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  • Contributors

Alan L. Berger holds the Raddock Family Eminent Scholar Chair of Holocaust Studies at Florida Atlantic University where he also directs the Center for the Study of Violence and Values After Auschwitz. Among his books are: Trialogue and Terror: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam After 9/11 (Editor); Jewish-Christian Dialogue: Drawing Honey from the Rock (coauthor with David Patterson); and Second Generation Voices: Reflections by Children of Holocaust Survivors and Perpetrators (coedited with his wife Naomi).

Nathan Cohen is a senior lecturer at the center for Yiddish Studies at Bar Ilan University. His research focuses on East European Jewish cultural history in the 19th and 20th centuries. His book, Books, Writers and Newspapers: The Jewish Cultural Center in Warsaw 1918-1942, was published by Magnes Press in 2003 (in Hebrew).

Robert Erlewine is Assistant Professor of Religion at Illinois Wesleyan University where he teaches philosophy of religion and modern Jewish thought. He is the author of Monotheism and Tolerance: Recovering a Religion of Reason (2010). He has also written articles on Hermann Cohen and Abraham Joshua Heschel and the ethics of Holocaust representation.

Tsippi Kauffman is a codirector of Seder-Nashim, Beit Midrash for Judaism and Gender at the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem. Her book In All Your Ways Know Him: The Concept of God and Avodah Be-Gashmiyut in the Early Stages of Hasidism, was published in Hebrew in 2009.

Michael Marmur is the Vice-President for Academic Affairs and Assistant Professor of Jewish Theology at the Hebrew Union College— Jewish Institute of Religion. He received his BA from the University of Oxford, and his PhD and MA degrees from the Hebrew University, Jerusalem. Articles by him have appeared in Conservative Judaism (2011), The CCAR Journal (2007), The Jewish Quarterly Review (2008), Shofar (2007), and in the edited collections Abraham Joshua Heschel: Philosophy, Theology and Interreligious Dialogue (2009) and New Essays in American Jewish History (2010). [End Page 249]

Yosef Salmon, Professor Emeritus at Ben-Gurion University, has published books and articles on modern Jewish history. His research addresses the history of the Jews in Eastern Europe and the Land of Israel in the 19th and 20th centuries, centered especially on religious movements: Hasidism, Religious Zionism, and Orthodoxy. Among his publications are: Religion and Zionism (1990) (Hebrew); Shivat Zion (annotated edition) (1998); Religion and Zionism (English) (2002); Do not Provoke Providence: Orthodoxy in the Grip of Nationalism (2006) (Hebrew); soon to be published in English. He was honored by colleagues and students with a jubilee volume, Yosef Da'at (2010). [End Page 250]

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