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The winners of the AMT awards for 2022

Prof. Ruth Lapidot, Prof. Hermona Shurk and Prof. Gideon Shelah-Lavi from the Hebrew University and Prof. Oded Lifshitz from Tel Aviv University are among the winners of the A.M.T.

AMT award winners from the Hebrew University. Photo: Hebrew University spokeswoman, Teng Mingyu
AMT award winners from the Hebrew University. Photo: Hebrew University spokeswoman, Teng Mingyu

Congratulations to Prof. Hermona Sorek, Prof. Ruth Lapidot and Prof. Gideon Shelah, winners of the 2022 AMT award!

AMT Award for Art, Science and Culture, awarded every year by A.M.N. Foundation - for the promotion of science, culture and art in Israel and under the auspices of the Prime Minister, For excellence and academic or professional achievements that have a far-reaching impact and a special contribution to society, sponsored by the Prime Minister.

Prof. Hermona Sorek, from the Institute of Life Sciences and the Edmond and Lily Safra Brain Research Center, is the recipient of the AMT Award for Life Sciences in the field of brain research, following her extraordinary contribution to basic and applied molecular neuroscience in Israel and abroad. Prof. Sorek is a leading scientist in merging the fields of genomics and biochemistry in deciphering the molecular pathways that regulate one of the most important neurotransmitters in the brain, acetylcholine, in healthy and diseased states.

Prof. Ruth Lapidot, from the Faculty of Law, is the recipient of the AMT award for social sciences in the field of law, following her academic activity as a researcher and priest as well as her extensive public activity. Prof. Lapidot is the winner of the Israel Prize in Legal Research and is considered one of the legal greats in the State of Israel, and as such she made her mark in research, teaching, and diverse activities for the sake of society in Israel and the State of Israel.

Prof. Gideon Shelah-Lavi, from the Department of East Asian Studies in the Faculty of Humanities, is the recipient of the AMT Award for Humanities in the field of archeology, due to being the first Israeli archaeologist who succeeded in establishing an academic career as a leading researcher in the field of archeology of areas outside Israel and the Near East . Prof. Shelah's work expands the horizons of Israeli archeology to areas and cultures that were not previously part of Israeli academic research and has brought great honor to the State of Israel in the international arena.

Prof. Oded Lifshitz from Tel Aviv University is a recipient of the A.M.T. for archeology for 2022

Prof. Oded Lifshitz, head The Nadler Institute of Archeology at the Lester and Sally Antin Faculty of Humanities, was announced as the winner of the A.M.T. (Art, Science, Culture) for 2022. The prize will be awarded to him in a ceremony to be held during the month of June, in the capacity of the Prime Minister of Israel.

Explorer of Great Empires

Prof. Lipshitz was born in Jerusalem, a city which and its surroundings are at the heart of his research. As part of his position at the university, he serves for over a decade as the head of the Institute of Archeology. He is in charge of the Austrian Chair for the Archeology of the Land of Israel in the Biblical Period, and is also the founder and director of the "Ancient Israel" program for master's and master's degrees. Since 2010 he has been managing the excavation expedition at Tel Azkah and since 2018 he has also been managing the excavations at the temple that was discovered at Tel Moza and dates back to the biblical period.

Prof. Lifshitz's works focus on the period of time of the "Age of Empires" - the period of rule of Assyria, Egypt, Babylon and Persia and its far-reaching effects on the areas of the southern Levant in general, and on Judea in particular. One of the great innovations led by Prof. Lipshitz is the recognition that, contrary to the conventional chronological view, the archeology and history of the Levant in most of the first millennium BC was shaped by the presence and rule of the great empires.

In a series of books and articles, he showed that on the one hand, the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple that ended the days of the First Temple did not lead to a period of complete and complete exile from the land ("the myth of the empty land"), and that the "return to Zion" period is also to a large extent a reflection of the "myth of the mass return".

"Striving for excellence in the archaeological and historical research of the Land of Israel"

Besides his many publications, which became important cornerstones for the study of this period, another "building block" laid by Prof. Lifshitz is an innovative study of the administrative and economic traditions of Judah, mainly in the imprinting of seal impressions on the handles of jars, a tradition that began at the end of the eighth century, and continued until the middle of the century The second BC, during the entire period of the reign of the empires in Judah. In these studies, the continuity of the administration and the economy in Judah during the First and Second Temples, before and after the destruction of Jerusalem, was proven, during the 600 years between the reigns of Ahaz and Hezekiah until the establishment of the Hasmonean dynasty.

"This is a great honor both for me personally and of course for all of us in the Department and the Institute of Archaeology, the School of Jewish Studies and Archaeology, the Faculty of Humanities and Tel Aviv University, which has been my academic home since the beginning of my studies," said Prof. Oded Lifshitz excitedly and added "this is an important and significant recognition for striving for excellence in the archaeological and historical research of the Land of Israel, for many years of hard work and fruitful cooperation with friends and colleagues at the university and other universities in Israel and the world. Thank you to the award committee for choosing me, and of course to my friends and colleagues, my wife Yael and my four children, for the love and support throughout the years I have been engaged in excavations, research and writing."

One response

  1. good to hear. These people are marching humanity forward. Thank you for the work of life. Humanity thanks you, even if it doesn't understand it

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