09 Aug 2017 Targeted from Both Sides Europe’s Jews need all the help they can get as they find themselves hemmed in by the twin forces of ill political winds and civilization clash
01 Sep 2017 Among the Publications of the Euro-Mediteranean Institute Joelle Aflalo, Chairwoman of the Matanel Foundation, Offering Pope Francis, the Song of Songs in eight languages (Hebrew, Arabic, Chinese, French, English, Deutch, Italian, Russian, Spanish)
20 Dec 2016 ג'ואל תליט"א: היהודיה הכי חזקה באירופה Joelle "Tlita" :The strongest Jew in Europe →article-content
20 Nov 2016 Une maison pour la vie Marc-Alain Ouaknin s’entretient avec David Stoleru cet architecte et éducateur passionné sur le sens du Beit Project et la manière dont il est réalisé aujourd’hui à travers toute l’Europe.
15 May 2015 Le Prix Lord Jakobovitz pour le judaïsme européen 2015 décerné au Premier Ministre Manuel Valls
12 May 2015 Les membres de la commission constante du Conseil des Rabbins européens (CER), accompagnés de Boris Minz, président du comité de patronage, et de Mme Joelle Aflalo, présidente de la fondation Matanel, se sont rendus à Paris pour une session spéciale qui s’est tenue à la veille de l’ouverture, à Toulouse, du Congrès du CER.
22 Mar 2014 Lecture d'Es-Saouira de Mogador, Ami Bouganim Lecture de Marrakech-Jérusalem, Shlomo Elbaz
The Faculty of Humanities, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 05 Jun 2014 The Matanel Prize in Jewish Thought
01 Mar 2013 Présentation et critique du livre “Contes de Braslav“, rédigé par Rabbi Nahman au 18e siècle et traduit de l'hébreu par Laurent Cohen
02 Mar 2013 Un article sur le livre de Paul Sidoun, Le Divan et le Talmud, paru dans la collection Matanel
10 Mar 2013 Une interview de Sophie Stern, auteure de Recommencer ailleurs, paru dans la collection Matanel
10 Apr 2013 Un article de J.-P. Allali sur le livre de S. Elbaz, Marrakech-Jérusalem, paru dans la collection Matanel
22 May 2013 Angela Merkel awarded Jakobovits Prize - Interview of Joelle Aflalo,president of Matanel Foundation (Brussels,Great Synagogue of Europe)
05 Apr 2012 Emission de radio Brouillons de culture traitant des livres publiés par Avant-Propos dans la collection Matanel
12 Apr 2012 כתבה על ד"ר מאיר בוזגלו, על פעילותו לטובת תחיית הפיוטים ועל תנועת תיקון שהקים בעידוד קרן מתנאל
Témoin de la 2ème génération 30 Jul 2012 Pourquoi parler d'Auschwitz ? Article pour sensibiliser les jeunes lycéens au génocide et enseigner la tolérance.
21 Apr 2012 Interview de Adin Steinzaltz autour du livre Mots simples paru chez Avant-Propos, Collection Matanel (2012)
EUROPEAN JEWISH PRESS Israel One of Judaism’s great commentators, Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz, dies at age 83 By Yossi Lempkowicz August 7, 2020 No Comments Share Tweet Google+ + A prolific author, he wrote as many as 60 books on an array of topics, including commentaries on the Talmud, the Torah, Jewish mysticism, Chassidism and Jewish philosophy. By JNS Rabbi Adin Even-Israel Steinsaltz, one of Judaism’s exceptional modern-day commentators, died in Jerusalem after suffering from acute pneumonia. He was 83 years old. Steinsaltz was born in Jerusalem on July 11, 1937. His scholarship was noted at an early age. He studied mathematics, chemistry and physics from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and after graduating began his career as an educator and a school principal in Jerusalem. It was also the beginning of his writing a great many varied Jewish books. In 1965, in conjunction with the Government of Israel, he founded the Israel Institute for Talmudic Publications, later the Steinsaltz Center, which became his life’s work—helping to make Judaism and the heritage of Israel accessible by translating and explaining the Babylonian Talmud to the whole world. Steinsaltz is considered one of the most important contemporary Jewish religious commentators and thinkers. His writings and philosophical works have been translated into dozens of languages to the benefit of millions of people all over the world. He authored as many as 60 books on various topics, including guides to and commentaries on the Talmud, the Torah, Jewish mysticism, Chassidism, Jewish philosophy and more. He later took on the name Even-Israel (“Stone of Israel”). One of the rabbi’s most renowned and significant projects was the Steinsaltz-Talmud, a translation from the original Aramaic, alongside an annotated explanation to all 2,711 pages of the Babylonian Talmud. Four years ago, the rabbi finished his commentary on the Torah (The Pentateuch), as well as on the writings of the Prophets Jeremiah, Isaiah and Ezekiel, and on the book of Psalms. In recent years, he went on to complete the full commentary of the Old Testament, in both English and Hebrew, while his commentary on the six books of the Mishnah are due to be published in the coming months. His work earned him recognition and praise in Israel and around the world. Time magazine called him a “once-in-a-millennium scholar,” while the long list of awards and degrees he received included the Israel Prize for Jewish Studies in 1988, the President’s Medal in 2012, the Yakir Yerushalayim (“Beloved of Jerusalem”) Medal in 2017, and honorary doctorates from Bar-Ilan University, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and Yeshiva University in New York. The U.S. Library of Congress recently announced the acceptance into its catalogue of an English translation of an extensive work about the Steinsaltz Center and its work. The Steinsaltz Center in Jerusalem has served as an umbrella organization, coordinating the rabbi’s various activities and initiatives, and it will continue to do so in his memory. The organization includes a publishing house, and works to establish educational institutions- and promote informal education projects. The center remains dedicated to promoting the rabbi’s vision of making Jewish learnings and Jewish culture accessible to all. Steinsaltz is survived by his wife, Sarah; their three children; and many grandchildren.