Gershom Gorenberg

Gershom Gorenberg
Born St. Louis, Missouri
Status Married
Education B.A. in religious studies from University of California at Santa Cruz (1976); M.A. in education from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1985)
Occupation Journalist, historian, blogger
Notable credit(s) Senior correspondent for The American Prospect;[1] blogger at South Jerusalem; contributes to The New York Times, Bookforum and Prospect magazine in the U.K.; author of The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Settlements, 1967-1977, among other works; frequent guest on BloggingHeads.tv
Children Three children

Gershom Gorenberg (Hebrew: גרשום גורנברג) is an American-born Israeli historian, journalist, and blogger,[2] specializing in Middle Eastern politics and the interaction of religion and politics. He is currently a senior correspondent for The American Prospect, a monthly American political magazine.[3] Gorenberg self-identifies as "a left-wing, skeptical Orthodox Zionist Jew".[4]

Early life and education

Gorenberg was born in St. Louis, and grew up in California.[2] In 1977, he traveled to Israel to study, and ultimately decided to immigrate to the country, becoming an American-Israeli dual citizen.[5]

Gorenberg graduated from the University of California at Santa Cruz, and earned his M.A. in education from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He currently lives in Jerusalem, Israel, with his wife, journalist Myra Noveck, and three children.[2]

Career

For many years, Gorenberg served as an associate editor of The Jerusalem Report, an Israeli bi-weekly news magazine. In 1996, he edited a selected collection of Jerusalem Report essays published under the title "Seventy Facets: A Commentary on the Torah from the Pages from the Jerusalem Report", and co-authored the Jerusalem Report's biography of Yitzhak Rabin, Shalom, Friend: The Life and Legacy of Yitzhak Rabin. Gorenberg is now a senior correspondent for The American Prospect, an American political monthly.

Gorenberg has contributed features and commentary on politics, religion, and aspects of Israeli-American relations to major American newspapers[2] including The New York Times,[6] Los Angeles Times,[7] and The Washington Post.[8]

Also a published author, Gorenberg is best known for his 2006 study on the origins of Israeli settlements in Israeli-occupied territories following the 1967 Six-Day War, The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Settlements, 1967-1977. In 2000, he published The End of Days: Fundamentalism and the Struggle for the Temple Mount.[2] In 2011, Gorenberg published The Unmaking of Israel, in which he decries the settler movement and how government support for the Haredi is undermining Israeli democracy.

Gorenberg blogs at South Jerusalem, together with Haim Watzman. He is a frequent guest on BloggingHeads.tv, particularly in discussions related to Israel.

Gorenberg was an associate of the now-defunct Center for Millennial Studies at Boston University.[5]

Bibliography

References

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