Micha Brumlik
Appearance
Micha Brumlik (born 1947 in Davos, Switzerland) is professor of education at the Goethe University of Frankfurt am Main, Germany. From October 2000 to 2005 he was director of the Fritz Bauer Institute for the Study and Documentation of the History of the Holocaust.
Early life
[edit]Brumlik was born in Davos, Switzerland, in 1947, the son of German-Jewish refugees. In 1968 and 1969, Brumlik was a student in Jerusalem where he became a member of the communist organization Matzpen.[1] An early critic of Israel's treatment of Palestinians, Brumlik joined a kibbutz and identified as an anti-Zionist.[2]
Books (selection)
[edit]- Die Gnostiker : der Traum von der Selbsterlősung der Menschen (1992) (German)
- Schrift, Wort, Ikone Wege aus dem Bilderverbot (1994) (German)
- Kein Weg als Deutscher und Jude Eine bundesrepublikanische Erfahrung (1996) (German)
- Vernunft und Offenbarung Religionsphilosophische Versuche (2000) (German)
- Deutscher Geist und Judenhaß Das Verhältnis des philosophischen Idealismus zum Judentum (2000) (German)
- Bildung und Glück Versuch einer Theorie der Tugenden (2002) (German)
- Aus Katastrophen lernen Grundlagen zeitgeschichtlicher Bildung in menschenrechtlicher Absicht (2004) (German)
- Wer Sturm sät. Die Vertreibung der Deutschen (2005) (German)
- Sigmund Freud Der Denker des 20 Jahrhunderts (2006)
References
[edit]- ^ "Still Too Close to the Holocaust". The Battleground. 26 May 2021. Retrieved 2023-12-24.
- ^ "German Jews and the Left". The Battleground. 20 May 2021. Retrieved 2023-12-24.
External links
[edit]- Brumlik's entry with Goethe University (in German)
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Micha Brumlik.
Categories:
- Swiss academic biography stubs
- 1947 births
- 20th-century German Jews
- 20th-century Swiss Jews
- 21st-century German Jews
- 21st-century Swiss Jews
- Activists against antisemitism
- Jewish German anti-Zionists
- German socialists
- Jewish socialists
- Living people
- Opposition to antisemitism in Germany
- People from Davos
- People from Frankfurt
- German secular Jews
- Swiss socialists
- Swiss secular Jews