2011 Jan Karski & Pola Nirenska Prize at YIVO Awarded to Marcin Wodziński
The Award Committee of the Jan Karski and Pola Nirenska Prize has the pleasure to announce that Professor Marcin Wodziński of Wrocław, Poland, is the 2011 recipient of the Karski-Nirenska award. Endowed by Professor Jan Karski at the YIVO Institute for Jewish Research in 1992, the $5,000 prize goes to authors of published works documenting Polish-Jewish relations and Jewish contributions to Polish culture. The winner was chosen by the Award Committee, whose members are Prof. Jerzy Tomaszewski, Prof. Feliks Tych, Dr. Eleonora Bergman (director, Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw), Dr. Jonathan Brent (director, YIVO Institute), and Marek Web (YIVO Institute). The award ceremony will be held in the Fall.
Born in 1966 in Świdnica, Poland, Prof. Wodziński, a Polish historian and linguist, has been associated for many years with the University of Wrocław where he had completed his graduate studies specializing in the history and culture of Polish Jews. He is now Professor of History and Literature and, since 2005, Director of the Department of Jewish Studies at the University of Wrocław. His special fields of interest are social history of the Jews in nineteenth-century Poland, regional history of the Jews in Silesia, and Jewish sepulchral art.
He has been active for a long time in the academic endeavors and gatherings inside and outside Poland relating to Jewish history and culture, and has published extensively on related topics. Among the books that Prof. Wodziński has written, worth mentioning are: Haskalah and Hasidism in the Kingdom of Poland: A History of Conflict (Polish, 2003; English, 2005), Hasidism and Politics: The Kingdom of Poland (Polish, 2008; English, 2011), The Graves of Tsadikim in Poland (Polish, 1998), and Bibliography on the History of Jews in Silesia (German, 2004). Additionally, he is the co-editor of the Bibliotheca Judaica series which is published by Wrocław University Publishing. Marcin Wodziński also serves as the chief consultant for history at the Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw.
The late Prof. Jan Karski, the founder of the prize at YIVO, was the envoy of the Polish government-in-exile during the Second World War, who brought to the West firsthand testimony about the conditions in the Warsaw Ghetto and in German death camps. The prize is also named in memory of Professor Karski's late wife, choreographer Pola Nirenska.