The Zionist Ideas: Visions for the Jewish Homeland-Then, Now, Tomorrow

The Zionist Ideas: Visions for the Jewish Homeland-Then, Now, Tomorrow

The Zionist Ideas: Visions for the Jewish Homeland-Then, Now, Tomorrow

The Zionist Ideas: Visions for the Jewish Homeland-Then, Now, Tomorrow

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Overview

The most comprehensive Zionist collection ever published, The Zionist Ideas: Visions for the Jewish Homeland—Then, Now, Tomorrow sheds light on the surprisingly diverse and shared visions for realizing Israel as a democratic Jewish state. Building on Arthur Hertzberg’s classic, The Zionist Idea, Gil Troy explores the backstories, dreams, and legacies of more than 170 passionate Jewish visionaries—quadruple Hertzberg’s original number, and now including women, mizrachim, and others—from the 1800s to today.

Troy divides the thinkers into six Zionist schools of thought—Political, Revisionist, Labor, Religious, Cultural, and Diaspora Zionism—and reveals the breadth of the debate and surprising syntheses. He also presents the visionaries within three major stages of Zionist development, demonstrating the length and evolution of the conversation. Part 1 (pre-1948) introduces the pioneers who founded the Jewish state, such as Herzl, Gordon, Jabotinsky, Kook, Ha’am, and Szold. Part 2 (1948 to 2000) features builders who actualized and modernized the Zionist blueprints, such as Ben-Gurion, Berlin, Meir, Begin, Soloveitchik, Uris, and Kaplan. Part 3 showcases today’s torchbearers, including Barak, Grossman, Shaked, Lau, Yehoshua, and Sacks.

This mosaic of voices will engage equally diverse readers in reinvigorating the Zionist conversation—weighing and developing the moral, social, and political character of the Jewish state of today and tomorrow.
 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780827612556
Publisher: The Jewish Publication Society
Publication date: 04/01/2018
Series: JPS Anthologies of Jewish Thought
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 608
Sales rank: 688,095
Product dimensions: 8.80(w) x 6.00(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author


Gil Troy is Distinguished Scholar of North American History at McGill University. A columnist for the Jerusalem Post and the Daily Beast, he has authored twelve books, including Moynihan’s Moment: America’s Fight against Zionism as Racism and Why I Am a Zionist. Natan Sharansky is former deputy prime minister of Israel and chairman of the Jewish Agency for Israel.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Pioneers:Political Zionism

Political Zionism identified the fundamentals that still define the Zionist project. As the Russian Jewish novelist Peretz Smolenskin exclaimed, "We are a people" — the Jews share national ties, not merely religious ones. Beyond that, as the Zionist pioneer Leon Pinsker and others proclaimed, this people, like all peoples, needed and deserved a state: "Since the Jew is nowhere at home, nowhere regarded as a native, he remains an alien everywhere." Finally, as Theodor Herzl discovered by the mass Jewish rejection of his Kenya Highlands–Uganda proposal in 1903, Jews must return to the Jewish homeland, Eretz Yisra'el, the Land of Israel.

Beyond these tenets, all Zionists assumed that creating a Jewish state would solve the Jewish Problem. Yet, as the following selections demonstrate, even the first Political Zionists differed regarding just what was the Jewish Problem. While most specified antisemitism, others addressed the drift toward assimilation, the shame of accommodation, the ongoing humiliation.

In short, Zionism arose from the dashed hopes of Emancipation, the European movement promising that Jews would be recognized fully as equal citizens communally and individually. The pogroms, the ranting and ravings of Jew haters, the continued toadying of Jews who wanted so badly to be accepted, all this tormented — and dispirited — many Jews.

The Haskalah, the enlightened Jewish intellectual movement, sought to reconcile tradition and modernity. In the early 1860s, a century after the German Jewish philosopher Moses Mendelssohn first started imagining it, the Russian Jewish poet J. L. Gordon articulated the sentiment exquisitely, endorsing "being a person on the street and a Jew at home." Although that model works for millions in the Diaspora today, Zionists ultimately concluded that Jewish pride, dignity, and integrity required living on a Jewish street in a Jewish state.

Although Theodor Herzl is the central figure of this first founding phase of Political Zionism, other contemporaries offered similar diagnoses. After his death at age forty-four, the movement was blessed with worthy successors who took Herzl's dream and improvised a blueprint for a functional state — even if, as the Israeli writer Natan Alterman warned, it wouldn't be delivered on a silver platter.

