Aryeh Shmuelevitz, too soon

Aryeh
Shmuelevitz, a member of the Moshe Dayan Center at Tel Aviv
University and a colleague, died of a heart attack on January 19, while
attending a university event. He was only 72, and although he had retired, he
came to his campus office each day, met with colleagues, and guided students.
The sudden loss has been felt keenly by us.
Shmuelevitz specialized in Ottoman, contemporary Turkish and Iranian history,
and the history of the Jews in the Ottoman empire. He trained at the Hebrew
University under the great German-born orientalists of the old school, in
particular the Turcologist Uriel Heyd, and he had a full command of Ottoman and
modern Turkish. Shmuelevitz was one of the founders of the Shiloah Institute
(precursor of the Dayan Center) in the years before it migrated to the
university. He was instrumental in assisting Shimon Shamir in bringing the
institute to the campus, and his later record of service to the university, as a
teacher and administrator, was long and impressive.
His edition of the sixteenth-century history of the Ottoman empire by the
Candian rabbi-historian Eliyahu Capsali (Seder Eliyahu Zuta) is his
chief scholarly monument. But he also wrote widely on contemporary Turkey, and
loved to travel through the length and breadth of that country. The Turkish
ambassador to Israel attended his funeral this morning.
There is a saying in Turkish, that God takes those he loves early. Aryeh will be
missed by all. This link
is to an article he published on Ataturk's policy toward the great powers.
This tribute to Prof. Shmuelevitz was written by Dr. Martin Kramer, past Director of the Center, and is posted on his website.