Jerusalem Post header - Prof. David Kazhdan becomes first Israeli to win the Shaw Prize - Prof. David Kazhdan is one of the great luminaries of the representation theory, his originality and knowledge are incomprehensible.

Prof. David Kazhdan, Hebrew University
Prof. David Kazhdan, Hebrew University

Prof. David Kazhdan of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem has received the distinguished Shaw Prize on his contributions to the field of mathematics, the first Israeli to ever win the prize.

Kazhdan is one of two recipients to win the prize; he shared the Shaw Prize of $1.2 million with another researcher from the University of Chicago, Alexander Beilinson. They won the prize for their “huge influence on and profound contributions to representation theory, as well as many other areas of mathematics.”

The Shaw Prize honors individuals who have recently achieved distinguished and significant advances in the fields of astronomy, life science and medicine, and mathematical sciences.

The Shaw Prize Foundation announced the winners today.

“This is a great honor for me. Of course, I was very happy when I heard, and I’m more than happy to receive the award. But I didn’t do anything, I’ve just engaged in math my whole life – and not for my own sake. I feel as though I’m in the good company of scholars and mathematicians who have received the award thus far,” said Kazhdan.

Kazhdan currently serves as a member of the National Academy of Israel and of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States.

In 2016, the professor received the EMET Prize for Art, Science and Culture, an Israeli prize awarded annually for excellence in academic and professional achievements (the video below is from the time of that award); the Rothschild Prize in 2010, an Israeli prize designed to support the advancement of science and the humanities in Israel; and received the MacArthur Fellowship in 1990.

Kazhdan has been a professor of mathematics in the Hebrew University’s Department of Mathematics and Natural Sciences since he immigrated to Israel in 2004 from the US, where he worked as a professor at Harvard University, a position he gained after emigrating from the Soviet Union in 1975.