Velvl Greene (; July 5, 1928 – November 21, 2011) was a Canadian–American–Israeli scientist and academic. Specializing in public health and bacteriology, he was a professor of public health and microbiology at the University of Minnesota from 1959 to 1986, teaching over 30,000 students. He developed the first university-level curriculum in environmental microbiology in response to an outbreak of Staphylococcus infections at American hospitals in the late 1950s. In 1961 he began working for the NASA Planetary Quarantine Division in an astrobiology program that sought to determine the presence of microbes in outer space. He Aliyah to Israel in 1986, serving as chair of epidemiology and public health and professor emeritus at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev and director of that school's Lord Jacobovitz Center for Jewish Medical Ethics until 2009. Coming from a secular Zionist background, Greene became a baal teshuva and Chabad Hasidic Judaism in the 1960s. He conducted a three-decade-long correspondence with the Lubavitcher Rebbe discussing the compatibility between Torah teachings and scientific knowledge.
Influenced by his Zionist upbringing at home and at school, he chose to study agriculture in order to prepare for aliyah (immigration) to Israel. He earned his undergraduate degree at the University of Manitoba on a Canadian army scholarship. He went on to earn a master's degree in dairy bacteriology at the same school. As a condition for receiving his scholarship, he then entered an officer training program, but quit after less than a year to pursue his doctorate in bacteriology at the University of Minnesota.
In 1957, Louisiana hospitals were hit with a virulent outbreak of staphylococcus that threatened both newborns and surgical patients. Though staph infections had been eradicated through the use of penicillin, the bacteria had become resistant to penicillin. Greene, "the only bacteriologist within a hundred miles", was asked by public health officials to help halt the outbreak. He later said: "I wasn't a physician, but they asked for help so I advocated a return to the old protocols of Ignaz Semmelweis and Nightingale: wash your hands, wear gowns, isolate patients. It worked, so we published a paper on how we'd handled the crisis".
When the staph outbreak spread northward, the University of Minnesota received a $1 million grant to conduct research on it, and invited Greene to join its faculty as an assistant professor. Greene moved his family back to Minnesota in 1959, and developed the first university-level curriculum in environmental microbiology. He lectured at the university until 1986, teaching more than 30,000 public health students.
When Greene began asking questions about how religious Jews reconcile the theory of evolution with the Genesis creation narrative, the shaliach introduced him to the Chabad Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, who had studied science and mathematics at the university level in Berlin and Paris. Greene began a scientific and personal correspondence with the Rebbe that lasted from 1963 until the Rebbe's death in 1994. The Rebbe expressed interest in seeing all of Greene's scientific papers and would critique them. Eventually the Rebbe clarified all of Greene's doubts about the evolution vs. Creation debate.
Greene laid tefillin for the first time in 1966 after receiving a pair as a gift from the Rebbe. With the encouragement of his wife, who wanted a Kashrut home, Greene slowly became a kippah-wearing, Shomer Shabbat Jew. He later served as an emissary for the Rebbe, smuggling in books and religious objects to Jews in the Soviet Union. His transformation from a secular Jewish professor to a Lubavitcher Hasid became part of Chabad lore. In 2017, the Tzeirei Hashluchim produced an animation of Greene's first meeting with the Chabad shaliach for the purpose of instructing youngsters in shlichus work.
Greene lectured around the world on the compatibility between Torah teachings and scientific knowledge, and had a morning talk show program on public television. He retired from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in 2009.
Greene died on November 21, 2011, aged 83. His sons edited and published his autobiography, Curiosity and the Desire for Truth: The spiritual journey of a NASA scientist, in 2015.
Academic career
NASA researcher
Religious observance
Move to Israel
Honors
Personal life
Selected bibliography
Books
Chapters
Papers
Notes
External links
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