Halper was born in Boston in 1946 but grew up in
Hibbing, Minnesota. He received his B.A. from
Macalester College and his Ph.D. in Cultural and Applied Anthropology from the
University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. During the 1960s Halper was active in the
civil rights movement and the
anti-Vietnam War movement, resisting military service in the war. By contrast, in a 2010 interview, Halper said: "I don't talk about it that much but I did go into the Israeli army ... I did reserve duty like everybody else for twenty some years." Halper emigrated to Israel in 1973. In his 2008 memoir, Halper says that upon arrival in Israel "I suppose you could have called me a '
Zionist.' " Until witnessing a
house demolition in
'Anata in the West Bank in 1998, Halper described himself, as "a Jew who had emigrated to Israel from the United States 25 years earlier" who "generally subscribed to what may be described as Zionist principles ..." Halper says: "I took umbrage to
Mazzini's famous dictum: 'Without Country you are the bastards of Humanity.' That alone seemed enough to me to justify the existence of Israel as a Jewish state while subordinating Palestinian claims to the historical necessity of Jews to control their own destiny." Although, in his 2010 interview, Halper claimed: "I came with my eyes open. I never came [to Israel] as a Zionist." Halper served as an adjunct lecturer in
anthropology at the
University of Haifa and at
Ben Gurion University, though most of his academic career was spent at
Friends World College (FWC). He was director of FWC's Middle East Center in Jerusalem, and when FWC merged with
Long Island University in 1991, he became Director of its International Academic Operations and was promoted to the rank of associate professor. His academic research focuses on the
history of modern Jerusalem, contemporary
Israeli culture, and the
Middle East conflict. In addition to teaching and research, Halper is involved in issues of social justice activism in Israel. He spent ten years as a community volunteer in Jerusalem's
inner city neighborhoods, and was a founder of
Ohel - a social protest movement of working-class
Mizrahi Jews. He served as the chairman of the
Israeli Association for Ethiopian Jews, having been active in the 1960s in championing the rights of
Ethiopian Jews and in researching the history of the
Jewish community in Ethiopia. ==Founding of ICAHD==