several leaders of other groups (like Jstreet, Hillel boards, etc.) from a few universities in the North East. They advised and encouraged me to develop a plan that outlined my ideas for a potential group, and most importantly, how my group would be different from other social justice groups on campus. I also reached out to groups such as NFTY (North American Federation of Temple Youth), which is a youth group for the Reform movement, in order to gauge their reactions to a potential collaboration. Additionally, I did work around the office that required any additional help and was at the disposal of the Human Resource team.

The experience was definitely life-changing. I realized how much one organization can accomplish in multiple areas of society. Though my primary work was to research the college group development process, there were days where I helped with other events like in the organization and implementation of a march against discrimination. I got to hear discussions about press releases, talk to attorneys in the legal arm of the organization, and just be a part of everything at the office. It was incredible to see how much of an impact IRAC could have in the community in Jerusalem and Israel at large.

Do you feel as though the work you did as an intern was valuable and did you see its impact? I understand that IRAC is the public and legal advocacy arm of the Reform Movement in Israel and works to advance pluralism in Israeli society. Did the experience change your understanding of issues civil and human rights and the issues of religion and state in Israel? If so, can you describe how?

I really do feel like my work had value and impact. In the immediate sense, I suppose I felt it when I helped with the march against hatred we did in October. In the long term, it was my research and the networks I established through the process of developing an outline of what an on-campus group affiliated with IRAC could look like. I also felt like I was having an impact just by being in the office, or maybe it was the office environment that was having an impact on me. I suppose it worked both ways, and for that, I am incredibly grateful.

My work with IRAC definitely gave me a better understanding of civil and human rights issues in Israel. I was familiar with many of the current events and issues, but not in the way IRAC allowed me to be. I not only heard about certain issues, like threats from members of the Orthodox community made against members of the Reform movement at a congregation in Raanana, but I got to see how the organizations fighting these issues would react when these challenges arose. I knew about the Women of the Wall movement but I got to hear Enat Hoffman, one of the chairwomen, talk about dancing at the Western Wall with torahs and how significant that progress is for Jewish women. I felt more involved in what was and is going on than I ever had before, which was incredible for me.

How do you feel your internship experience has complemented your academic experience at NYU Tel Aviv?

Well, while I was in Tel Aviv, two of the classes I took were politics classes. I took “Comparative Radical Politics,” and “Diplomacy and Negotiation.” While we talked about different political theories and beliefs in those classes, I got to see their implementation while I was in the office at IRAC. I knew the beliefs associated with the right and left in the Israeli political system, but by working at IRAC I saw how the policies were effecting the members of the population and the implications those policies had on the way IRAC conducted its work. So my academic work and my internship definitely had a tremendous sense of cohesion.

Has your time studying at NYU Tel Aviv or interning at IRAC informed your thinking about your future plans? If so, how?

I think it really affirmed for me that I need to work with people. Not just in a literal sense, but I need to be in a work environment where our goal is the betterment of different populations’ ways of life. There is so much that inhibits various groups of people around the world from living the way they want or even need to, and from my experience as a Jewish woman, I feel a connection with those groups. I want to help people, from a legal or perhaps non-profit perspective, work towards having the lives they want and deserve to live. I’m pretty sure law school is definitely part of my future at this point.

Is there anything else you’d like to share about your time in Tel Aviv or while at NYU?

I guess I can’t say enough how amazing it was. It allowed me to grow in so many ways, as a person, a Jew, a woman, and even more. I really want other people to experience Israel, regardless of their religion, because it is an incredible place that gives you a life changing spiritual experience.

