Monday, July 28, 2025 - Harvard announced a new undergraduate study abroad program with Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and launched a postdoctoral fellowship for Israeli scientists at Harvard Medical School on Monday in a dramatic expansion of the University’s academic and institutional ties to Israel.
The Office of International
Education added BGU to its roster of approved-term time study abroad partners
earlier this month. The program will begin in spring 2026 and offer Harvard
College students credit-bearing opportunities for spring, full-year, or summer
study in Israel.
The Medical School
fellowship — funded by the Blavatanik Family Foundation and the Dorot
Foundation and backed by the Kalaniyot Foundation, which has a chapter at HMS —
will support Israeli researchers in conducting two to three years of basic
biomedical research at HMS or one of its affiliated hospitals in Boston.
Harvard Vice Provost for
International Affairs Mark C. Elliott said the BGU partnership was the first
step in “increased academic collaboration across the region in the coming
years.”
“The collaboration with BGU
is the latest in Harvard’s long and rich history of engagement with
institutions of higher education across Israel,” he said.
The Monday announcements
arrived half a year after Harvard agreed in January to form a new
partnership with an Israeli university as part of a settlement with two groups
that had sued Harvard over allegations that it failed to address antisemitism
on campus.
The announcements were also
made just weeks after Harvard reopened negotiations with the Trump
administration, which has withheld nearly $3 billion in federal funding since
April amid ongoing concerns of campus antisemitism.
Late last month, the White
House issued a formal finding that Harvard had violated Title VI of the Civil
Rights Act and demonstrated a “deliberate indifference” toward combatting
antisemitism and anti-Israeli discrimination.
But in a confidential memo sent to Harvard on
April 3 — which was made public in early July — the White House signaled its
approval of the University’s commitment in the earlier settlement to partner
with Israeli institutions and end its ties to Birzeit.
It remains unclear whether the partnership with BGU and the
Kalaniyot Fellowship were direct responses to administration demands.
As campus tensions spiked
following Hamas Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel and Israel’s war in Gaza,
Harvard has faced calls to build the study of Israel, Palestine, and the
region’s culture and history into its research and curricular offerings. The
University has agreed to expand programs for the study of Hebrew and Judaic
languages, as well as of antisemitism. But it has not made any public
commitments to expanding Palestinian studies, Arabic language programs, or
Islamic studies.
Harvard suspended its
research partnership with a Palestinian university — Birzeit University in the
West Bank — in April, bowing to longstanding calls from its critics to
terminate the relationship because of accusations that Birzeit had ties to
Hamas.
Harvard’s internal task
force on antisemitism and anti-Israeli bias, which released its final report in
late April, recommended that the University condition any continued
relationship with Birzeit on the establishment of a parallel partnership with
an Israeli institution — a step seemingly fulfilled by the new agreement with
BGU.
BGU, located in the Negev
desert city of Be’er-Sheva, is a public research institution with strengths in
climate science, desert agriculture, and applied biotechnology. All courses for
visiting undergraduate students will be taught in English, with students
joining BGU classes alongside Israeli peers.
Amanda Claybaugh, dean of
undergraduate education, said that the collaboration with BGU was driven in
part by a desire to offer students academic opportunities that Harvard cannot
replicate in Cambridge.
“I’m delighted that we’re
adding BGU to the list of Israeli universities where our students can study
abroad, because BGU offers opportunities that aren’t available here at
Harvard,” she said.
The rollout also follows
tensions with one of Harvard’s largest donors. In late 2023, the Blavatnik
Family Foundation — whose namesake, billionaire Leonard V. Blavatnik, has given
hundreds of millions to Harvard — paused new donations in protest of the University’s
response to campus antisemitism.
But in recent months,
Blavatnik has returned. Earlier this month, he pledged nearly $19 million in
donations to HMS in response to lost federal research support under the Trump
administration. More than $5 million of Blavatnik’s gift was dedicated toward
junior faculty conducting basic research. It was not immediately clear how much
of that amount would go toward the Kalaniyot fellowships.
The new partnerships are not Harvard’s first with Israeli
institutions. The OIE already offers undergraduate study abroad programs with
Tel Aviv University, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Technion, and the
University of Haifa.
And in 2021, HMS partnered
with the Clalit Research Institute in Israel through the Berkowitz Family
Living Laboratory to incubate research on precision medicine for both Israeli
and global populations.
0 Comments