Jerusalem, Israel - Oct. 31, 2022 - President Yitzhak Herzog and his wife Michal hosted on Sunday, October 30, at Beit Hanasi, in Jerusalem, Israel, the award ceremony of the Shazar Prize. The prize, starting in 1985, is awarded every year for groundbreaking research in the field of Jewish history.

The award is named after the late Zalman Shazar, the third president of the State of Israel, to a researcher who wrote an original book in Hebrew on the history of the people of Israel. 

President Herzog opened his remarks: "In the Middle Ages, there were scholars who debated which way of life was preferable. That of the sage, the scholar, the researcher, the philosopher - the life of knowledge. Or that of the leader, the initiator, the man of action, the man of society, the creator, the laborer - The one who reflects the practical life. Our third president, Zalman Shazar, blessed memory, practically fulfilled these two forms of life together. He lived a rich life, a full life, in spirit and in deed. At the Shazar Center, you strive to make Jewish history accessible to Israeli society, and you make a substantial and necessary contribution to society, which deepens and extends our roots as a people and as a nation."

Each of the prize winners spoke briefly at the ceremony.

  • Dr. Yaakov Meir wrote his doctoral thesis at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, awarded the Shazar Prize for the Study of Israel's History for his book "The First Printing - The Jerusalem Edition of the Talmud in Venice 1523 and the Beginning of the Hebrew Printing."
  • Dr. Ron Lesri wrote his doctoral thesis at the University of Haifa, recipient of the late Yuval Heiman Prize for researchers at the beginning of their journey - his work deals with two essays focusing on the legends of the Sages.
  • Ms. Nurit Dermer wrote her doctoral thesis at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, awarded the Pinchas and Shindil Weld scholarship. Ms. Nurit Dermer's research is methodologically unusual. It deals with a socio-historical analysis of the Jews in Paris at the end of the thirteenth century.