Haggai Erlich
Encyclopedia
Haggai Erlich is professor emeritus at Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University is a public university located in Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv, Israel. With nearly 30,000 students, TAU is Israel's largest university.-History:...

 and an academic adviser at the Open University of Israel
Open University of Israel
The Open University of Israel is a distance-education university in Israel. , the Open University taught around 39,000 students.The Open University of Israel has more students than any other academic institution in Israel. The administration is based in the city of Ra'anana. Students from all over...

 where he is the head of Middle East
Middle East
The Middle East is a region that encompasses Western Asia and Northern Africa. It is often used as a synonym for Near East, in opposition to Far East...

ern History studies. He's the Landau Prize recipient for 2010 in Africa Studies.
Landau Prize Recipients

His life and work

Haggai Erlich was born to a working class
Working class
Working class is a term used in the social sciences and in ordinary conversation to describe those employed in lower tier jobs , often extending to those in unemployment or otherwise possessing below-average incomes...

 family in Tel Aviv
Tel Aviv
Tel Aviv , officially Tel Aviv-Yafo , is the second most populous city in Israel, with a population of 404,400 on a land area of . The city is located on the Israeli Mediterranean coastline in west-central Israel. It is the largest and most populous city in the metropolitan area of Gush Dan, with...

, was a member of the leftist youth movement Hashomer Hatsair and studied in the Oriental Class of Tel Aviv municipality secondary school D. He served in the Nahal
Nahal
Nahal is an Israel Defense Forces infantry brigade. Historically, it refers to a program that combines military service and establishment of new agricultural settlements, often in outlying areas...

 paratroops battalion and as a reservist fought in the battle on Jerusalem in 1967 Six-Day war
Six-Day War
The Six-Day War , also known as the June War, 1967 Arab-Israeli War, or Third Arab-Israeli War, was fought between June 5 and 10, 1967, by Israel and the neighboring states of Egypt , Jordan, and Syria...

. He composed some of the paratroops' popular songs, some still in circulation. Between 1959 and 1969 he was one of Israel leading high jumpers and represented the country in international athletic meetings.

In 1989 in the World Masters Games
World Masters Games
The World Masters Games is an international multi-sport event held every four years which, in terms of competitor numbers, has developed into the largest of its kind....

 in Denmark, he came second in the 45 – 50 category, clearing 1.65m. In the 1960s
1960s
The 1960s was the decade that started on January 1, 1960, and ended on December 31, 1969. It was the seventh decade of the 20th century.The 1960s term also refers to an era more often called The Sixties, denoting the complex of inter-related cultural and political trends across the globe...

 he played basketball in Israel's premier league and in 1997 won the academic staff tennis championship.
Erlich completed his B.A.
Bachelor of Arts
A Bachelor of Arts , from the Latin artium baccalaureus, is a bachelor's degree awarded for an undergraduate course or program in either the liberal arts, the sciences, or both...

 studies in Tel Aviv University in General History and History of the Middle East and Africa, and his M.A.
Master of Arts (postgraduate)
A Master of Arts from the Latin Magister Artium, is a type of Master's degree awarded by universities in many countries. The M.A. is usually contrasted with the M.S. or M.Sc. degrees...

 studies in the Hebrew University under the guidance of Professor Gabriel Baer (cum laude, 1969). His thesis
Thesis
A dissertation or thesis is a document submitted in support of candidature for an academic degree or professional qualification presenting the author's research and findings...

 was on the tribes in Yemen
Yemen
The Republic of Yemen , commonly known as Yemen , is a country located in the Middle East, occupying the southwestern to southern end of the Arabian Peninsula. It is bordered by Saudi Arabia to the north, the Red Sea to the west, and Oman to the east....

 and their role in the civil war. In 1973 he received his Ph.D.
Doctor of Philosophy
Doctor of Philosophy, abbreviated as Ph.D., PhD, D.Phil., or DPhil , in English-speaking countries, is a postgraduate academic degree awarded by universities...

 from the School of Oriental and African Studies
School of Oriental and African Studies
The School of Oriental and African Studies is a public research university located in London, United Kingdom and a constituent college of the University of London...

, University of London
University of London
-20th century:Shortly after 6 Burlington Gardens was vacated, the University went through a period of rapid expansion. Bedford College, Royal Holloway and the London School of Economics all joined in 1900, Regent's Park College, which had affiliated in 1841 became an official divinity school of the...

, where he wrote his thesis on the History of Ras Alula, Ethiopia
Ethiopia
Ethiopia , officially known as the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, is a country located in the Horn of Africa. It is the second-most populous nation in Africa, with over 82 million inhabitants, and the tenth-largest by area, occupying 1,100,000 km2...