Spotlight On NYU Tel Aviv: Interning in Israel

We are going to take a few posts to explore the internship experience at NYU Tel Aviv. To begin, we spoke with Ilana Goldberg, Internship Coordinator and Instructor at NYU Tel Aviv. She explained that the internship program was first created by Debra London, one of the people who set up the study away site at NYU Tel Aviv.  Debra’s focus was on internships in non-profits and human rights organizations, but since then the program has expanded to include businesses, startups, think tanks, research centers, and art institutions.
According to Ilana, “Internships are the single most effective way for students to immerse in local culture and meet Israelis, and get insider perspectives on life in Israel. Most students seek internships in a field that they want exposure to as part of career exploration, although some take advantage of the opportunity to do something adventurous that isn’t necessarily related to their major or explicit career choices. For those who choose a field that is related to their major, gaining experience in a work environment provides opportunities to really confront theory and practice and see how they interrelate in regard to real-world dilemmas. For example, a business student may gain experience with a cutting edge methodology for creating lean business plans, and confront this experience with more traditional methods taught in the classroom. Or, a student interested in universal human rights can see how advocating for specific rights, such as workers’ rights or the right of movement plays out in a specific national and political context.”
All the internships are unpaid and therefore come under the umbrella of NYU Tel Aviv’s academic activity, although students can choose whether to pursue the internship for credit or not. Students who wish to earn credit for their internships must enroll in the internship seminar, attend classes, and fulfill all the associated academic assignments. For the final paper, they undertake a small research project that brings an academic perspective to bear on some aspect of their placement and intern experience.
To find suitable placements, Ilana begins with the applications that students submitted to the Office of Global studies. From this she learns about their college majors and declared interests. She then contacts students individually and requests updated resumes and sometimes also a writing sample or portfolio. In most cases she will also initiate a Skype interview, in order to get to know their personality a bit better, and help clarify and narrow down their interests.  Based on the student’s interests, and academic and professional profile, Ilana tries to match them with organizations NYU Tel Aviv has worked with in the past or she reaches out to new organizations, in order to optimize the fit. The next step is making the connection between the student and the organization or company. At this point the student and recruiter at the organization take the lead and arrange an interview, and sometimes students will be asked to perform an assignment to evaluate their skills. The organization or company makes the final determination. Since some internships are very competitive, Ilana will sometimes refer students to two or more organizations simultaneously.
In most cases, the matching process works extremely well, but sometimes placement sites want to wait to meet the student in person, and things are only finalized after arrival. For the uncommon event that a placement falls through in the last minute,  Ilana tries to access additional backup options.
The first weeks of the semester can be colored by a little uncertainty, and some patience is required until the student begins to adjust and feel comfortable at the placement. All the students in the internship program are offered continual support in dealing with workplace issues and dilemmas throughout the semester, both Ilana and the Assistant Director for Academics, Edan Raviv.
Ilana finds that, “Every semester ends with a crop of very satisfying and rewarding experiences for students. Many times students feel that their internship has been life changing, either because they have been empowered by the responsibilities and tasks they were given, or because they overcame personal challenges. Often students speak of being exposed to a reality that was eye-opening for them, and were proud of their ability to assimilate new information, overcome language and cultural barriers, and make a contribution or impact in an unfamiliar setting. A unique characteristic of the Israeli workplace is that young people are given a lot of credit and autonomy, and so if a student is really dedicated to learning and developing skills, they are likely to be entrusted with meaningful work, and frequently have significant accomplishments to show by the end.”

NYU Steinhardt and NYU Tel Aviv Helping to Organise and Sponsor Sustainable Food Systems Conference

Sustainable Food Systems - Agriculture, Environment and Nutrition

NYU Steinhardt Professor Lisa Sasson is helping to organize a Sustainable Food Systems conference at Tel Aviv University, Israel on 20-21 June. Sponsored by the Manna Center Program for Food Safety and Security at Tel Aviv University, the Israeli Forum for Sustainable Nutrition, and New York University, the conference will unite students and experts to discuss food safety, sustainability, nutrition, and public policy. NYU involvement and support includes participation from NYU Steinhardt, the Provost’s Global Research Initiatives program, and NYU Tel Aviv.

The conference will enable participants to learn from and interact with renowned academic experts, government officials, industry leaders, and activists in the global and local food movement.

