Buber-Rosenzweig-Medal

The Buber-Rosenzweig-Medaille is an annual prize awarded since 1968 by the Deutscher Koordinierungsrat der Gesellschaften für Christlich-Jüdische Zusammenarbeit (DKR; German Coordinating Council of Societies for Christian-Jewish Cooperation) to individuals, initiatives, or institutions, which have actively contributed to Christian–Jewish understanding. Forty-four different societies belong to the DKR. The name of the prize honors the memory of the Austrian-Jewish philosopher, translator, and educator Martin Buber (1878–1965) and the German-Jewish theologian Franz Rosenzweig (1886–1929). In its inaugural year, the prize was granted to both the historian Friedrich Heer (Gottes erste Liebe; God's First Love) and the Protestant theologian Friedrich-Wilhelm Marquardt (Die Entdeckung des Judentums für die christliche Theologie: Israel im Denken Karl Barths; The Discovery of Judaism for Christian Theology: Israel in the Thought of Karl Barths).

Recipients

Zentralkomitee der deutschen Katholiken, Bonn

gollark: T̳͆͑h͍ͫ͂a͐̓͞ẗ̙͝ ͍̆ͤiͥ͊̎s͙̉̔ ̶̣ͥa̷̩̒l̺ͧ͟s͆̾̾o̢̍͞ ̹̓͛a̼͜͟ ͔̟̩h̡̉͏ã̴͉r͖̞͗d̩̯̎ ͔̂̉q̗ͯ̈́u͖̱͞e̲̎ͭs͙̆̾t͈̂͡i͏̰͌o̺̔ͅṋͮ̿.̵ͣ͝
gollark: ų̅̍s̢̮̀e̵̾̿ ̤͋ͮa̻̓ͤ ̪̓͜p̠̤ͭȓ̜͏o͕̯ͮg҉̙ͥr̛̟ͤa͓̩̓m̓͋͢m͚͙ͪi̶̝͒nͬͪ͠g̦̜̾ ̠̖̻l̽͐͠a̛͙̅n̵̽̋g̷̻͟ù̀ͬa̢̓͐g̶̺͗è͉͈.̦̊͞
gollark: f̗̂̿o͔̩͑r͒̉͗t͉̯́h̙͋͌
gollark: Nobody can agree on what programming languages are good.
gollark: You *can* run serverside luaa.

See also

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