Yair Lapid, for now, is the caretaker prime minister of
Israel. Next week at the polls, however, Israelis will determine his fitness to
remain as head of their government. One factor that voters may wish to take
into account is his lack of an education: Yair Lapid never matriculated from
high school.
Informed of this juicy tidbit, Israelis not to the right
will laugh in your face. The fact is, however, indisputable. The naysayers may go
to Google to prove you wrong, pointing to the scanty text falling under Lapid’s
official Knesset
biography, which suggests that he has, at the very least, attained a baccalaureate
degree:
Education:
Studies toward MA in Hermeneutics and Culture Studies, Bar
Ilan University.
But dig a little further and one arrives closer to the truth,
as in this Hebrew-language biography of Lapid at Ynet:
:השכלה של יאיר לפיד
בוגר הגימנסיה העברית הרצליה, ללא זכאות לתעודת בגרות. התקבל ללימודי
תואר שני במסלול מהיר לדוקטורט מטעם אוניברסיטת בר אילן, אך עזב לאור איסור
המל"ג על קבלת סטודנטים ללא תואר אקדמי.
Google translates this as (emphasis added):
Yair Lapid's education:
Graduated from the Herzliya Hebrew High School, without
eligibility for a matriculation certificate. He was admitted to master's
studies on a fast-track path to a doctorate on behalf of Bar Ilan University,
but left in light of the ban on
accepting students without an academic degree.
In other words, it’s against the rules, but the university
was going to look the other way and give Lapid a master’s. Unfortunately, someone
noticed and that someone was the Council
for Higher Education (CHE), the official authority for higher education in
Israel and the body responsible for this country’s higher education policy. In 2012, CHE recommended sanctions*
for Bar Ilan as a result of its offer to give Lapid some lickety-split education
on the sly (emphasis added):
The Council for Higher Education will recommend on Tuesday
imposing sanctions on Bar-Ilan University for violating regulations on
accepting students for advanced degrees. The investigation was launched after Haaretz revealed that Bar-Ilan had
accepted Yair Lapid directly to a Master's and then a doctoral program without
him having [a] B.A. degree.
The CHE ordered its committee on supervision and enforcement
to investigate the matter, and the committee will meet on Tuesday and recommend
action against the university.
All other Israeli universities were asked to report any
similar violations by the middle of February, but the Council of University
Presidents said Tuesday that, as far as it knows, only Bar-Ilan admitted such
students against the rules. However, a Bar-Ilan official said he thinks all of
the universities do the same.
Lapid was accepted onto Bar-Ilan's prestigious culture and
interpretation graduate program, which accepts only candidates who received a
B.A. degree with honors. Lapid, a news and media personality whose recent
announcement of his Knesset candidacy was accompanied by reports of
skyrocketing popularity in polls, has no
undergraduate degree.
In response, the CHE launched an investigation. The
university says Lapid was accepted into
the demanding master's and doctoral programs on the basis of his "literary
and journalistic achievements."
Someone might want to tell Haaretz that not only does Lapid not have an undergraduate degree,
he did not even pass the bagrut—the rigorous
Israeli high school matriculation examinations. Should we be disturbed by Lapid’s lack
of academic credentials? And isn’t it kind of embarrassing for Israel to have a
prime minister who didn’t finish high school?
That depends on your point of view. Is he otherwise
qualified?
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Abraham Lincoln Marovitz
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Well, let’s put it this way, he’s no Abraham Lincoln
Marovitz. Marovitz earned his Bachelor of Laws in 1925 at the age of
19, when he was still 20 months too young to sit for the Illinois bar exam. He
took the exam when he turned 21, and passed it on his first try. But Marovitz attended
law school without benefit of a college degree. "In those days, you
didn't need a college degree to go to law school," Marovitz later said.
"So that's how I wound up the only sitting federal judge who never went to
college."
Of course, even the boy wonder that was Marovitz, matriculated from
high school.
Bar Ilan’s claim that it accepted Lapid for a masters and
subsequent doctoral program (!) because of his “literary and journalistic achievements”
doesn’t even begin to pass the smell test. It is far more likely that Lapid’s political star
had begun to rise, so he thought he’d talk to someone and snag a couple of college degrees
PDQ, because hey. That lack of education: It’s not a good look for a prime
minister.
Lapid, like me, is a writer and a journalist. He never studied
political science. He’s not a lawyer or an economist. But he does have great
hair and his English is good. Also his father was Tommy Lapid.
Are these CVs, added to his experience in office, enough to sway
the balance against his failure to obtain a high school diploma? From this writer's perspective, it seems doubtful. And here is why:
Some years ago, I applied for a job
with a Jerusalem think tank. They loved my cover letter and resume. I stood out
from all the candidates. But there was nothing about education on my resume, could
I just fill in for them that missing bit?
At that point, the jig was up and I had to tell them that I was not a college
graduate. To which they said, “You’re otherwise perfect for us, but as a
government-affiliated think tank, there’s no way we can hire someone without even a bachelor's degree.”
I was disappointed, but I had learned a lesson: I too, was no Abraham Lincoln Marovitz. If I wanted
a job at that level, I was going to have to put in the time and work necessary
to earn it. And if I wasn’t willing to do that, I had to set my sights
elsewhere.
It’s pretty basic: without that college degree, I was not qualified
for that particular job, no matter how much knowledge or wisdom I had managed to accumulate.
But like I said, even I matriculated from high school. Which
leads to a thought:
It is not that difficult to arrange to sit for the Israeli high
school matriculation exams, no matter one’s age or station in life. Shouldn’t the
Israeli electorate, at the very least, demand that a prime minister have a high
school degree under his or her belt? And shouldn’t this be codified into law?
*The Haaretz piece
linked to here is behind a paywall.
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