Sustainable food systems takes into account environmental, health, social and economic concerns in the production and consumption of food. According to the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) of the UN, “Sustainable Diets are those diets with low environmental impacts which contribute to food and nutrition security and to healthy life for present and future generations. Sustainable diets are protective and respectful of biodiversity and ecosystems, culturally acceptable, accessible, economically fair and affordable; nutritionally adequate, safe and healthy; while optimizing natural and human resources”. Sustainable diets are the outcome of sustainable food systems.

The aim of the conference is to draw on the themes of sustainability and food security, public policy, nutrition, and food justice, by bringing students and experts involved in these topics.  The outcome will enable tackling the question of how best to integrate sustainability in our food system.

Read more from the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 

NYU Tel Aviv Students have Unique Modern Dance Experience

NYU Tel Aviv students recently participated in a rare modern dance experience. The Batsheva dance troupe practices in a famous dance pavilion located in Neveh Tzedek, a neighborhood in southern Tel Aviv with cobbled stone streets and small artisan shops. NYU students were invited into a private final rehearsal of the troupe’s choreographer, Ohad Naharin’s, most recent dance production.

A week before the rehearsal Students also had the opportunity to attend a public GAGA Dance lesson. Gaga is the movement language developed by Ohad Naharin throughout his work as a choreographer and Artistic Director of Batsheva Dance Company.

The GAGA dance lesson.

The GAGA dance lesson

Yitian Zhao, a Business and Finance student from NYU Shanghai attended the class: “This class really empowered everyone, regardless of their previous dancing background, to fully take advantage of our body’s flexibility. By offering tips on how to coordinate different body parts, Ohad Naharin took us onto a journey where we could artistically interpret our emotions via body.

The intimate performance if “The Hole” a week later had an occasional pause for the choreographer’s interjection and improvisation, which is an experience that only the dancer’s themselves are typically invited to see. Following the performance Ohad sat down with our students to field questions about his career path, creative process and choices in crafting this sort of evocative dance performance. In addition, NYU students had the opportunity to meet up with a fellow NYU alum who joined the Batsheva group following his graduation.

The NYU Tel Aviv students loved the performance. Michael Luckiman, a junior studying Neural Science at NYU Shanghai commented: “the event was astounding, well ­synchronized, immersive, and almost violently scary. There were constant surprises about the show, shocking its way into your memory“.

Daniela Echeverria, a History Major from the College of Arts and Science reflected, “Usually I am not so much a fan of contemporary dance; I went into the performance expecting to be entertained but not moved; Instead, the Company’s work had a profound emotional effect on me.” Daniela continued and mentioned she was grateful for the discussion session we had with Naharin “He left many questions and answers openended. In this way, he allows each individual spectator an opportunity to cultivate an experience of his art that is entirely his/her own.”

Dispatch from Tel Aviv

Bejamin HaryNYU Tel Aviv Site Director Benjamin Hary provides an update:
Greetings from NYU Tel Aviv!
Sixteen bright students are currently attending NYU Tel Aviv and they all tell me that they are very happy here. They come from CAS, Liberal Studies (including GLS), Steinhardt, Stern and NYU Shanghai. Their interests range from science to politics, religion and language, language studies, history and archeology, business and entrepreneurship and innovations (which is so typical to Israel). We are all excited about the possibility of doubling the number of our students in the fall.
NYU Tel Aviv is experiencing much excitement and growth. We just completed the construction of the third floor of your beautiful dormitories; consequently, students enjoy first-rate modern accommodations with a beautiful shared kitchen and lounge! Furthermore, we are in final negotiations for a new building for our offices and classes and we hope to launch it in the Fall of 2016. We are also experiencing growth in our staff and consequently reorganizing the administration structure at NYU Tel Aviv.
Please note that we have some new courses, which may have not been uploaded to our webpage yet. In addition to our regular science, business and history/politics courses in the spring, we will offer Crossroads of Empires and Conflicts: Jaffa and Tel Aviv in Modernity, taught by our popular Dr. Martin Wein, using extensive academic walking tours in the city and ample opportunities for interactive fieldwork. We will also offer Queering the Middle East, exploring LGBTQ issues in the Middle East in historical perspective and asking how Tel Aviv has become a “Gay Mecca.” The course can be accompanied with an internship at a LGBTQ organization in Tel Aviv. In fact, we are very proud of our flagship Internship program at NYU Tel Aviv.
Tel Aviv is a vibrant city and students have a fantastic time here. We are having a great weather now, in the 70s, and people are out and about, working at cafés around the town (and the cappuccino here is simply superb!) or even walking or jogging along the Mediterranean. Recent violence that erupted at some areas in Israel and the Palestinian Authority has not really been felt in Tel Aviv and we are all hopeful for peace and quiet.
Here are some pictures from our recent trips to the western Galilee and the Dead Sea!
students during orientation
students in the Dead Sea

