
Robert Solomon Wistrich holds
the Neuberger chair for Modern European History at the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem and is head of its International Center for the Study of Antisemitism. He is the
author and editor of 24 books, several of which have won international awards.
These include Socialism and the Jews (Oxford University Press, 1982), The
Jews of Vienna in the Age of Franz Joseph (OUP, 1989) which won the
Austrian State Prize for Danubian History and Antisemitism, the
Longest Hatred (Pantheon, 1992) which received the H.H. Wingate Prize for
non-fiction in the UK. It was also the basis for the PBS film documentary
which Professor Wistrich scripted and co-edited. Among
his recent books are: Hitler and the Holocaust (Random House, 2001) and
the edited volume Nietzsche. Godfather of fascism?
(Princeton, 2002). Between 1999 and 2001 Professor Wistrich
was one of six scholars who were appointed to an international Catholic-Jewish
historical commission to examine the wartime record of Pope Pius the XII. More
recently, in June 2003, he initiated and acted as Chief Historical Advisor for
a BBC film documentary on contemporary Muslim antisemitism,
entitled “Blaming the Jews”. Since 2003, he has edited the research journal Antisemitism International and the Posen
Papers in Contemporary Antisemitism. In 2007 he published Laboratory of World
Destruction, Germans and Jews in Central Europe (University of Nebraska
Press). His forthcoming book to be published by Random House in 2009 is a major
study of the new antisemitism which has developed around the world from 1945 to
the present.