Marcel-Jacques Dubois | |
Nationality: | France, Israel |
Occupation: | Theologian, professor of philosophy |
Discipline: | Theology, Philosophy |
Sub Discipline: | Catholic-Jewish relations |
Workplaces: | Hebrew University of Jerusalem |
Marcel-Jacques Dubois (1920–2007) was a French academic and theologian of the Dominican Order and a naturalized citizen of Israel. He was linked to Bruno Hussar's House of Isaiah and involved in Relations between Catholicism and Judaism. He was professor of philosophy at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (where he served as chairman of department) and was on the 1974 Commission of the Holy See for Religious Relations with the Jews. He had significance as an orthodox Dominican who rejected supersessionism. He spent much to most of his life in Israel and Teddy Kollek declared him an "Honored Citizen of Jerusalem".[1] He participated in a series of televised debates with Israeli thinker Yeshayahu Leibowitz.[2] [3] In 1996 he won the Israel Prize for his work for Israeli society.[4]