Peretz Smolenskin (1842-85)

Yes, we are a people!

HaToeh BeDarchei HaChayim (The wanderer in life's ways) is the title of Peretz Smolenskin's autobiographical novel describing the adventures of an orphan who wanders through all of contemporary Jewish life until he dies defending his people in a Russian pogrom. This tale summarized not only Smolenskin's life but his generation's journey. This most widely read book of modern Hebrew letters in the 1870s depicted the painful halfway house many enlightened Jews lived in, between the ghetto and modernity.

Like his protagonist, Smolenskin was born in the Russian Pale of Settlement, the western provinces of the tsarist empire, which were alone open to the Jewish population. At the age of twenty he migrated to Odessa, the great Black Sea port that hosted Russia's most modern Jewish community. He spent five years there studying music and languages while earning his keep by teaching Hebrew — and writing.

In 1868 Smolenskin settled in Vienna. He and a collaborator founded a monthly publication, HaShahar (The dawn), which he issued until his death from tuberculosis in Meran, Austria, in 1885.

Smolenskin is modern Hebrew literature's transition figure between the "Enlightenment," which ended with the Russian pogroms of 1881, and the return to nationalist moorings. Until his last "Zionist" novel, written in the 1880s following the pogroms, his work in belles lettres expressed the usual notions that modernizing Jewish life was desirable and inevitable. Even then, however, he was no uncritical admirer of modernity. His novels emphasized a countertheme: the assimilation of the Jew would not necessarily yield acceptance by society or personal happiness.

In the aftermath of the pogroms, Smolenskin abandoned his theorizing about Jewish national culture and the definition of Jewry as a spiritual nation. Instead he endorsed the evacuation of Eastern Europe. He asked its Jews not to repeat the woeful cycles of their history by emigrating to America or to any other lands of exile. There was only one answer — Zionism.

The excerpts which follow are from a volume he published as a series of articles in his own HaShahar in the years 1857–77: from an essay reacting to the pogroms of 1881, which expressed his later Zionism of complete exodus; and from a late piece critiquing Reform Judaism and the Haskalah, which he regarded as the immediate enemies.

It Is Time to Plant (1875–77)

The Jewish people has outlived all others because it has always regarded itself as a people — a spiritual nation. ... Yes, we are a people. We have been a people from our beginnings until today. We have never ceased being a people, even after our kingdom was destroyed and we were exiled from our land, and whatever may yet come over us will not eradicate our national character. But we are not today a people like all others, just as we were not a people like the others even when we dwelt in our own land. The foundation of our national identity was never the soil of the Holy Land, and we did not lose the basis of our nationality when we were exiled. We have always been a spiritual nation, one whose Torah was the foundation of its statehood.

From the start our people has believed that its Torah took precedence over its land and over its political identity. We are a people because in spirit and thought we regard ourselves bound to one another by ties of fraternity. Our unity has been conserved in a different way, through forms different from those of all other peoples, but does this make us any the less a people?

Let Us Search Our Ways (1881)

Calamity after calamity and disaster after disaster have afflicted the Jews of Russia. In many communities not a stone has been left standing. The shops of our brethren have been pillaged and looted, and whatever the mob could not carry off, it has utterly destroyed. Many Jews have been murdered and the wounded are without number. The mob, a ravenous wolf in search of prey, has stalked the Jews with a cruelty unheard of since the Middle Ages. Perhaps most shocking of all, many supposedly decent people appeared among the makers of the pogroms. There is no end to the affliction that has already struck so many tens of thousands. ...

We have no sense of national honor; our standards are those of second-class people. We find ourselves rejoicing when we are granted a favor and exulting when we are tolerated and befriended. ...

The Haskalah of Berlin (1883)

The Haskalah of Berlin rested on this keystone: to imitate the gentiles, to abandon our own traditions, to disdain our own manners and ideas, and to conduct ourselves both at home and without — in the synagogue, within our families, everywhere — in imitation of others. As a reward for such a great achievement, so these upright and wise teachers assured us, our children, or our children's children, or their children, would be accepted as equals.

The consequences of this doctrine were: first, the destruction of the sentiment which is the unifying principle and strongest foundation of the House of Israel — that we are a nation; and, second, the abandonment of the hope of redemption....