NYU Professor Jonathan Zimmerman in Tel Aviv talks about how Globalization Stymied Sex Education

Jonathan Zimmerman
On October 8, NYU Professor Jonathan Zimmerman gave talk at NYU Tel Aviv entitled “Hot and Bothered: How Globalization Stymied Sex Education”.
Professor Zimmerman’s talk focused on how sex education has never won a sustained foothold in modern schools. Although sexual attitudes around the world have liberalized in the past half-century, sex education has not followed suit; indeed, the modern phenomena of globalization have mostly served to inhibit–not to expand–the subject. As visual and digital technologies spread new sexual images and ideas around the world, citizens joined hands to curtail sexual instruction in their schools. In the 20th century, the movement of people and ideas across nations made sex education into a subject without a home.
Jonathan Zimmerman is Professor of Education and History and Director of the History of Education Program, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development. He also holds an appointment in the Department of History of NYU’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. A former Peace Corps volunteer and high school teacher, Zimmerman is the author of Small Wonder: The Little Red Schoolhouse in History and Memory (Yale, 2009), Innocents Abroad: American Teachers in the American Century (Harvard, 2006), Whose America? Culture Wars in the Public Schools (Harvard, 2002), and Distilling Democracy: Alcohol Education in America’s Public Schools, 1880-1925 (Kansas, 1999). His academic articles have appeared in the Journal of American History, the Teachers College Record, and History of Education Quarterly. Zimmerman is also a frequent op-ed contributor to the New York Times, the Washington Post, the New Republic, and other popular newspapers and magazines.

NYU Tel Aviv Biology Symposium

student scientist
On March 18 – 19, NYU Tel Aviv will host a symposium entitled Individuality and Cooperation: Cells, Organisms and Populations.
The symposium will open Wednesday evening, March 18, with a public lecture by Dr. Yaron Daniely, the Academic Director of the MBA program with focus on biomedical management at the College of Management in Rishon le-Zion in Israel. Daniely is also CEO of Alcobra Pharma and Ph.D. graduate of the NYU Sackler Institute of Graduate Biomedical Sciences. His talk, entitled Biomedical Entrepreneurship and Innovations in Israel, will highlight recent achievements in this Israeli industry and will be accessible to the general public.
On Thursday, March 19, the symposium will continue with an all-day program of scientific talks by speakers from NYU, Tel Aviv University and other Israeli institutions. The symposium will highlight cutting-edge experimental and theoretical approaches linking population-level phenomena with traits of individual cells and organisms.
Traditionally studying away has been an opportunity unavailable to the STEM students seeking to meet their degree requirements on time. With course offerings in biology, chemistry, and physics, NYU Tel Aviv proudly represents the ever increasing opportunities within NYU’s global network for STEM students to expand their cultural awareness abroad while earning credits towards their major.

