---Forwarded Message---

“The Idea of Jerusalem” to be topic of symposium April 15-17
Events are free and open to the public

Contact:

Sarah Ray
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
(802) 443 - 5794

Release Date: Tuesday, April 05, 2005

MIDDLEBURY, Vt.—Many aspects of Jerusalem’s character and rich history, 
from religious symbolism and the city’s future, to the Jewish-Palestinian 
struggle for control over the city will be the topic of a symposium, “The 
Idea of Jerusalem,” at Middlebury College Friday, April 15-Sunday, April 
17.  Academic experts from Israel and from across the United States will 
gather to discuss a variety of subjects, including the viability of peace 
without negotiation over Jerusalem, Palestinian leadership in Jerusalem 
since 1948, and the city’s place in Jewish history and tradition.  All the 
symposium events — a lecture and four panel discussions — are free and open 
to the public.

“Jerusalem has been of interest to scholars, writers, artists, clergy and 
lay people for millennia.  We thought that it was important to create a 
forum for scholars from different disciplines who study Jerusalem to talk 
to one another and to do it on campus so our community can benefit from 
it,” said Tamar Mayer, professor of geography at Middlebury, who organized 
the symposium with Suleiman A. Mourad, assistant professor of religion at 
the college.  “This is truly a unique opportunity.”

“The Idea of Jerusalem” will kick off when Francis E. Peters, professor of 
Middle Eastern studies and history at New York University, gives the 
keynote lecture, “One City, One God, Three Faiths” on Friday, April 15, at 
4:15 p.m. in Mead Chapel.  A reception will follow Peters’ talk in the 
Redfield Room of Proctor Hall.  Both locations are on Hepburn Road off 
College Street (Route 125).

On Saturday, April 16, from 9 a.m.-12 p.m., a panel of experts will gather 
to discuss “The Religious Symbolism of Jerusalem.”  The panelists, who will 
each address a topic and then engage in a discussion, will be Yaron Eliav, 
the Jean and Samuel Frankel Assistant Professor for Rabbinic Literature at 
the University of Michigan, who will discuss “The Temple Mount in Jewish 
Tradition;” Lee I. Levine, professor of archeology at the Hebrew University 
of Jerusalem, who will give remarks on “Jerusalem in Jewish History, 
Tradition and Memory;” O. Larry Yarbrough, Pardon Tillinghast Professor of 
Religion at Middlebury College, who will give a talk on “Jerusalem in Early 
Christianity;” and Mourad, who will lecture on “The Transformation of the 
Holiness of Jerusalem in Islamic Scholarship.”  The panel will take place 
in the conference room of the Robert A. Jones House on Hillcrest Road off 
College Street (Route 125).

 From 1-5 p.m., a second panel will address the topic of “The Struggle over 
Jerusalem.”  Serving on the panel will be Christiane J. Gruber, a doctoral 
candidate in art history at the University of Pennsylvania, who will 
discuss “Jerusalem in the Visual Propaganda of Contemporary Iran,” and 
Alexander Van Der Haven, a doctoral candidate at the University of Chicago 
Divinity School, who will give a talk on “The Jerusalem Syndrome.”

Following a brief break, the second panel will resume when Mayer offers 
remarks on “Nationalizing Jerusalem: The Making of the Capital.”  Issam 
Nassar, professor of history at Bradley University, will then lecture on 
“Palestinian Jerusalem in the early 20th century;” Elie Rekhess, a senior 
research fellow at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African 
Studies at Tel Aviv University, will discuss “The Palestinian Leadership of 
Jerusalem, 1948-2004;” and Bernard Wasserstein, the Harriet and Ulrich E. 
Meyer Professor of Modern European Jewish History at the University of 
Chicago, will give a lecture on “The Walls of Jerusalem: Past, Present, 
Future.”  The panel will take place in the Robert A. Jones House Conference 
Room.