A false doctrine, that religion is the keystone of the House of Israel, was substituted. But this stone, too, crumbled into dust; the very people who paid all this lip service to religion condemned it and spurned all religious customs and laws because they were different from the ways of the gentiles....

In assuring us that, as a reward for "Enlightenment," we would be able to establish our homes wherever we happened to be, they have told us to abandon all hope of returning to our own land and living there in dignity, as all peoples do. And we, having seen that all this did not get us anywhere, and that it did not even help us secure the love we sought — we declare: Only a dog neither has nor wants a home. A man who chooses to live his whole life as a transient, without a thought for the establishment of a permanent home for his children, will forever be regarded as a dog. And we must seek a home with all our hearts, our spirit, our soul....

Leon Pinsker (1821-91)

Autoemancipation: Judeophobia! Since the Jews are nowhere at home, they remain aliens everywhere....

Leon Pinsker was the most assimilated among the Russian Jews who turned Zionist under the impact of the events of 1881. A passionate patriot, he had believed the Russian regime would liberalize itself into a constitutional monarchy in which all people would be equals. Because he had staked his faith in Russia and had relatively little Jewish affiliation, he was even more disillusioned by the pogroms than most of his contemporaries.

Alongside an impressive medical career, after 1860 Pinsker took a considerable interest in Jewish affairs. He wrote for the two earliest Jewish weeklies in the Russian language and was active in the affairs of the Society for the Spread of Culture among the Jews of Russia, founded in 1863. Rejecting the "Enlighteners" who wrote in Hebrew, he believed the Russian language and culture should dominate the inner life, even the religion, of the Jew.

Outbreaks of violence were familiar phenomena in the life of Russian Jews. Why, then, did the 1881 pogroms constitute an emotional crisis for so many, Pinsker among them, and a break in modern Jewish history? There are two major reasons: their extent, and the composition of the mobs. The assassination of Tsar Alexander II in March 1881 (ironically as he was about to grant a liberal constitution) triggered violence in nearly two hundred cities and villages. These, moreover, were not lynchings carried out by an illiterate rabble. Leading newspapers whipped up the frenzy. Men of education and position participated in the attacks. And the government abetted the pogromists.

Pinsker left the Society for the Spread of Culture, declaring that "new remedies, new ways" would have to be found. He went to central and western Europe to advance his new ideas about concentrating the bulk of Jewry in a national state. Alas, he found no adherents. Returning to Russia, he published his views anonymously in German in a pamphlet entitled Auto-Emancipation.

Like Herzl fifteen years later, Pinsker was sufficiently outside the influence of the traditional emotions centering around the Holy Land not to argue that a Jewish state had to be only in Zion. Palestine was preferable, but any land suitable for a national establishment would do.

Pinsker's pamphlet was greeted with vociferous indignation in many circles. The Orthodox regarded the author, who did not remain anonymous for long, as lacking in religion. The liberals, especially those outside Russia, attacked him as a traitor to the faith in humanity's ultimate victory over prejudice and hatred.

Nevertheless, the personal prestige of the man and the intellectual impact of the pamphlet propelled Pinsker to the foreground of the ferment toward creating a Jewish nationalist organization. Pinsker became the leader of the new Hibbat Zion movement, also known as Hovevi Zion. These groups of "lovers of Zion," believing the best reaction to the pogroms was to establish agricultural settlements in Palestine, convened in a founding conference in 1884. Pinsker's "Auto-Emancipation" is the first great statement of the anguish of the Jew driven to assert his own nationalism because the wider world rejected him. The theme would recur in Theodor Herzl's writing.

Auto-Emancipation: An Appeal to His People by a Russian Jew (1882)

That age-old problem, long called the Jewish Question, yet again provokes discussion....

This is the kernel of the problem as we see it: the Jews comprise a distinctive element among the nations under which they dwell, and as such can neither assimilate nor be readily digested by any nation.

Hence the solution lies in finding a means of readjusting this exclusive element to the family of nations, so that the essential reason for the Jewish Question will be permanently removed....

The Jewish people lacks most of the essential attributes which define a nation. It lacks that authentic, rooted life which is inconceivable without a common language and customs and without geographic cohesion. The Jewish people has no fatherland of its own, though many motherlands; no center of focus or gravity, no government of its own, no official representation. The Jews are home everywhere, but are nowhere at home....

Among the living nations of the earth the Jews as a nation are long since dead.

