Lydia Aran
Lydia Aran | |
---|---|
Born | 1921 Vilnius, Lithuania |
Died | March 5, 2013 Jerusalem, Israel | (aged 91)
Scientific career | |
Fields | Buddhism |
Institutions | Hebrew University of Jerusalem |
Lydia Aran (Hebrew: לידיה ארן; October 1921 – March 5, 2013 in Jerusalem),[1] was a professor emerita at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and a scholar of Buddhism. She taught in the Hebrew University's Department of Indian Studies until her retirement in 1998.
Aran was born in Vilnius, Lithuania, where she survived the Holocaust by being hidden, with her twin sister, in the small village of Ignalina by her high school history teacher, Krystyna Adolph, an ethnically Polish Catholic.[2][3]
Books[]
- The Art of Nepal
- Buddhism: An Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy and Religion (Hebrew) 1993
- Destroying a Civilization: Tibet 1950-2000 (Hebrew) 2007
References[]
- ^ ארכיון רשומות מהחודש "אוקטובר, 2011 (in Hebrew). lydiaran.com. Archived from the original on 5 November 2013. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
- ^ The Righteous: The Unsung Heroes of the Holocaust, Martin Gilbert, Macmillan, 2004, pp. 2004 ff.
- ^ Krystyna’s Gift—A Memoir, Lydia Aran, Commentary, February 2004
Categories:
- Hebrew University of Jerusalem faculty
- Holocaust survivors
- Lithuanian Jews
- Lithuanian emigrants to Israel
- Writers from Vilnius
- 2013 deaths
- 1921 births
- Lithuanian women writers