Omer Bartov

Historian

Birthday April 17, 1954

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Ein HaHoresh, Israel

Age 69 years old

Nationality American

#53819 Most Popular

1930

Bartov's mother immigrated to Mandatory Palestine from Buchach, Ukraine, in the mid-1930s.

1937

He said that Israel's 37th government had brought "a very radical shift", adding, "I am a historian of the 20th century and don’t make analogies lightly", before recounting how the movement of fringe politics into the mainstream in Europe led to fascism, and emphasizing: "This is the current moment in Israel. It's terrifying to see it happening."

1954

Omer Bartov (עֹמֶר בַּרְטוֹב ; born 1954) is an Israeli-born historian.

Omer Bartov was born in 1954 in Ein HaHoresh, Israel.

His father, Hanoch Bartov, was an author and journalist whose parents immigrated to Mandatory Palestine from Poland before Hanoch was born.

1984

In 1984, he was a Visiting Fellow at Princeton University's Davis Center for Historical Studies.

1989

Bartov was a Junior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows from 1989 to 1992.

1992

From 1992 to 2000, Bartov taught at Rutgers University, where he held the Raoul Wallenberg Professorship in Human Rights.

At Rutgers, he was also a Senior Fellow at the Rutgers Center for Historical Analysis.

2000

He is the Samuel Pisar Professor of Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Brown University, where he has taught since 2000.

Bartov is a historian of the Holocaust and is considered one of the world's leading authorities on genocide.

The Forward calls him "one of the foremost scholars of Jewish life in Galicia."

The son of Israel Prize-winning author Hanoch Bartov, Bartov was born in Israel and educated at Tel Aviv University and St. Antony's College, Oxford.

As a historian, he is most noted for his studies of the German Army in World War II.

Bartov has challenged the popular view that the German Army was an apolitical force that had little involvement in war crimes or crimes against humanity in World War II, arguing that the Wehrmacht was a deeply Nazi institution that played a key role in the Holocaust in the occupied areas of the Soviet Union.

He has also characterized Israel's treatment of Palestinians in the occupied territories as apartheid.

Bartov joined the faculty of Brown University in 2000.

2005

He was elected a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2005.

In August 2023, Bartov was one of more than 1,500 U.S., Israeli, Jewish and Palestinian academics and public figures who signed an open letter stating that Israel operates "a regime of apartheid" and calling on U.S. Jewish groups to speak out against the occupation in Palestine.