Admiel Kosman

Admiel Kosman (born in 1957) is an Israeli poet and professor of Talmud.

Contents

Biography

Admiel Kosman was born in Haifa, Israel to an Orthodox Jewish family. His father hailed from a German Jewish family living in France, and his mother immigrated from Iraq. [1] After serving in the Israel Defense Forces in an artillery unit and attending Yeshivat Hakotel in the Old City of Jerusalem, he studied graphic art and pottery at the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design. He did his Ph.D. in Talmud at Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan.[1]

Kosman has four children from his first marriage.[1]

Since relocating to Berlin, Kosman is a professor of Religious and Jewish Studies at Potsdam University and the academic director of Abraham Geiger Reform Rabbinical Seminary.[1]

Kosman is the author of eight books of poetry. His poems often deal with the tension between his religious faith and artistic sensibilities. Kosman has also written three volumes of post-modern scholarship on gender in traditional Jewish texts. In 2000, he was invited by Nobel Prize winning Polish poets Czeslaw Milosz and Wislawa Szymborska to participate in an interfaith festival in Cracow, Poetry – between Prayer and Song.[1]

Awards

Kosman has been awarded national prizes for poetry including the Bernstein Prize (original Hebrew-language poetry category), the Prime Minister’s Prize (1976) and the Brenner Prize.[1]

Published work

Poetry

Books and articles

See also

References

External links