Shimon Lev

Shimon Lev (Low)

Shimon Lev (Low) (Hebrew: שמעון לב; born August 1, 1962) is an Israeli multidisciplinary artist, writer, photographer, curator and researcher in the fields of Indian Studies, art and literature, religion, and travel. He holds a Doctoral degree on the subject of the mutual influence of the Jewish and Indian cultures. Lev teaches at the Hadassah Academic College.

Lev is the author of "Soulmates", the story of Mahatma Gandhi and Hermann Kallenbach (Orient BlackSwan, 2012), the first comprehensive study analyzing the unique and enigmatic relationship between Gandhi and his closest intimate friend and supporter, Hermann Kallenbach, in the context of his developing in his formative years in South Africa, and in the understanding of his relationship to the Zionist movement.[1][2] The Hindu found it "insightful" and "a valuable addition to Gandhi studies for the historian".[3] In particular the book debunks the idea that Gandhi and Kallenbach had a homosexual relationship.[4]

Following the publication of the unique relationships between Gandhi and Kallenbach in "Soulmates", The Government of Lithuania decided to put a statue of the two men in the city of Rusnė in the republic.[5]

Lev also wrote "Vesheyodea Lishol" (Hebrew for "And He who Knows how to Ask", Xargol Publisher, Israel 1998), which is a collection of life stories of people who abandoned the Jewish Orthodox religion, written in a form of monologues.

Education

Shimon Lev studied Photography at the Hadassah Academic College, Jerusalem (graduated 1988). He earned B.A.degree and M.A. Degree (Cum Laude), Faculty of Humanities (2010), the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He earned his Doctorate from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 2016. His dissertation is about the cultural and political meeting between the Jewish world and the Indian World – A comparative research in light of the Indian and Zionist national movements.

Books

Author

Photographer

Academic Editor

Art

Lev has produced 28 exhibitions worldwide, and participated in more than 50 others.[11] In addition, he contributed photographs for a number of art books. He also directed three television films.

In an exhibition summarizing one hundred years of photography in the Land of Israel, Lev was chosen to represent the 1990s.

In 2014 Lev created, together with the Austrian artist Friedemann Derschmidt, an exhibition of photographs, video clips and Performance art about his father's family, titled "Two Family Archives".[12] Derschmidt exhibited documents and photography works of his own family, some of whom have been Nazi party members. Following the exhibit, Lev reported, a few of them boycotted the artist and threatened to file charges against him. The exhibition received broad coverage.[13][14]

Lev was the chief curator, researcher and catalogue editor for the historical research exhibition at the Tower of David Museum, Jerusalem: "The Camera Men: Women and Men Photograph Jerusalem, 1900–1950", May 2016.

Papers

Among his published papers are:

Films

Family

Shimon Lev is the son of Ze’ev Lev (Low), a physicist, Torah scholar, and founder of the Jerusalem College of Technology. Shimon Lev has three children: Gideon, Tamar and Ilay, and he lives in Yafo (Jaffa), Israel.

References

  1. A review on the book at thebookreviewindia.org
  2. "The Mahatma's strange friend". The Hindu. December 3, 2012. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  3. Saks, David (April 18, 2013). "Gandhi, Kallenbach and the controversial 'Vaseline' reference". Thought Leader/Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  4. Sinha, Kounteya (19 September 2015). "Hermann Kallenbach was Mahatma Gandhi's 'soulmate'". The Times of India.
  5. Lev interviews about the book, on YouTube
  6. The book's web page (Hebrew)
  7. Exhibition web page
  8. Ha'aretz daily article
  9. The Jerusalem Post article
  10. A partial list of events (Hebrew)
  11. Exhibition web site
  12. A Die-Presse article
  13. A Jeruselem Post article (in French)
  14. Introduction by the editors
  15. Web site of the film
  16. Facebook page (Hebrew)

External links

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