's national hero, under the guidance of professors Richard Gray and Edward Ullendorff
Edward Ullendorff
Edward Ullendorff FBA was a British scholar and historian, especially in Semitic languages and Ethiopia.-Biography:...

.

Erlich taught in Tel Aviv University from 1973 till his retirement in 2004. He served there as head of graduate studies in the Middle Eastern History Department, School of History. He was a visiting professor at Concordia, Montreal, 1978–1979, Georgetown University
Georgetown University
Georgetown University is a private, Jesuit, research university whose main campus is in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C. Founded in 1789, it is the oldest Catholic university in the United States...

, 1985–1986 and 1992–1992, and in San Diego State University
San Diego State University
San Diego State University , founded in 1897 as San Diego Normal School, is the largest and oldest higher education facility in the greater San Diego area , and is part of the California State University system...

, 1999-2000. He is an associate editor of Northeast African Studies, Michigan, a member of the International Committee of Ethiopian Studies, the "field expert" on Islam and the Middle East in Encyclopaedia Aethiopica, Hamburg, and the head of the editorial board of the journal of Israel's Association of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies [MEISAI], Hamizrah Hehadash. From 1983 he is heading the development of Middle Eastern studies in the Open University of Israel.
Erlich is married to Yocheved, has four children and five grandchildren.

In 2004 Erlich retired as emeritus from Tel Aviv University and intensified his involvement in the Open University. The program he had developed as from 1983, based also on ten volumes of introduction he wrote himself, was recognized in 2007 by the Higher Education Council of Israel as a BA program in "the Middle East and its Cultures". It combines studying the history of Arab-Islamic societies with those of other societies in the region. Erlich heads at the Open University a committee tasked with facilitating studies for Arab students and in this context he is also in charge of translating ten of the courses in various fields into Arabic. In the Open University he developed also Ethiopian studies and for the purpose wrote three introductory books in Hebrew.

His Studies

Erlich studies focus on Ethiopia, on the modern Middle East, and on the connections and the relations between these histories. His studies on Ethiopia deal mainly with the internal ethnic dynamism between Tigreans and Amhara and the country's political culture as a factor in Ethiopia's survival in facing European imperialism. His studies on the Middle East deal mainly with the development of higher education and the role of students in politics. His studies on the relations between Ethiopia and the Middle East – a field he is pioneering—reconstruct the history of major strategic meeting points and mainly on the conceptual Islamic- Christian dimensions and the religious historical legacies which inspired and continue to influence those relations.

Ethiopia and Eritrea, Ras Alula, 1875 - 1897

A biography of Ethiopia’s national hero, the general and statesman who played a central role in Ethiopia’s struggle for survival in facing late 19th century imperialism. In this context the book analyzes Ethiopia’s relations with Egypt, the Mahdist Sudan, the Italians, and the British during the Scramble for Africa, and attempts at explaining Ethiopia’s victories. In the same context it analyzes Ethiopia’s home affairs of the time, mainly Tigrean - Shoan relations, the establishment of Asmara and late 19th century Eritrean history.

The Struggle Over Eritrea, 1962 - 1978

Analysis of the birth of the Eritrean nationalist movement and fight for independence. It focuses mainly on the internal struggles of the Eritreans as they were interwoven with two simultaneous development: a. the internal affairs of Ethiopia during the time of Haile Sellassie and the beginning of Mangistu’s period, b. relevant developments in the Arab world and the Arab - Israeli conflict of the time.

Ethiopia and The Challenge of Independence

A collection of twelve articles which had been published in various journals, all revolving around the Ethiopian modern experience, and in sequence constitute an attempt at understanding the country’s unique success at maintaining independence.

Students and University in Twentieth Century Egyptian Politics

The book follows two dimensions in the history of Egypt’s modernization. One is the
development and the evolution of the University as both a national concept and an educational institution. It reconstructs the role of politicians in shaping higher education from the 1908 establishment of the Egyptian University to Sadat’s revolutionary expansion of the education system. The other dimension is the role of students in politics. The book analyses the influence of the higher education system on the creation of the students as an active sociopolitical class, it surveys the students’ role in major historic junctures, and describes the pivotal role of the educated youth in the making of he country’s modern politics.

Introduction to Modern History of the Middle East

Five volumes history of the Middle East from 18th century developments in the Ottoman Empire to World War I, and the establishment of the modern states of the Middle East. The narrative follows stages of modernization culminating with the emergence of modern nationalists ideas and movements, and is accompanied by hundreds of short informative articles and hundreds of authentic illustrations.

Ethiopia and the Middle East

A discussion of the relations between Ethiopia and the Oriental Middle East from medieval times to the present. It follows two interwoven aspects. One is the reconstruction of major junctures of political connections and strategic collisions. The second is the analysis and evolution of the basic mutual concepts and images which were shaped in earlier formative stages and have been reshaped in later confrontations to be transmitted to the conceptual reservoir of today’s Ethiopian, Egyptian and Arab nationalism.

