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Photograph of Efrat Yerday

Efrat Yerday Visiting Professor In Residence Sociology

Bio
Efrat Yerday is an activist, writer, poet, cultural entrapreneur. She's currently a visiting scholar at the Meltzer Schwartzberg Center for Israel Studies. She is the chair of Association of Ethiopian Jews and a PhD candidate in Sociology at Tel Aviv University, researching “Ethno-national citizenship and Jewish illegality: Ethiopian Jews in Israel between 1955-1975 and the struggle for citizenship”. Yerday has founded a number of initiatives, including the Young Ethiopian Students blog, Ra’av (Hunger), African Film Festival ATESIB! the Color Line exhibition, and “Ethiopolitics” reading group for students of Ethiopian descent who wanted to broaden their knowledge of Ethiopian history and in order to have a safe haven for conversations on blackness and racism in the university and elsewhere; the course “Black Identity in a White Space: The Ethiopian Population in the Israeli Context” which she taught at ben Gurion University. Yerday received the NIF’s Gallanter Prize in 2020. Yerday wrote a column “Shchora M’Shachor” (blacker than black) for HaMakom HaHi Kham BaGehinom (the hottest place in hell) and has several academic publications, including “To Be Black and Beautiful in Israel” published in Anthropology of the Middle East (2019). In 2024 she  served as guest editor in the Van Leer Institute’s journal, Theory and Criticism, which published its first issue in Israel and Hebrew, focusing on Local Blackness. She contributed her study titled “Softening the Gaze: Between Sexual Harassment and Racial Harassment."
For the Media
To request an interview for a news story, call AU Communications at 202-885-5950 or submit a request.

Teaching

Fall 2024

  • SOCY-340 Israeli Society