The symposium will continue in the evening from 7:30-9 p.m. when the third 
panel, titled “Thoughts on the Future,” takes place in Redfield 
Proctor.  The panelists include Professor Sari Nusseibeh, president of 
Al-Quds University and Palestinian minister for Jerusalem affairs, and Ian 
Lustick, the Bess W. Heyman Chair of Political Science at the University of 
Pennsylvania, who will give a talk on “Yerushalayim, al-Quds, and the 
Wizard of Oz: Facing the Problem of Jerusalem after Camp David II and the 
al-Aqsa Intifada.”

The symposium will conclude with a final panel, “Jerusalem in the Arts,” on 
Sunday, April 17, from 9-11 a.m. in the Robert A. Jones House Conference 
Room.  The panelists will include Emmie Donadio, associate director and 
chief curator of the Middlebury College Museum of Art, who will discuss 
“Nineteenth Century Photography of Jerusalem;” Rehav Rubin, professor of 
geography at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, who will give a talk titled 
“The Map  Has a Message: Reality, Ideology and Symbolism in the Early 
Printed Maps of Jerusalem;” and Christopher Stone, assistant professor of 
Arabic and international studies at Middlebury College, who will lecture on 
“Fayruz, Jerusalem and the Leba-stinian Song.”

For more information about the symposium, contact Tamar Mayer, professor of 
geography at Middlebury College, at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or 802-443-5568, 
or Suleiman A. Mourad, assistant professor of religion at Middlebury 
College, at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or 802-443-3485.

To follow are events calendar listings:

Middlebury College Symposium
“The Idea of Jerusalem”
April 15-17

Friday, April 15
4:15 p.m.
Keynote Lecture: “One City, One God, Three Faiths” by Francis E. Peters, 
professor of Middle Eastern studies and history at New York University
Free
The lecture is in Mead Chapel on Hepburn Road off College Street (Route 
125).  A reception will follow in the Redfield Room of Proctor Hall across 
the street on Hepburn Road.

Saturday, April 16
9 a.m.-12 p.m.
Panel Discussion: “The Religious Symbolism of Jerusalem” with Yaron Eliav, 
the Jean and Samuel Frankel Assistant Professor for Rabbinic Literature at 
the University of Michigan; Lee I. Levine, professor of archeology at the 
Hebrew University of Jerusalem; O. Larry Yarbrough, Pardon Tillinghast 
Professor of Religion at Middlebury College; and Suleiman A. Mourad, 
assistant professor of religion at Middlebury College
Free
Conference Room, Robert A. Jones House on Hillcrest Road off College Street 
(Route 125)

1-5 p.m.
Panel Discussion: “The Struggle over Jerusalem” with Christiane J. Gruber, 
a doctoral candidate in art history at the University of Pennsylvania; 
Alexander Van Der Haven, a doctoral candidate at the University of Chicago 
Divinity School; Tamar Mayer, professor of geography at Middlebury College; 
Issam Nassar, professor of history at Bradley University; Elie Rekhess, a 
senior research fellow at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and 
African Studies at Tel Aviv University; and Bernard Wasserstein, the 
Harriet and Ulrich E. Meyer Professor of Modern European Jewish History at 
the University of Chicago
Free
Conference Room, Robert A. Jones House on Hillcrest Road off College Street 
(Route 125)

7:30-9 p.m.
Panel Discussion: “Thoughts on the Future,” with Professor Sari Nusseibeh, 
president of Al-Quds University and Palestinian minister for Jerusalem 
affairs, and Ian Lustick, the Bess W. Heyman Chair of Political Science at 
the University of Pennsylvania
Free
Redfield Room, Proctor Hall, Hepburn Road off College Street (Route 125)

Sunday, April 17
9-11 a.m.
Panel Discussion:  “Jerusalem in the Arts,” with Emmie Donadio, associate 
director and chief curator of the Middlebury College Museum of Art; Rehav 
Rubin, professor of geography at Hebrew University of Jerusalem; and 
Christopher Stone, assistant professor of Arabic and international studies 
at Middlebury College
Free
Conference Room, Robert A. Jones House on Hillcrest Road off College Street 
(Route 125)

For more information about the symposium, contact Tamar Mayer, professor of 
geography at Middlebury College, at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or 802-443-5568, 
or Suleiman A. Mourad, assistant professor of religion at Middlebury 
College, at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or 802-443-3485.

---End of Forwarded Message---






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