Blidstein wins Israel Prize in Jewish Thought

Prof. Ya'acov (Gerald) Blidstein of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev has been awarded this year's Israel Prize in Jewish Thought for the year 5766. The prize, Israel's highest honor, was announced by Minister of Education, Culture and Sport Meir Shitreet on Tuesday. Blidstein, who holds the Miriam Martha Hubert Chair in Jewish Law, joined the faculty of BGU in 1972. He served in a number of senior positions including chairman of the Goldstein-Goren Department of Jewish Thought and head of the Goldstein-Goren International Center of Jewish Thought. A member of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts, Blidstein is an internationally-renowned scholar in Maimonides' halachic law and philosophy, with a special emphasis on political philosophy. His work in Jewish law focuses on Jewish public law and the interface of law and social ethics. Blidstein has also published many studies on the history of prayer and liturgy from ancient times to the present. His research interests cover the history and philosophy of halachah in general, Maimonides' ethics and halachah, prayer, aggadic literature, and political thought.