A somewhat ironic announcement in the light of present news reports.
"Earlier in the day, Israeli tanks reportedly shelled a hospital in Gaza, killing at least four people and wounding 60, half of whom were medical staff.
A Palestinian health official said that 12 shells had been fired at the Al Aqsa hospital in the town of Deir el-Balah, striking parts of the building that included the intensive care unit and the surgery department." - The Telegraph
"Wafa Hospital in Gaza’s Shujaiyya district has already been hit by drone strikes, but staff say 16 elderly and terminally ill patients are too frail to move despite Israeli warnings of further attacks." - The Independent
-----Original Message-----
From: Society for The Academic Study of Magic [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Davide Ermacora
Sent: 21 July 2014 12:17
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [ACADEMIC-STUDY-MAGIC] Fw: CONFERENCES: Defining Jewish Medicine (London, 27th - 29th)
I n t e r n a t i o n a l S u m m e r C o n f e r e n c e
O r g a n i s e d j o i n t l y b y t h e
Institute of Jewish Studies , UCL
a n d t h e
Jewish Medical Association ( UK)
Defining Jewish Medicine
27th - 29th July 2014
UCL, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT
The association between Jewish doctors and their calling has roots which go back to the Babylonian Talmud and proceed throughout the Middle Ages into modernity, with major contributions to medicine being made by Jewish practitioners. A fundamental aspect of this question is how to define 'Jewish medicine' throughout its long history. Developing a clear profile will have considerable influence on the way we view the connection between Jews and medicine.
This conference will
present different aspects of research on Jewish medicine - its origins, its historical context, how medicine could be influenced by Jewish law and custom (halachah) and how the role of the Jewish doctor has evolved over the centuries.
This conference is funded by a grant from the Wellcome Trust
P R O G R A M M E
Monday 28th July
Medicine in the Talmud and Middle Ages
Venue: J.Z Young lecture theatre, Anatomy Building
09.45 Mark Geller (UCL / Freie Universität Berlin) - Welcome and Introduction
10.15 Ulrike STEINERT (Freie Universität Berlin) - Concepts of the female body in Mesopotamian gynaecological texts
11.00 Coffee
11.30 Tzvi LANGERMANN (Bar-Ilan University) -Nu'man al-Isra'ili's unstudied commentary on Abu Sahl al-Masihi's Kitab al-Mi'a
12.15 Gerrit BOS (University of Cologne) and Guido Mensching (University of Göttingen) - Jewish multilingualism in medieval medical lexicography and translations
13.00 Lunch break (lunch not provided)
15.15 Lennart LEHMHAUS (Freie Universität Berlin) - On the medical
discourse(s) in the two
Talmudim
16.00 Tea
16.30 Gad FREUDENTHAL (University of Geneva) - Philosophy and Medicine in Jewish Provence, Anno 1199: Samuel Ibn Tibbon and Doeg the Edomite Translating Galen’s Tegni
17.15 Justine ISSERLES (UCL) -Bloodletting and medical astrology in Hebrew manuscripts from medieval Western Europe (13th-15th c.)
Tuesday 29th July
Medicine, Jewish Medical Ethics and Jews
Venue: J.Z Young lecture theatre, Anatomy Building
9.45 Samuel KOTTEK (Hebrew University, Jerusalem) - The Physician in Bible and Talmud:
Between the Lord and the Ailing.
10.30 Alan JOTKOWITZ (Ben Gurion University of the Negev) -The role of Talmudic Narratives in the Development of Jewish Medical Ethics
11.15 Coffee
11.45 Shimon GLICK (Ben Gurion University of the Negev) - 20th century Jewish medical ethics -a historic overview
12.30 Lunch break (lunch not provided)
14.00 Avraham STEINBERG (Hebrew University and Shaarei Zedek Hospital,
Jerusalem) - “Nature has
changed" – Talmudic and modern medicine re halakhic decisions
14.45 Kenneth COLLINS (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, University of
Glasgow) - The Entry of Jews
to the Medical Schools of Early Modern Europe
15.30 Tea
16.00 Gerry BLACK (Past President, Jewish Historical Society of
England) - Lord Rothschild and the
Barber. The struggle to establish the London Jewish Hospital.
16.45 Paul WEINDLING (Oxford Brookes University) - Jewish Victims of Nazi Medical and Racial Research, and their Responses
17.30 David R Katz (UCL) - Concluding remarks
Institute of Jewish Studies, UCL, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT
e-mail: [log in to unmask] tel: 020 7679 3520
website: www. ucl.ac.uk/ijs
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