The Middle East Between the World Wars

Five volumes surveying the history of the Middle East from the aftermath of World War I to the end of World War II. The series analyses the "Parliamentarian" 1920s and "The Crisis of the 1930s" focusing mainly on the dynamism of inter- generational tensions as a key to sociopolitical and ideological changes. In so doing the series surveys developments in each of the major countries, but also attempts at narrating the history of the region as the home of a common Islamic-Arab civilization. Volume 5, The Middle East During World War II, 2003, analyzes the same inter-generational tensions in Arab societies during the war, the anti-British activities on the one hand and the final victory (as of 1942) on the other hand of the elite groups leading to the emergence of the rather conservative Arab League (1945).

Ethiopia: an Empire and a Revolution

A History of Ethiopia from the early medieval Aksumite dynasty to the 1990s as analyzed mainly along the competition between centralizing concepts and institutions (“the Amahara thesis”) on the one hand, and the pluralistic, de-centralist concepts of culture and politics (“the Tigrean thesis”) on the other hand. The narrative attempts also at explaining the ability of this Christian dominated society to retain over that long history its political sovereignty in facing both imperial Islam and Western imperialism.

Youth and Politics in the Middle East – Generations and Identity Crises

A discussion of modern Middle Eastern history as developing around: a. the role of higher education (and its various architects) in shaping new “political generations” in Arab societies. b. the role of such “political generations” -- mainly those of 1906, 1919, 1935, the 1970s—in offering and struggling for renewed interpretations of both politics and identity.

The Nile – Histories, Cultures, Myths

This Book Erlich edited with Israel Gershoni. It's a collection of 18 articles contributed by some of the world’s leading scholars of Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia, of Islam and of Eastern Christianity. These articles were originally presented in a 1997 international conference held in Tel Aviv University and in Jerusalem under the same title. The introduction, written with co-editor (and co-organizer) Professor Israel Gershoni, presents the main theme of the book: the role of the great river in communicating, but also separating between its various riparian cultures and societies. The various chapters discuss the main Nile countries’ common world of inter-relations, mutual images and myths, their image in medieval and modern Europe, and the various historical backgrounds to today’s crisis of the Nile’s waters.

The Cross and the River –Ethiopia, Egypt and the Nile

A history of sixteen centuries of relations is analyzed revolving around dimensions of mutual dependence: Ethiopia being the main source of Egypt’s Nile, Egypt being the main source of Ethiopia’s Christianity. The complexities of good neighborliness and conflicts, of suspicions, myths and wars, of religious and cultural interpretations of the “self” and the “other”, is discussed from the 4th century creation of Ethiopia as a bishopric of the Egyptian Church to today’s Egyptian and Ethiopian anxieties over the future of the Nile waters.

Ethiopia – Christianity, Islam, Judaism

This Book Erlich wrote with Steven Kaplan and Hagar Salamon. It's a detailed history of Ethiopia’s religious history. A discussion of the Ethiopian interpretation of each of those three belief systems, their local institutions, and their inter-relations. An introduction (by H. Erlich, the general editor) summarizes the flexible, non-essentialist nature of Ethiopia’s religiosity. “Christianity” (by Professor Steven Kaplan) analyzes the history and many faces of the country’s hegemonic religion. “Islam” (H. Erlich) discusses its role among ethnic minorities and on the margins of society, and ends with its apparent revolution and penetration into the core as of the 1990s. “Judaism” (by Hagar Salamon) surveys “Beta Israel”’s culture against the historical Ethiopian context.

Egypt – The Older Sister

The first volume of the Open University’s new series “The Middle East in Our Time”. The series’ twelve volumes, authored by leading Israeli scholars (with H. Erlich as chief editor) will cover the history of the region’s various states from 1945 to the 1980s, (each volume concluding with a succinct analysis to 2000). The Older Sister’s introduction survey’s Egypt leading role in shaping modern developments in the Middle East and in influencing the all-regional periodization of the post World War II era. The book’s three parts are devoted to a detailed analysis of “The End of the Parliamentarian Era, 1945–1952”, “Nasser and Nasserism, 1952–1970”, and “Sadat – The Return to Egyptianism, 1970 - 1981”. The pivotal theme is the ever-dynamic interplay between the various social and political forces in Egypt and the country’s various identities – Islamic, Arab, Egyptian.