Dispatch from Tel Aviv

Bejamin HaryThe summer at NTY Tel Aviv started with a lot of promise. I was very excited to take over the directorship of NTY Tel Aviv. I am coming from Emory University where I spent many years as a Professor of Hebrew, Arabic and Linguistics and I also served as the Director of the Linguistics Program there. My academic specialties are Judeo-Arabic, the Arabic of the Jews in the Islamic world; Hebrew linguistics; sociolinguistics and dialectology. I also led Emory students in many study abroad academic tours.
In the summer we had 15 wonderful students from NYU-Shanghai taking courses at Tel Aviv University and hosted by us. When hostilities started, we needed to evacuate them and we created a great course for them, which we ran in Istanbul, Turkey for a week: The Ottoman Empire and the Holy Land.
After the decision to postpone coursework for the Fall, we began working on long-overdue infrastructure projects at the site. We made our offices look more professional; created a beautiful Faculty Lounge (which we did not have before); ordered new signs for NYU Tel Aviv and completed many other necessary minor projects. We are also teaching three courses from here on line (via Real Presence and Google Hangouts) to students in London and Berlin who could not come to Tel Aviv because of the situation.
We are also in the process of scheduling special events for the academic year. On October 21 we will host Professor of Physics and Mathematics, Dr. Daniel Stein, who will speak to NYU alumni in Israel on Order, Disorder, Symmetry, and Complexity, followed by a reception. Later in the semester we will host A Night of Comedy and Reflection, parodying the Middle-East peace process through farce, mockumentary and autobiographical monologue and presented by Jeremie Bracka. In January we will host Orly Ramihiyan who will discuss the image of the Jew in Iranian culture. Later in the Spring semester our noted Israeli film director and faculty member of NYU Tel Aviv, Eytan Fox (Yossi and Jagger; Walk on Water) will lead an evening of Film and the Arts in Israel where he will host an Israeli actress and following her career. We are planning more events for the Spring.
Things are much quieter in Tel Aviv these days and you can see people enjoying themselves at cafés in the city and along the Mediterranean. We are planning to start as usual the J-term with courses from the Silver School of Social Work and of course we are all excited to see students again in the Spring in a vibrant intellectual environment.

Dispatch from Tel Aviv

Ronald ZweigThis is a period of rapid development for NYU Tel Aviv. The big news is the completion of the first stage of the construction at Bnei Dan, providing NYU with a new dormitory for our exclusive use. The new building has a large open kitchen for student use, and plenty of space to socialize. The availability of a self-service kitchen allows students to bypass a meal plan and to prepare food for themselves. That is great in theory – but in practice most of them have never cooked before! So cooking workshops were organized, and they are proving very popular. The internet connections in the building have been upgraded and WiFi is now available throughout. During the summer, an additional floor will be completed (the third), bringing capacity to 30 beds.
The academic facilities have been upgraded significantly as well, and classes are now taught in the Conservatory of Music just two short blocks away. The Conservatory is newly constructed with wonderful classrooms that would make Washington Square blush. The Conservatory is only lightly used till the mid-afternoon, and we have the building almost to ourselves.
New courses and new faculty have been introduced, all of whom are also teaching in Israeli’s major universities. The science courses offered in NYU Tel Aviv have been expanded, and we now have a collaborative arrangement with Tel Aviv University (TAU) which allows us to use their labs for the teaching of Organic Chemistry. More subjects will be added to the list in the future. The agreement with TAU extends to the Humanities as well. Students are now able to enroll in regular TAU courses that are taught in English, on an academic calendar that is more in tune with ours. Eventually, TAU students will be able to enroll in courses taught at NYU Tel Aviv as well. This is a reciprocal arrangement that augers well for the future.
Tours of Israel have always been a feature of studying abroad at NYU Tel Aviv. The tours are accompanied by lectures and extensive background information. For the Spring semester the tour itineraries have been revamped and extended. And we will repeat the very successful cycling tour around the Sea of Galilee – a challenging 40 mile cycle which over half of our students completed in the Fall.
The introduction of new courses, new faculty and new subject areas to be taught at NYU Tel Aviv, together with the new dorms and teaching facilities, is making Tel Aviv an increasingly attractive choice for NYU students from New York, Abu Dhabi and soon from Shanghai as well.