The Edward Blank YIVO Vilna Online Collections
GO TO YIVO INSTITUTE HOME

YIVO Names Jonathan Brent Executive Director and CEO

May 21, 2009

(NEW YORK, May 21, 2009) – The YIVO Institute for Jewish Research has appointed Jonathan Brent, 59, to be its executive director and CEO effective July 1. Brent succeeds Carl J. Rheins, who has resigned for health reasons. In ten years as executive director, Rheins helped renew YIVO’s position as a preeminent resource center for East European Jewish Studies, successfully shepherded 23 major publishing projects, and formed strong institutional collaborations.

Brent comes to YIVO from Yale University Press in New Haven, CT, where he served as editorial director and associate director. During his 18-year tenure at Yale, he published leading educational, academic, and trade books, including several publications sponsored by YIVO, such as The History of the Yiddish Language; The Last Days of the Jerusalem of Lithuania, by Herman Kruk; and The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe. In 1992 Brent founded the internationally acclaimed Annals of Communism series, a project he will continue to direct. In 1997 he was appointed the first editorial director of Yale University Press. Brent greatly expanded Yale’s publications in Jewish studies, acquiring in addition to many individual titles The New Yiddish Library and the Posen Library of Jewish Culture and Civilization.

“Jonathan Brent’s appointment shows a strong commitment to YIVO’s future, as he brings a robust background of scholarship combined with outstanding management skills, as well as a successful history of work with nonprofit cultural institutions, including YIVO,” says Bruce Slovin, chairman of the YIVO Board.

“I am confident that YIVO will grow and prosper by building on the foundation of its traditional strengths, which are its cultural legacy,” adds Jonathan Brent. “I look forward to working with the YIVO board and staff to develop a vibrant, new vision for YIVO based on its extraordinary history as both a teaching and a research institute with priceless archival holdings.”