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Yaakov Malkin is an intellectual, educator, writer, literary critic, and professor emeritus in the Faculty of Arts at Tel Aviv University.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Author, Lecturer, and Professor Yaakov Malkin Receives Jerusalem Film Festival Life Achievement Award )〕 Malkin is active in several cultural and educational institutions that deal with cultural and humanistic Judaism. ==Public activity== Starting in 1944, while still a student, Malkin published literary, cinema, and theater critiques, and served as the editor of ''On the Wall'', the magazine of the Hashomer Hatzair youth movement (1944–1946). During the 1948 war in Israel, he served as a broadcasting officer for the Haganah and the IDF (1947–1948) in the underground radio station, ''Telem Shamir Boaz'', that later became the Israel Army Radio (''Galei Tzahal''). Malkin lectured (in Yiddish) and was active in the Jewish camps in Cyprus, and worked for the IDF acquisition branch in France (1949). He directed and lectured in Pomansky College for Judaism as Culture in New York (1951), and founded and directed a Hebrew Ulpan (language school) in the Quartier Latin in Paris (1956). While in Paris, he also worked as assistant to the cultural attaché at the Israeli embassy in Paris. He also participated in a lecture tour on Judaism in world literature in Australia (1960), the United States (1965), and France (1970). From 1952 to 1956, Malkin taught comparative literature studies and the Bible as literature at the Seminar HaKibbutzim teachers' college in Tel Aviv. At the same time he served as director of the repertoire department at the Habima national theater and as a drama instructor at the theater schools of Habima and of the Cameri Theater. From 1971 to 1981, he founded and directed the Mateh Yehuda community college, which employed the educational methods of Empire State College (SUNY) where students create personal tracks of study. This was adopted to conditions in Israel and to the particular requirements of working students in the Mateh Yehuda area. From 1969 to 1994, Malkin taught aesthetics, theater and film criticism at the Tel Aviv University. In 1971 he established, together with the Dean of the Faculty for New Arts, Professor Moshe Lazar, the Department for Cinema and Television at the Tel Aviv University. He also served as the university's representative in the founding team of the Tel Aviv Cinematheque, and as editor of the "Cinematheque Pages" – film criticism essays handed out to viewers before the screening of each movie, together with Uri Klein. From 1958 to 1971, Malkin founded and directed the first community centers in Haifa, Beit Rothschild and the Beit Hagefen Jewish–Arab Center. These municipal centers were at first run by groups of friends who led the centers' dozens of social activities, including the Haifa Cinematheque, built inside Beit Rothschild. During these years Malkin also lectured in the Technion (Israel Institute of Technology) on aesthetics and rhetoric. Today Malkin serves as editor-in-chief for Free Judaism, a magazine for Judaism as a culture, which he founded in 1995 and which came out in print editions until 2004. Malkin also serves as provost at the International Institute for Humanistic Secular Judaism, based in Jerusalem (Tmura) and in Farmington Hills near Detroit in the United States ("Birmingham Temple"). The institute trains students who hold an undergraduate degree to be community leaders for secular communities and those with a master's degree or a PhD to be secular Rabbis in a four-year track of studies and work. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Yaakov Malkin」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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