Raphael Patai
Raphael Patai | |
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| רפאל פטאי | |
| Born | Ervin György Patai 22 November 1910 Budapest, Austria-Hungary |
| Died | 20 July 1996 (aged 85) Tucson, Arizona, United States |
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| Known for |
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| Spouse | Naomi Tolkowsky |
| Relatives | Saul Patai (brother) |
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Raphael Patai (Hebrew: רפאל פטאי; November 22, 1910 − July 20, 1996),[1] born Ervin György Patai, was a Hungarian-Jewish ethnographer, historian, and anthropologist.
Family background
[edit | edit source]Patai was born in Budapest, Austria-Hungary in 1910 to Edith Patai, née Ehrenfeld, and József Patai (hu). Patai's mother was born in Nagyvárad to German-speaking, Jewish parents who expressed their commitment to Magyar Hungarian nationalism by sending their daughter to Hungarian-language schools.[2] Both parents spoke Hungarian and German fluently and educated their children to be perfectly fluent in both languages.[2] His father was a prominent literary figure, author of numerous Zionist and other writings, including a biography of Theodor Herzl. József was founder and editor of the Jewish political and cultural journal Mult és jövő, (Past and Future) from 1911 to 1944, a journal that was revived in 1988 by János Köbányai in Budapest. József Patai also wrote an early History of Hungarian Jews and founded a Zionist organization in Hungary that procured support for the settlement of Jews in the British Mandate of Palestine.
Education
[edit | edit source]Raphael Patai studied at rabbinical seminaries in and at the University of Budapest and the University of Breslau, from which he received a doctorate in Semitic languages and Oriental history. He moved to Palestine in 1933, where his parents joined him in 1939, after he received the first doctorate awarded by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in 1936. He returned briefly to Budapest, where he completed his ordination at the Budapest Rabbinical Seminary.
Career
[edit | edit source]During the late 1930s and early 1940s Patai taught at the Hebrew University and served as the secretary of the Haifa Technion. He founded the Palestine Institute of Folklore and Ethnology in 1944, serving as its director of research for four years. He also served as scientific director of a Jewish folklore studies program for the Beit Ha'Am public cultural program in Jerusalem.[3]
In 1947 Patai went to New York with a fellowship from the Viking Fund for Anthropological Research (later renamed the Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research); he also studied the Jews of Mexico. Patai settled in the United States, becoming a naturalized citizen in 1952. He held visiting professorships at a number of the country's most prestigious colleges, including Columbia, the University of Pennsylvania, New York University, Princeton, and Ohio State. He held full professorships of anthropology at Dropsie College from 1948 to 1957 and Fairleigh Dickinson University. In 1952 he was asked by the United Nations to direct a research project on Syria, Lebanon and Jordan for the Human Relations Area Files.
Patai's work was wide-ranging but focused primarily on the cultural development of the ancient Hebrews and Israelites, on Jewish history and culture, and on the anthropology of the Middle East generally. He was the author of hundreds of scholarly articles and several dozen books, including three autobiographical volumes. In 1985 he was a contributor to an exhibit at the Museum of New Mexico.[4]
Awards
[edit | edit source]In 1936, Patai was the co-recipient (jointly with Moshe Zvi Segal) of the Bialik Prize for Jewish thought.[5]
In 1976, Patai was awarded the National Jewish Book Award in the Jewish History category for The Myth of the Jewish Race.[6]
Personal life
[edit | edit source]Patai married Naomi Tolkowsky, whose family had moved to what was then Palestine in the early twentieth century; they had two daughters, Jennifer (born 1942) and Daphne (born 1943). He died in 1996 in Tucson, Arizona, at the age of 85. Longtime Hebrew University of Jerusalem organic chemistry professor Saul Patai[7] (1918-1998) was his brother.
Selected bibliography
[edit | edit source]Own writings
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Co-authorship
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Autobiography
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Secondary sources
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See also
[edit | edit source]References
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- ^ a b Marsha Rozenblit, Reconstructiong National Identity, Oxford, 2001, pp.31-32
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- ^ "At the door of the Tent of Meeting by Raphael Patai." in Zackheim, Michele. and Museum of Fine Arts. Museum of New Mexico. (1985). The Tent of Meeting : catalogue & guide. Santa Fe, NM : The Tent of Meeting.
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External links
[edit | edit source]- The Raphael Patai Papers at the New York Public Library
- Raphael Patai Prize
- Raphael Patai Series in Jewish Folklore and Anthropology Archived 2011-09-28 at the Wayback Machine (Wayne State University Press)
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- 1910 births
- 1996 deaths
- Jewish historians
- 20th-century Hungarian historians
- Hungarian anthropologists
- American Zionists
- Jewish orientalists
- Hungarian orientalists
- Hungarian Zionists
- American orientalists
- Academic staff of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
- Fairleigh Dickinson University faculty
- Hebrew University of Jerusalem alumni
- University of Breslau alumni
- Eötvös Loránd University alumni
- Hungarian Jews
- Hungarian emigrants to Israel
- Jews from Mandatory Palestine
- Israeli emigrants to the United States
- American people of Hungarian-Jewish descent
- Writers from Budapest
- 20th-century American historians
- 20th-century American male writers
- Jewish scholars of Islam
- 20th-century American anthropologists
- American male non-fiction writers
- Ethnographers of Palestine (region)
- Bialik Prize recipients