With the loss of their country, the Jewish people lost their independence, and fell into the kind of decay that would suck the life out of any healthy organism. The state was crushed before the eyes of the nations. But after the Jewish people had ceased to exist as an actual state, as a political entity, they nevertheless resisted total annihilation — they lived on spiritually as a nation.

In this people the world saw the uncanny form of one of the dead walking among the living. The ghostlike apparition of a living corpse, of a people without unity or organization, without land or other bonds of unity, no longer alive, and yet walking among the living — this spectral form without precedence in history, unlike anything that preceded or followed it, was doomed to haunt the imagination of the nations. ...

Judeophobia is a psychic aberration. As a psychic aberration it is hereditary, and as a disease transmitted for two thousand years it is incurable.

This fear of ghosts, the mother of Judeophobia, has evoked this pure — I might say Platonic — hatred. As a result, the whole Jewish nation is often blamed for the real or supposed misdeeds of its individual members; it is libeled in so many ways — and buffeted about so shamefully....

Since the Jews are nowhere at home, nowhere regarded as a native, they remain aliens everywhere....

To sum up then: to the living, the Jew is a corpse; to the native, a foreigner; to the homesteader, a vagrant; to the proprietary, a beggar; to the poor, an exploiter and a millionaire; to the patriot, a man without a country; for all, a hated rival....

Consequently, we are duty-bound to devote all our remaining moral force to reestablishing ourselves as a living nation, so that we may ultimately assume a more fitting and dignified role among the family of the nations....

In order to build a secure home, end our endless life of wandering, and rise to the dignity of a nation in our own eyes and in the eyes of the world, we must, above all, not dream of restoring ancient Judaea.... We shall take with us the most sacred possessions which we have saved from the shipwreck of our former country, the God-idea and the Bible. It is these alone which have made our old fatherland the Holy Land, and not Jerusalem or the Jordan. Perhaps the Holy Land will again become ours. If so, all the better, but, first, we must determine — and this is the crucial point — what country is accessible to us, and at the same time suitable to offer the Jews of all lands who must leave their homes a secure and undisputed refuge, capable of flourishing....

The people's consciousness is awake. The great ideas of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries have not passed us by without leaving a trace. We feel not only as Jews; we feel as people. As human beings, we, too, wish to live and be a nation as the others. And if we seriously desire that, we must first of all extricate ourselves from the old yoke, and rise courageously to our full height. We must first of all desire to help ourselves and then the help of others is sure to follow. ...

Let "Now or never" be our watchword. Woe to our descendants, woe to the memory of our Jewish contemporaries, if we let this moment pass by! ...

Help yourselves, and God will help you!

Theodor Herzl (1860-1904)

We are one people. ... We are strong enough to form a State, and, indeed, a model State.

Theodor Herzl was born on May 2, 1860, in Budapest, Hungary, the second child and only son of a rich merchant. He received his preliminary education in a technical school and high school in Budapest. When he was eighteen, the family moved to Vienna after his sister's death from typhoid. Herzl enrolled in the University of Vienna's law school. After gaining his doctorate in 1884, Herzl practiced for a year as a minor civil servant but soon gave up the law to devote himself to writing. With relative ease he won regard as a feuilletonist, a familiar essayist, the favorite form of central European journalism, and as a writer of light, fashionable plays. In 1892 he was appointed to the staff of the Neue Freie Presse, the most important Viennese newspaper. Later that year Herzl arrived in Paris as its resident correspondent.

(Continues…)



Excerpted from "The Zionist Ideas"
by .
Copyright © 2018 Gil Troy.
Excerpted by permission of UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA PRESS.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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Table of Contents