Saudi Arabia and Ethiopia – Christianity, Islam and Politics Entwined

A history of modern relations between the Wahhabi-Islamic state and Ethiopia, beginning in the 1930s and culminating in today’s radicalization of Islam in the region and Ethiopia’s transformation from a “Christian island” into a multicultural state. The narrative follows the development of strategic relations ever since Mussolini’s conquest of Ethiopia through the Ogaden war and local activities of the terrorism networks of the 1990s. The conceptual dilemmas of Ethiopia’s Christian establishments, of Ethiopia’s Muslim communities and of the Saudis are analyzed as they have developed along and influenced these processes.

Ethiopia – History of a Siege Culture

An analytical survey of Ethiopia’s history from early Aksumite period to today’s developments. The first part of the book discusses the medieval foundations of the country’s political culture; the second part focuses on the late 19th century victory of Ethiopia over both European imperialists and local neighbors; and the third part explains the price paid for these formative victories – the entrenchment of traditional structures and concepts as shapers of Ethiopia to 1974. The fourth part analyzes first the communist revolution under Mangistu Haila-Mariam ( to 1991) as a recycling of the medieval siege culture in a new cloak, and second, arguing that today’s opening to both the outside world as well as to internal diversity and free economy is the first authentic revolution in the country’s history.

Islam and Christianity in the Horn of Africa, Somalia, Ethiopia, Sudan

Tracing the modern history of the region where the two religions first met, and where they are engaged now in active confrontation, this book surveys the political developments in the Horn of Africa since the late nineteenth century. The analysis combines the factual changes with an exploration of the ways in which religious formulations of the nearby "other" influenced policymaking and were also reshaped by it. It demonstrates how initial Islamic and Christian concepts remain directly relevant in the region today.

Erlich's Festschrift

( Israel Gershoni and Meir Hatina (eds.), Narrating the Nile: Politics, Cultures, Identities - Essays in Honor of Haggai Erlich, Lynne Rienner Publishers, Boulder, 2008.
    • The book contains twelve articles by leading scholars of Middle Eastern and Ethiopian histories, Erlich's list of publications (including some fifty articles) by years, 1969–2008, and an article analyzing his overall contribution: Israel Gershoni, "Honoring Haggai Erlich" (pp. 233 – 239).

Present study
"Somalis, Ethiopians, Sudanese -- Islam and Christianity in the Horn of Africa." forthcoming

Books

  • Haggai Erlich, Ethiopia and Eritrea, Ras Alula, 1875–1897, Michigan State University Press, 1982. (Reprint, new preface, Red Sea Press, New Jersey and Asmara 1997).
  • Haggai Erlich, The Struggle Over Eritrea, 1962–1978, Hoover Institution, Stanford, 1983.
  • Haggai Erlich, Ethiopia and The Challenge of Independence, Lynne Rienner Press, Boulder 1986.
  • Haggai Erlich, Students and University in Twentieth Century Egyptian Politics, Frank Cass Publishers, London 1989.
  • Haggai Erlich, Introduction to Modern History of the Middle East, The Open University Press, Tel Aviv, 1987 - 1991. (Hebrew)
  • Haggai Erlich, Ethiopia and the Middle East, Lynne Rienner Press, Boulder, 1994.
  • Haggai Erlich, The Middle East Between the World Wars, The Open University Press, Tel Aviv, 1992 - 2003. (Hebrew).
  • Haggai Erlich, Ethiopia: an Empire and a Revolution, The Open University Press, Tel Aviv 1997 (Hebrew).
  • Haggai Erlich, Youth and Politics in the Middle East – Generations and Identity Crises, Tel Aviv 1998 (Hebrew)
  • Haggai Erlich and Israel Gershoni (eds.) The Nile – Histories, Cultures, Myths, Lynne Rienner Publishes, Boulder 2000.
  • Haggai Erlich, The Cross and the River: Ethiopia, Egypt and the Nile, Lynne Rienner Publishers, Boulder 2002.
  • Haggai Erlich, Steven Kaplan and Hagar Salamon, Ethiopia – Christianity, Islam, Judaism, The Open University Press, Tel Aviv, 2003 (Hebrew)
  • Haggai Erlich, Egypt – The Older Sister, The Open University Press, Tel Aviv (Hebrew, 2003, 343 pp.)
  • Haggai Erlich, Saudi Arabia and Ethiopia – Christianity, Islam and Politics Entwined, Lynne Rienner Publishers
    Lynne Rienner Publishers
    Lynne Rienner Publishers is an independent scholarly and textbook publishing firm. It was founded in 1984 and publishes in the fields of international studies and comparative world politics. It also publishes books about US politics, sociology and criminology. It also translates foreign books to...

    , January 2007
  • Haggai Erlich, Ethiopia – History of a Siege Culture, Broadcast University, Ministry of Defence, Tel Aviv, 2008 (Hebrew, 295 pp.)
  • Haggai Erlich, Islam and Christianity in the Horn of Africa, Somalia, Ethiopia, Sudan, Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2010, 225 pp.

External links

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