Education of Jerusalem
Because of the high birth rate and the strong religious convictions of many among the population, education has always involved complex issues. The language of instruction is Hebrew in most Jewish schools and Arabic in Arab schools. English is the most common second language. Separate Jewish school systems exist for the various religious traditions. In these the curriculum concentrates much more heavily on the study of Jewish religion, history, and sacred texts. As a rule, the government-controlled Arab schools follow the Jordanian curriculum. While the majority of school-age children attend government schools, there are numerous private institutions maintained by Jewish, Muslim, and Christian religious organizations; in the Christian schools the language of instruction is sometimes English or French. State kindergartens were introduced in East Jerusalem in 1967. Education is the single most important item in the city’s budget, and the municipality is responsible for maintaining classrooms from kindergarten through high school.
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (opened 1925) is Israel’s oldest, though no longer the largest, institution of higher learning, with an enrollment exceeding 20,000 students. It has two main campuses—at Mount Scopus in the east and at Givʿat Ram in the west, in addition to the medical school at Ein Karem and the Faculty of Agriculture in Rehovot. The old buildings on Mount Scopus have been renovated and supplemented by a new complex of buildings. Al-Quds University (1995), a Palestinian Arab institution with headquarters at Abu Dis, just outside the city limits in the West Bank, operates partly in buildings in East Jerusalem. Other institutes of higher learning are the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design (1906), the Samuel Rubin Academy of Music (1945), the Hebrew Union College (a branch of the Reform Jewish seminary founded in Cincinnati, Ohio), several teachers colleges, a Mormon university, and an Armenian seminary.
The National Library of Israel (1892), with more than five million volumes in its main and dependent libraries, is Israel’s largest. It holds the foremost collection of books, incunabula, and periodicals of Judaica in the world, as well as an excellent library on all fields, particularly archaeology and Middle Eastern studies, including the history of Palestine. In addition, there are the Library of the Knesset (1949) and the State Archives (1949) and the Municipal Library and its branches. The Gulbenkian Library (1929) is one of the best Armenian libraries outside Armenia. The Khalidi Library (1900) in the Old City holds several hundred Arabic manuscripts and several thousand Arabic books. Numerous other libraries serve a variety of needs.
Social services provide adult education, clubs for older people, and youth clubs among a variety of programs in both parts of the city. Community centers are focal points of educational and recreation programs in the neighborhoods.
Cultural life
Israelis often say that although Jerusalem is the country’s political, historical, and religious capital, Tel Aviv is the nation’s financial, culinary, and cultural capital. In recent decades, however, Jerusalem has been narrowing the gap when it comes to both the number and quality of its cultural institutions.
The Israel Museum (1965) continues to be the foremost cultural attraction—especially after its four-year $100 million renovation and expansion (2007–10). In addition to its large collection of Western and Israeli paintings, the museum houses a comprehensive Middle Eastern archaeological collection, several important Dead Sea Scrolls and other relics (displayed in the Shrine of the Book annex), a notable collection of Jewish ritual art, Middle Eastern ethnological exhibits, a sculpture garden, and a youth wing. The Rockefeller Archaeological Museum (1938), located in East Jerusalem, concentrates on the archaeology of the Holy Land.
Jerusalem’s Museum Row, situated opposite Israel’s Knesset, comprises the aforementioned Israel Museum; the Bible Lands Museum (1992), one of the world’s finest museums dedicated to the history of the ancient Near East; the interactive Bloomfield Science Museum (1992); and Israel’s National Library, which is on the Givʿat Ram campus of the Hebrew University.
There is an Islamic Museum on the Temple Mount (the area is known in Islam as Al-Ḥaram al-Sharīf), where Al-Aqsa Mosque and the Dome of the Rock are located. The L.A. Mayer Memorial Museum for Islamic Art (1974) in west Jerusalem houses a world-class collection of antique clocks. The Museum on the Seam (1983), located in the former no-man’s-land that divided Jewish west Jerusalem from Arab East Jerusalem, is a contemporary art museum often dealing with controversial social and political themes.
Among important scholarly research institutes in the city are the École Biblique et Archéologique Française (1890), the Studium Biblicum Franciscanum (1924), the Pontifical Biblical Institute (1909), the British School of Archaeology (founded in 1919, from 1998 operating as part of the Council for British Research in the Levant, Jerusalem), the William Foxwell Albright Institute of Archaeological Research (1900), and the Ben-Zvi Institute (1948). All these have libraries dealing with theology and the ancient and modern history of Israel and the Middle East; some have collections of antiquities and valuable manuscripts.
Jerusalem has become a major center for the performing arts, especially since a wave of Jewish immigration from the former Soviet countries in the early 1990s included a large influx of accomplished musicians, actors, and directors. The annual Israel Festival attracts leading troupes from around the world every spring. Newer annual festivals, such as the winter Festival of Light and the Festival of Sacred Music, are growing in popularity. The Jerusalem Theatre in west Jerusalem holds performances by visiting acting companies and is the home of the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra. An especially dramatic outdoor venue for large concerts and performances is the Sultan’s Pool, at the foot of the Old City walls. The Jerusalem Cinematheque shows a wide variety of films in many languages and hosts the annual Jewish Film Festival. The biennial Jerusalem Book Fair is one of the world’s notable international fairs for authors and publishers.
The Jerusalem Foundation (1966) raises funds for the preservation of the city’s multireligious heritage and for the beautification of the city. This foundation is responsible for creating many of Jerusalem’s parks, gardens, woodlands; of particular note is the Wohl Rose Garden, situated between the Knesset and the Supreme Court building. Small gardens, playgrounds, and recreation areas dot the city. The Biblical Zoo, relocated and expanded in 1982, houses specimens of all the animals that are mentioned in the Bible. In 2015 the Gazelle Valley Park was inaugurated as a reserve for gazelles, a native animal that had long been absent from Jerusalem’s landscape.
The Jerusalem Post, an English-language daily, is published in Jerusalem, as is the Arabic daily Al-Quds. The major Hebrew daily newspapers, however, are all published in Tel Aviv–Yafo. The headquarters of the Israel Broadcasting Authority (television and radio) are in Jerusalem. Radio broadcasts are mainly in Hebrew and Arabic, though some programs are also broadcast in other languages. The PA broadcasts radio and television programs from transmitters located outside the city.
The municipality and a public lottery subsidize professional sports and facilities for the public. The main outdoor sports arena, Teddy Kollek Stadium (named for the city’s longtime mayor), seats more than 20,000 spectators. The adjacent Payis Arena hosts indoor sporting events and concerts. The leading professional sports are football (soccer) and basketball. Beitar Jerusalem football team has won Israel’s national championship several times.
Joshua Prawer Bernard Wasserstein Buzzy Gordon