Contents
Foreword by Natan Sharansky    
Acknowledgments    
Introduction: How Zionism’s Six Traditional Schools of Thought Shape Today’s Conversation    
Part One. Pioneers: Founding the Jewish State
1. Pioneers: Political Zionism
Peretz Smolenskin
It Is Time to Plant (1875–77)
Let Us Search Our Ways (1881)
The Haskalah of Berlin (1883)
Leon Pinsker
Auto-Emancipation: An Appeal to His People by a Russian Jew (1882)
Theodor Herzl
The Jewish State (1896)
From the Diaries of Theodor Herzl (1895)
Third Letter to Baron Hirsch (1895)
Max Nordau
Zionism (1902)
Muskeljudentum, Jewry of Muscle (1903)
Jacob Klatzkin
Boundaries: Judaism Is Nationalism (1914–21)
Chaim Weizmann
On the Report of the Palestine Commission (1937)
Natan Alterman
Shir Moledet (Song of the homeland) (1935)
Magash HaKesef (The silver platter) (1947)
Albert Einstein
Palestine, Setting of Sacred History of the Jewish Race (with Erich Kahler) (1944)
2. Pioneers: Labor Zionism
Moses Hess
Rome and Jerusalem (1862)
bilu
bilu Manifesto (1882)
Joseph Hayyim Brenner
Self-Criticism (1914)
Nahman Syrkin
The Jewish Problem and the Socialist Jewish State (1898)
Ber Borochov
Our Platform (1906)
Aaron David Gordon
People and Labor (1911)
Our Tasks Ahead (1920)
Rachel Bluwstein
My Country (1926)
Berl Katzenelson
Revolution and Tradition (1934)
Rahel Yanait Ben-Zvi
The Plough Woman (1931)
3. Pioneers: Revisionist Zionism
The Union of Zionists-Revisionists
Declaration of the Central Committee of the Union of Zionists-Revisionists (1925)
Vladimir Jabotinsky
The Fundamentals of the Betarian World Outlook (1934)
Evidence Submitted to the Palestine Royal Commission (1937)
The Iron Wall ([1923] 1937)
Saul Tchernichovsky
I Believe (1892)
They Say There’s a Land (1923)
The Irgun
Proclamation of the Irgun Zvai Leumi (1939)
Avraham (Yair) Stern
Eighteen Principles of Rebirth (1940)
Haim Hazaz
The Sermon (1942)
4. Pioneers: Religious Zionism
Yehudah Alkalai
The Third Redemption (1843)
Samuel Mohilever
Message to the First Zionist Congress (1897)
Isaac Jacob Reines
A New Light on Zion (1902)
Abraham Isaac Kook
The Land of Israel (1910–30)
The Rebirth of Israel (1910–30)
Lights for Rebirth (1910–30)
Moshe “Kalphon” HaCohen
Mateh Moshe (Moses’s headquarters) (1920)
Meir Bar-Ilan (Berlin)
What Kind of Life Should We Create in Eretz Israel? (1922)
5. Pioneers: Cultural Zionism
Eliezer Ben-Yehudah
A Letter of Ben-Yehudah (1880)
Introduction to The Complete Dictionary of Ancient and Modern Hebrew (1908)
Ahad Ha’am (Asher Zvi Ginsberg)
On Nationalism and Religion (1910)
The Jewish State and the Jewish Problem (1897)
Hayyim Nahman Bialik
The City of Slaughter (1903)
At the Inauguration of the Hebrew University (1925)
Micah Joseph Berdichevski
Wrecking and Building (1900–1903)
In Two Directions (1900–1903)
On Sanctity (1899)
Martin Buber
Hebrew Humanism (1942)
An Open Letter to Mahatma Gandhi (1939)
6. Pioneers: Diaspora Zionism
Solomon Schechter
Zionism: A Statement (1906)
Louis Dembitz Brandeis
The Jewish Problem and How to Solve It (1915)
Henrietta Szold
Letter to Augusta Rosenwald (1915)
Horace Mayer Kallen
Zionism and Liberalism (1919)
Stephen S. Wise
Challenging Years (1949)
Milton Steinberg
The Creed of an American Zionist (1945)
Part Two. Builders: Actualizing and Modernizing the Zionist Blueprints
7. Builders: Political Zionism
Israel’s Declaration of Independence (1948)
David Ben-Gurion
The Imperatives of the Jewish Revolution (1944)
Speech to Mapai Central Committee (1948)
Am Segula: Memoirs (1970)
The Law of Return (1950)
Isaiah Berlin
Jewish Slavery and Emancipation (1953)
The Achievement of Zionism (1975)
Abba Eban
Statement to the Security Council (1967)
Teddy Kollek
Jerusalem (1977)
Chaim Herzog
Address to the United Nations General Assembly (1975)
Albert Memmi
