Professor Monty Noam Penkower Honored for “After the Holocaust"

Touro Professor Awarded 2023 Bernard Lewis Book Prize by the Association for the Study of the Middle East and Asia

November 07, 2023
Monty Noam Penkower
Professor Monty Noam Penkower

“After the Holocaust” examines how the survivors contended with life following the Shoah, when a third of world Jewry had been obliterated by Nazi Germany and the need for Jewish sovereignty in their ancestral homeland was undeniable. In accepting the award from his home in Jerusalem, Prof. Penkower said that it meant even more to him in light of recent events.

“Aware of the pioneering, scholarly contribution made by the late Prof. Lewis in alerting our world to the dangers of radical Islamism,” Prof. Penkower said, “I am particularly moved to accept this award at a time when Israel continues its war with Hamas, a terrorist adversary guilty of unprecedented atrocities against civilians and committed to the State of Israel’s annihilation.”

ASMEA is “an academic society dedicated to promoting the highest standards of research and teaching in Middle Eastern and African studies, and related fields,” according to its website, and the Bernard Lewis Prize, named after ASMEA’s founding chairman, is awarded to scholars engaged in the study of antisemitism, which was of great importance to Prof. Lewis.

“Professor Penkower’s volume features his characteristically meticulous research in archival sources, insightful analysis of historical figures and events, masterfully clear  prose and passionate engagement with the history of the Jewish people,” said Dr. Michael Shmidman, dean of Touro’s Graduate School of Jewish Studies.

The former Victor J. Selmanowitz Professor of Modern Jewish History at Touro University in New York, Prof. Penkower was one of Touro’s earliest full-time faculty members, having taught at the school’s Manhattan and Brooklyn divisions for both men and women since 1974. Upon moving to Israel in July 2002, he taught modern Jewish history at Touro's Graduate School of Jewish Studies’ Israel branch campus for five years before retiring from academic teaching.

Prof. Penkower has lectured widely on American history and on modern Jewish history, and his numerous publications include “The Jews Were Expendable: Free World Diplomacy and the Holocaust,” (1983), a National Jewish Book Award finalist and recipient of the B’nai B’rith A.D.L. Merit for Educational Distinction. “The Jews Were Expendable” also earned Prof. Penkower the Samuel Belkin Memorial Literary Award from Yeshiva University, together with his 1986 work, “The Emergence of Zionist Thought.” Especially noteworthy is Prof. Penkower’s five-volume study, four of which were published by the Touro University Press, of the rise of the State of Israel in the years 1933-1948.

His newest book, “The Holocaust and Israel Restored: From Rupture to Revival,” will be published by the Touro University Press in 2024.