EINSTEIN TURNED DOWN ISRAEL PRESIDENCY
》As a Nobel Prize-winning physicist and the creator of the world's most famous equation, Albert Einstein had an impressive resume. But there was one notable title he turned down: President of Israel.
Israel's first president, Chaim Weizmann, said that Einstein was "the greatest Jew alive." So, upon Weizmann's death on November 9, 1952, only one successor seemed a natural fit.
As such, the Embassy of Israel sent a letter to Einstein on November 17, officially offering him the presidency.
The letter said he would have to move to Israel, but he wouldn't have to worry about the job being a distraction from his other interests. It was just the presidency, after all.
"The Prime Minister assures me that in such circumstances, complete facility and freedom to pursue your great scientific work would be afforded by a government and people who are fully conscious of the supreme significance of your labors," Abba Ebban, an Israeli diplomat, wrote.
And despite Einstein's age of 73 at the time, he would have been a popular choice. For one thing, as a German-born professor who found refuge in America during Hitler's rise to power, he had been a long-time advocate for the establishment of a persecution-free sanctuary for the Jews.
"Zionism springs from an even deeper motive than Jewish suffering," he is quoted as saying in a 1929 issue of the Manchester Guardian. "It is rooted in a Jewish spiritual tradition whose maintenance and development are for Jews the basis of their continued existence as a community."
Furthermore, Einstein's leadership in establishing the Hebrew University of Jerusalem suggested that he might be a willing candidate. Proponents thought his mathematics expertise would have been useful to the burgeoning state.
"He might even be able to work out the mathematics of our economy and make sense of it," one statistician said to TIME magazine.
However, Einstein turned the offer down, insisting that the man whose last name is synonymous with "genius" was not qualified. He also cited old age, inexperience, and insufficient people skills as reasons he wouldn't be a good choice. (Imagine someone turning down a presidency based on a lack of experience, old age, and an inability to deal properly with people.)
"All my life, I have dealt with objective matters. Hence I lack the natural aptitude and the experience to deal properly with people and to exercise official functions," he wrote.
Though resolute in his decision, Einstein hoped it wouldn't reflect badly on his relationship with the Jewish community, a connection he called his "strongest human bond."
》As a Nobel Prize-winning physicist and the creator of the world's most famous equation, Albert Einstein had an impressive resume. But there was one notable title he turned down: President of Israel.
Israel's first president, Chaim Weizmann, said that Einstein was "the greatest Jew alive." So, upon Weizmann's death on November 9, 1952, only one successor seemed a natural fit.
As such, the Embassy of Israel sent a letter to Einstein on November 17, officially offering him the presidency.
The letter said he would have to move to Israel, but he wouldn't have to worry about the job being a distraction from his other interests. It was just the presidency, after all.
"The Prime Minister assures me that in such circumstances, complete facility and freedom to pursue your great scientific work would be afforded by a government and people who are fully conscious of the supreme significance of your labors," Abba Ebban, an Israeli diplomat, wrote.
And despite Einstein's age of 73 at the time, he would have been a popular choice. For one thing, as a German-born professor who found refuge in America during Hitler's rise to power, he had been a long-time advocate for the establishment of a persecution-free sanctuary for the Jews.
"Zionism springs from an even deeper motive than Jewish suffering," he is quoted as saying in a 1929 issue of the Manchester Guardian. "It is rooted in a Jewish spiritual tradition whose maintenance and development are for Jews the basis of their continued existence as a community."
Furthermore, Einstein's leadership in establishing the Hebrew University of Jerusalem suggested that he might be a willing candidate. Proponents thought his mathematics expertise would have been useful to the burgeoning state.
"He might even be able to work out the mathematics of our economy and make sense of it," one statistician said to TIME magazine.
However, Einstein turned the offer down, insisting that the man whose last name is synonymous with "genius" was not qualified. He also cited old age, inexperience, and insufficient people skills as reasons he wouldn't be a good choice. (Imagine someone turning down a presidency based on a lack of experience, old age, and an inability to deal properly with people.)
"All my life, I have dealt with objective matters. Hence I lack the natural aptitude and the experience to deal properly with people and to exercise official functions," he wrote.
Though resolute in his decision, Einstein hoped it wouldn't reflect badly on his relationship with the Jewish community, a connection he called his "strongest human bond."
EINSTEIN TURNED DOWN ISRAEL PRESIDENCY
》As a Nobel Prize-winning physicist and the creator of the world's most famous equation, Albert Einstein had an impressive resume. But there was one notable title he turned down: President of Israel.
Israel's first president, Chaim Weizmann, said that Einstein was "the greatest Jew alive." So, upon Weizmann's death on November 9, 1952, only one successor seemed a natural fit.
As such, the Embassy of Israel sent a letter to Einstein on November 17, officially offering him the presidency.
The letter said he would have to move to Israel, but he wouldn't have to worry about the job being a distraction from his other interests. It was just the presidency, after all.
"The Prime Minister assures me that in such circumstances, complete facility and freedom to pursue your great scientific work would be afforded by a government and people who are fully conscious of the supreme significance of your labors," Abba Ebban, an Israeli diplomat, wrote.
And despite Einstein's age of 73 at the time, he would have been a popular choice. For one thing, as a German-born professor who found refuge in America during Hitler's rise to power, he had been a long-time advocate for the establishment of a persecution-free sanctuary for the Jews.
"Zionism springs from an even deeper motive than Jewish suffering," he is quoted as saying in a 1929 issue of the Manchester Guardian. "It is rooted in a Jewish spiritual tradition whose maintenance and development are for Jews the basis of their continued existence as a community."
Furthermore, Einstein's leadership in establishing the Hebrew University of Jerusalem suggested that he might be a willing candidate. Proponents thought his mathematics expertise would have been useful to the burgeoning state.
"He might even be able to work out the mathematics of our economy and make sense of it," one statistician said to TIME magazine.
However, Einstein turned the offer down, insisting that the man whose last name is synonymous with "genius" was not qualified. He also cited old age, inexperience, and insufficient people skills as reasons he wouldn't be a good choice. (Imagine someone turning down a presidency based on a lack of experience, old age, and an inability to deal properly with people.)
"All my life, I have dealt with objective matters. Hence I lack the natural aptitude and the experience to deal properly with people and to exercise official functions," he wrote.
Though resolute in his decision, Einstein hoped it wouldn't reflect badly on his relationship with the Jewish community, a connection he called his "strongest human bond."
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