From Deseret News archives:

Jerusalem Center deadline is today

Published: Friday, July 7, 2006 12:06 a.m. MDT
 |  E-MAIL | PRINT | FONT + - 
PROVO — Today is the deadline for applications to spend fall semester at Brigham Young University's Jerusalem Center — the first time students will be back at the facility since political unrest forced the school to suspend programs in 2001.

Some 65 BYU students had applied for the 44 open seats and a few more applications were expected to be submitted by the end of the day, said Brent Harker, a spokesman for the LDS Church-owned school.

Harker expects some top-notch students will not be accepted into the program this time around. The study-abroad program in the coming semester is limited to matriculated students who have studied at the Provo campus for at least two years.

While BYU officials suspended student programs at the facility because of security concerns, the Jerusalem Center has remained open for concerts, workshops and tours, Harker said.

When students were last there, 170 students lived in and studied at the center. Fewer students will attend the revived program.

"It's not like scaling back, it's like starting over," Harker said. "We start small and we add to it as we go along."

Story continues below
The U.S. State Department has issued a travel advisory for Americans going to Israel. The department asks people to carefully weigh the necessity of a trip, especially to Gaza and the West Bank, noting that violence is unpredictable between militant pro-Palestine groups and the Israeli Defense Forces.

"The folks who run the Jerusalem Center programs are intimately acquainted with what goes on over there," Harker said. "They know which areas to avoid and which ones are safe. They will make every effort to keep students safe.

"They have a good track record," Harker said. He noted that no one attending classes at the center has been injured in conflict between Israelis and Palestinians since its opening in 1987.

The Jerusalem Center was closed during the Persian Gulf war in 1991. BYU halted student programs again five years ago after sending a group of BYU students back to the United States a month earlier than scheduled, largely because of escalating violence in the Holy Land.

Program officials kept the group inside the center more than a month before sending them home.

The 44 students selected to attend the Jerusalem Center for the fall will earn 15 credit hours studying the Old Testament and New Testament, ancient and modern Middle East studies, and Hebrew and Arabic languages, Harker said.


E-mail: lhancock@desnews.com

Comments

You can be the first to comment on this story.

Image
BYU Photo

BYU will resume student programs on a limited basis at its Jerusalem Center beginning fall of 2006.

previousnext

Latest comments

GOO UTES I hope you guys win against BYU.... Even though i have nothing...

really really awkward

You give Steves everywhere a bad name because you don't know what you're...

I am very happy for this man and his family, and hope that he will enjoy a...

John Pack Lambert: I can garantee that there are more than two sessions a...

Hall, Johnson matchup key

Maybe Anae would have run the ball and Unga would have been stuffed maybe he...

Party on Garth! Fantastic game. RSL was clearly the best team on the field....

Letters: Don't buy it

"Who says that we are the 50th most healthy people in the world? I say that...

Expect epic clash on the line

Born and raised in SLC and living in Ann Arbor ( Big Ten country) for the...

I can't see how a Springville team that returns 4 of 5 starters and will be...

Advertisements