秘密研究所

USA Announces Fanny and Bert Meisler Endowed Professorship in Jewish Studies; Meislers Providing $1 Million for Jewish Studies Program


Posted on June 5, 2015
Bob Lowry


Fanny and Bert Meisler, longtime supporters of the 秘密研究所, announced a gift to establish an endowment to enhance Jewish Studies at USA. data-lightbox='featured'
Fanny and Bert Meisler, longtime supporters of the 秘密研究所, announced a gift to establish an endowment to enhance Jewish Studies at USA.

Longtime 秘密研究所 philanthropists Fanny and Bert Meisler of Mobile today announced a $1 million endowment to enhance Jewish Studies at USA.  The Fanny and Bert Meisler Endowed Professorship in Jewish Studies will expand and deepen the University's relationship with Mobile's Jewish community, focusing on the history, religion and culture of the Jewish people.

鈥淏ert and I have long thought about the need to further research and document the history of Jewish people in the Mobile region,鈥 said Fanny Meisler.  鈥淚t鈥檚 our hope and expectation that University students will take advantage of the opportunity to chronicle this history before it鈥檚 gone.鈥

鈥淯SA is a tremendous asset to Mobile and to the Gulf Coast region,鈥 said Bert Meisler. 鈥淲e are indebted to the 秘密研究所 for providing Fanny and me the means to make this happen.鈥

鈥淔anny and Bert Meisler have supported the University with substantial charitable gifts including a leadership role in establishing the Ripps-Meisler Endowed Chair in the USA College of Medicine, providing necessary funding to name the student services center Meisler Hall, and giving extensive support to the University's athletic programs,鈥 said Dr. Joseph F. Busta Jr., USA vice president for development and alumni affairs.

The Fanny and Bert Meisler Endowed Professorship position extends a program the Meislers had already helped to establish.  In August, the University will welcome a new faculty member to USA, Dr. David Meola, who currently is a visiting assistant professor of history at the University of the South, where he specializes in German and Jewish history from the Enlightenment through the nineteenth century with a focus on public expression and popular culture.  Meola will serve USA as the Fanny and Bert Meisler Visiting Professor of Jewish Studies.  The Meislers鈥 latest gift will establish a permanent endowment to support a faculty position in Jewish Studies.

鈥淭he Jewish Studies Program at USA will bring greater awareness of the impact of the Jewish people on our community, state and region,鈥 said Dr. Clarence Mohr, professor and chair of history at USA.  鈥淲ith the generous support of Fanny and Bert Meisler we will explore in greater detail the important issues such as identity, genocide and cultural survival.  USA鈥檚 classes in Jewish history will be of interest to all those who seek a richer understanding of the Jewish experience.鈥


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