After WWII the situation got worth. For a long time Jewish students were not admitted in the University or in the College of Medicine where the first 13 students were admitted in 1964. There were no Jews on the Med school staff. A friend of my parents, a graduate of Sorbonne, who founded the Biochemistry Lab, was asked to step down in 1952 (The case of Jewish Doctors) and offered a position of a lab technician.
Staring in the mid 60s about 5% of students admitted to science and math department were Jewish, the rest did not admit Jews. Only those departments had a few Jewish professors, because they really needed them. One of them was Fishman, a brilliant mathematician. But that was the situation all over Ukraine. That why most of the Jewish kids went to far away places.
The schools, on the other hand, specifically in the center of the city, were excellent. The combination of great teachers/curriculum with parental involvement and high expectations from both components produced great results, just like before WWII.
And that's why we could compete with the best out there.
As for the University? For half a century it admitted students based on their ethniccity, class and party affiliation and not on their merit. Same goes for the faculty. How good can it be?
Channa
> From: mirtaylo_at_indiana.edu
> Subject: Re: [Cz-L] Childhood in Czernowitz
> Date: Wed, 6 Mar 2013 10:15:12 -0500
> To: eshet1_at_netvision.net.il
>
> I also do not know exactly what standard the university is today,
> but before WW2 it was considered a very good university.
> According to one of my friends, a Romanian professor of Mathematics,
> the department of Mathematics had some outstanding professors.
> The students who went to study abroad, did so because
> under Romanian rule, only a very limited number of Jewish students
> were admitted to the Czernowitz university. I am also not sure
> whether they had a department of Medicine or law.
>
> Mimi
> On Mar 6, 2013, at 7:03 AM, yosi-jerry wrote:
>
> > I don't know what class the University is today, but I know that in
> > the days before WW2 if somebody wanted to achieve something with a
> > serious academic background, she/he traveled to central Europe.
> > Yosef Eshet
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Received on 2013-03-06 11:10:05
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