April 2024, a new study from Stanford University ranked Tel Aviv University first in Israel and first outside the United States in number of unicorns.

A study by Professor Ilya Strebulaev, a researcher in entrepreneurship at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, ranks Tel Aviv University 1st in Israel and 1st in the world (outside the United States) for the number of private companies valued at more than one billion dollars (unicorns) created by its alumni.

« Professor Strebulaev’s findings prove once again that Tel Aviv University is Israel’s entrepreneurial university, nurturing more start-ups, and in particular more unicorns, than any other university in the country« , according to Professor Moshe Zviran, Director of Entrepreneurship and Innovation at Tel Aviv University. « We have achieved this status because we welcome the best students in a wide range of disciplines, and also because in recent years we have become proactive in the spheres of entrepreneurship and innovation ».

« I firmly believe that we will win and that we will end up being much better than we were in reality, » says Moshe Zviran, Professor and Director of Entrepreneurship and Innovation at Tel Aviv University

TAU Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences receives $12.67 million grant from Helmsley Tel Aviv University Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences receives $12.67 million grant from Helmsley TrustTrust, April 2024.

Helmsley Medical Simulation Center team at the Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences at Tel Aviv University (crédit photo TAU)
Left to right: Joel Bar-El, Meital Shamia, Arik Faingold, Dr. Eyal Benjamin, and Sigalit Ben Hayoun.
(photo credit: YAEL BAR TZUR)

Grand Opening: TAU’s Innovative Nanotech Frontier, TAU Proudly Opens its New Nanotech Center the
29 May 2024.

From left: TAU President Prof. Ariel Porat, former TAU President Prof. Joseph Klafter, and Ms. Rola Brentlin cutting the ribbon of the Nano building entrance (photo: Israel Hadari)

The inauguration of the Roman Abramovich Building for Nano and Quantum Science & Technology and the Jan Koum Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

took place during the events of the annual Board of Governors (BOG24). The new building has taken quite a route, but it was worth the wait. It is a marvel of architecture and science not just for our campus, not just for Israel, but also for the world.

TAU’s Koum Center is one of the top research institutions in Israel for nanotechnology. Its new location spans three floors and 8,000 square meters. This esteemed facility signals a new era for nanotechnology research both at TAU and generally in Israel.
Everything here was designed for the next generation of researchers” – Prof. Tal Dvir, Director of the Jan Koum Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology.

From left: Prof. Dvir, TAU VP Amos Elad, President of The Koum Family Foundation Yana Kalika, and Prof. Porat unveiling the sign for the Koum Center (photo Israel Hadari).

The building will house thirty scientists working on nanotechnology solutions across various disciplines, including engineering, exact sciences, life sciences, and medical sciences. Exciting projects at Tel Aviv University include Professor Dan Peer’s nanobots that target and destroy cancer cells in the bloodstream and Professor Yael Hanein’s devices that integrate with the retina to restore vision for the blind.
The scientists at the Koum Center and Abramovich building are creating pioneering devices and drugs that will directly improve our lives by leading to better health care, faster and safer communications systems, a cleaner environment, enhanced national security, smarter products and more efficient energy use.(TAU)

The exterior of the Roman Abramovich Building for Nano and Quantum Science & Technology (TAU)

Tel Aviv University Ranks First in Israel in the Prestigious QS Ranking for the Year 2025


The Only Israeli University to Rise in the Global RankingsAmong the metrics reflecting Tel Aviv University’s advancements this year, a 5% increase in international collaborations stands out compared to the previous year. Additionally, the sustainability category saw a notable rise of 39 places in the global ranking. Moreover, the university distinguishes itself in citation metrics, securing the 20th position worldwide.

Tel Aviv University campus, in Israel.

Antisemitism Worldwide Report for 2023 (May 2024)

The Annual Antisemitism Worldwide Report, published by Tel Aviv University and the Anti-Defamation League (ADL)

October 7th helped spread a fire that was already out of control, » states the Report.


ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt on the rise of severe hate online: The numbers are staggering

Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt joins ‘Squawk Box’ to discuss the new ADL report showing a 22% increase in severe online harassment over the past 12 months, an increase from 18% in 2023, the rise in antisemitism around the USA , and more.

ADL’s CEO and National Director, Jonathan Greenblatt, said: « The aftermath of Hamas’s horrific attack on Israel on October 7th was followed by a tsunami of hate against Jewish communities worldwide. Unprecedented levels of antisemitism have surged globally in the streets of London, New York, Paris, Santiago, Johannesburg and beyond. This year’s report is incredibly alarming, with documented unprecedented levels of antisemitism, including in the US, where 2023 saw the highest number of antisemitic incidents in the US ever recorded by ADL.

We are proud to partner with Tel Aviv University on this important annual report which will be used to inform governments and civil society and help push back against antisemitic trends ».


In a special essay for the Report, Greenblatt wrote: « 

Antisemitism isn’t just an abstract issue. It is a real-life threat to Jewish life in America and Jews around the world,

and our history teaches us that we do not have the luxury to be indifferent when moments like these occur. That means we need to be clear-eyed about the threats we face and have the determination to confront them »

The reveals that 2023 saw an increase of dozens of percentage points in the number of antisemitic incidents in Western countries in comparison to 2022. A particularly steep increase was recorded following the October 7 attacks, but the first nine months of 2023, before the war started, also witnessed a relative increase in the number of incidents in most countries with large Jewish minorities, including the United States, France, the UK, Australia, Italy, Brazil, and Mexico. In France, the number of incidents increased from 436 in 2022 to 1,676 in 2023 (the number of physical assaults increased from 43 to 85); in the UK from 1, 662 to 4,103 (physical assaults from 136 to 266); in Argentina from 427 to 598; in Germany from 2,639 to 3,614; in Brazil from 432 to 1,774; in South Africa from 68 to 207; in Mexico from 21 to 78; in the Netherlands from 69 to 154; in Italy from 241 to 454; and in Austria from 719 to 1,147. Australia recorded 622 antisemitic incidents in October and November 2023, in comparison to 79 during the same period in 2022.

According to Prof. Uriya Shavit, Head of The Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry and the Irwin Cotler Institute, 

« The year is not 1938, not even 1933. Yet if current trends continue, the curtain will descend on the ability to lead Jewish lives in the West – to wear a Star of David, attend synagogues and community centers, send kids to Jewish schools, frequent a Jewish club on campus, or speak Hebrew.

With bomb threats against synagogues becoming a daily occurrence, Jewish existence in the West is forced to fortify itself, and the more it does so, the more the sense of security and normalcy is undermined. What the fight against antisemitism needs now is efforts focused on the hubs of poison, and the presentation of measurable and attainable goals. Foremost, the reality in which big companies make big money by spreading big hate has to end ».

An Emergency Plan by former Canadian Justice Minister


Former Canadian Justice Minister and Attorney General Irwin Cotler offers in the Report a historical and political analysis of the development of present-day antisemitism and a detailed 11-point plan for globally combatting the phenomenon. Cotler warns that “the explosion of antisemitism is a threat not only to Jews, but is toxic to our democracies, an assault on our common humanity, and a standing threat to human security – in a word, the bloodied canary in the mineshaft of global evil. Jews alone cannot combat it, let alone defeat it.

What is required is a constituency of conscience – a whole of government, whole of society commitment and action to fight this oldest and most lethal of hatreds ».

Coralie Schaffter

Sources : CTech, 2024, i24news, TAU, CNBC