World Union of Jewish Students
Company type | Non-profit |
---|---|
Founded | 1924 |
Headquarters | Tel Aviv, Israel |
Website | www.wujs.org.il |
The World Union of Jewish Students (WUJS; Template:Pron-en) is the international, pluralistic, non-partisan umbrella organisation comprising of 48 national independent Jewish Student Unions from all over the world, founded in 1924, with Albert Einstein as its first Chairman. Other previous Chairmen have included Amos Oz and Chaim Herzog.
The headquarters of WUJS are located in Tel Aviv, Israel and its current Chairman is Oliver Worth, a British immigrant from the United Kingdom.
Histroy
1924-1929
The World Union of Jewish Students was founded in 1924 by Zvi Lauterpacht, an Austrian Jew who was aggrieved by the injustices regarding the admittance of Jews to European universities, which at the time had quotes for Jewish students. As this quota system spread throughout Europe, Lauterpacht saw the need to spread his campaigning efforts.[1] From this the concept of an organized international union began to materialize. The union, however, only began to truly develop when Albert Einstein threw his weight behind the union. Then a lecturer in Berlin, Einstein was equally concerned with growing anti-semitism across Europe, himself having been verbally attacked when lecturing. In 1925 Einstein accepted Lauterpacht's invitation to be the union's first Chairman.
WUJS Executive
The World Union of Jewish Students is administered by its Executive. Chaired by a full-time Chairman, the Executive is comprised of the the Presidents of WUJS' continental and special status unions.
- Australasian Union of Jewish Students (AUJS): Australasia
- Canadian Federation of Jewish Students (CFJS): Canada
- European Union of Jewish Students (EUJS): Europe
- Federacion Universitaria Sionista Latinoamericana (FUSLA): Latin America
- National Union of Israeli Students (NUIS): Israel
- Union des étudiants juifs de France (UEJF): France
- Union of Jewish Students (UJS): United Kingdom
- South African Union of Jewish Students (SAUJS): South Africa
See also
- Chabad on Campus Foundation
- Hillel: The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life
- CampusJ
- Religion and the internet