Webinar: Hope, Resilience and A New Jewish Narrative

Narrative Hope Resilience banner

Webinar: Hope, Resilience and A New Jewish Narrative November 16, 1pm EST \ 8 PM IL Jewish professionals, leaders and educators from around the world are invited to engage in how to generate internal hope and resilience with ANU’s Naama Klar, director of The Koret International School for Jewish Peoplehood, and Tracy Frydberg, director of[…]

ANU Museum of the Jewish People Acquires the Most Influential Book in History – The Codex Sassoon

Codex Sassoon

The 1100-year-old Codex Sassoon, the oldest and most complete Hebrew Bible, was sold on May 17th at Sotheby’s for $38.1m. The sacred text, considered the foundation of Jewish ethics and beliefs, will become part of the core exhibition and permanent collection of ANU – Museum of the Jewish People in Tel Aviv, Israel. The Codex Sassoon acquisition by the American Friends of[…]

Family Names of the Jews of Egypt

The Jewish community of Egypt flourished from the mid-19th century through the 1950s. Egypt’s increasing integration into international trade, particularly after the opening of the Suez Canal, attracted Jews from other parts of the world who settled in Egypt, manly in Cairo and Alexandria, alongside members of the veteran local Jewish community. Their arrival in[…]

Club Med: Rooms With a View and a Jewish Story

Adi Akunis Club Med’s vacations have always appeared tailor-made for the global rich: Exotic locations in remote regions that offer an “all-inclusive holiday” in the original sense of that term. Food, recreation, sports, organized activities, rest, and good company. But long before this vacation concept was born, it was the idealistic brainchild of two Jews[…]

Avraham Kishke or Sonia Schmalz? Food and Jewish Family Names

Gefilte fish is probably Eastern-European Jewry’s most famous dish. Other well-known Jewish delicacies include borsht, bagels and shmalz. Today, however, not many are aware that the names of these familiar foods are also Jewish surnames, as are babke, kishke, tzimes and more. There are at least a hundred Israelis with the family name Herring, and[…]

The museum is closed until further notice, according to current security orders.

Plan Your Visit

Visiting Hours

Sunday
10am-5pm
Monday
10am-5pm
Tuesday
10am-5pm
Wednesday
10am-5pm
Thursday
10am-8pm
Friday
10am-2pm
Saturday
10am-5pm

Admission Prices (NIS)

Regular
54
Israeli Senior citizens
27
Persons with disabilities, college/university students, “olim”
44
Children under 5 years old
Free entrance
Soldiers in uniform, and Israelis evacuated from the south and the north
free entrance (please show I.D.)

Agents and Groups

Phone

Our Location

15 Klauzner st. Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv. Tel Aviv Campus gate no. 1