The Liberation of the Jew (1966, 2013)
Jews and Arabs (1975)
Yonatan (Yoni) Netanyahu
Letters from Yoni Netanyahu (1968, 1975)
Elie Wiesel
One Generation After (1970)
A Jew Today (1975, 1978)
Natan Sharanksy
Fear No Evil (1988)
Emmanuel Levinas
Politics After (1979)
Assimilation and New Culture (1980)
Martin Peretz
The God That Did Not Fail (1997)
8. Builders: Labor Zionism
Golda Meir
A Land of Our Own (1973)
Address to the United Nations General Assembly (1958)
Muki Tsur
The Soldiers’ Chat (1967)
Amos Oz
The Meaning of Homeland (1967)
Roy Belzer
Garin HaGolan Anthology (1972)
The Members of Kibbutz Ketura
The Kibbutz Ketura Vision (1994)
Yaakov Rotblit
Shir LaShalom, A Song for Peace (1969)
Leonard Fein
Days of Awe (1982)
Yitzhak Rabin
Our Tremendous Energies from a State of Siege (1994)
Shimon Peres
Nobel Lecture (1994)
Shulamit Aloni
I Cannot Do It Any Other Way (1997)
9. Builders: Revisionist Zionism
Uri Zvi Greenberg
Those Living-Thanks to Them Say (1948)
Israel without the Mount (1948–49)
Geulah Cohen
Memoirs of a Young Terrorist (1943–48)
The Tehiya Party Platform (1988)
Moshe Shamir
For a Greater Israel (1967)
The Green Space: Without Zionism, It’ll Never Happen (1991)
Menachem Begin
The Revolt (1951)
Broadcast to the Nation (1948)
Statement to the Knesset upon the Presentation of His Government (1977)
Yitzhak Shalev
We Shall Not Give Up Our Promised Borders (1963)
Eliezer Schweid
Israel as a Zionist State (1970)
The Promise of the Promised Land (1988)
Benjamin Netanyahu
A Place among the Nations (1993)
10. Builders: Religious Zionism
Ben-Zion Meir Chai Uziel
Prayer for the State of Israel (1948)
On Nationalism (ca. 1940–50)
David Edan
A Call for Aliyah (ca. 1950)
Joseph Ber Soloveitchik
Listen! My Beloved Knocks! (1956)
Yeshayahu Leibowitz
A Call for the Separation of Religion and State (1959)
Zvi Yehuda Hakohen Kook
On the 19th Anniversary of Israel’s Independence (1967)
Abraham Joshua Heschel
Israel: An Echo of Eternity (1969)
Esther Jungreis
Zionism: A Challenge to Man’s Faith (1977)
Talma Alyagon-Roz
Eretz Tzvi, The Land of Beauty (1976, 2014)
Eliezer Berkovits
On Jewish Sovereignty (1973)
Gush Emunim
Friends of Gush Emunim Newsletter (1978)
David Hartman
Auschwitz or Sinai (1982)
The Third Jewish Commonwealth (1985)
Commission on the Philosophy of Conservative Judaism
Emet V’Emunah: Statement of Principles of Conservative Judaism (1988)
Richard Hirsch
Toward a Theology of Reform Zionism (2)
Ovadia Yosef
Oral Torah 14 (1979)
11. Builders: Cultural Zionism
Haim Hefer
There Were Times (1948)
A. M. Klein
The Second Scroll (1951)
Leon Uris
The Exodus Song / This Land Is Mine (1960)
Shmuel Yosef Agnon
Nobel Prize Speech (1966)
Naomi Shemer
Jerusalem of Gold (1967)
Yehudah Amichai
All the Generations before Me (1968)
Tourists  (1980)
Gershon Shaked
No Other Place (1980, 1987)
Letty Cottin Pogrebin
Deborah, Golda, and Me (1991)
Anne Roiphe
Generation without Memory (1981)
12. Builders: Diaspora Zionism
Arthur Hertzberg
Impasse: A Movement in Search of a Program (1949)
Some Reflections on Zionism Today (1977)
Mordecai M. Kaplan
A New Zionism (1954, 1959)
Rose Halprin
Speech to the Zionist General Council (1950)
Jacob Blaustein
Statements by Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion and Mr. Jacob Blaustein on the Relationship between Israel and American Jews (1950, 1956)
Simon Rawidowicz
Babylon and Jerusalem (1957)
Two That Are One (1949)
Irving “Yitz” Greenberg
Twenty Years Later: The Impact of Israel on American Jewry (1968)
Yom Yerushalayim: Jerusalem Day (1988)
Eugene Borowitz
Twenty Years Later: The Impact of Israel on American Jewry (1968)
Herman Wouk
This Is My God (1969, 1974)
Arnold Jacob Wolf
Will Israel Become Zion? (1973)
Breira National Platform (1977)
Hillel Halkin
Letters to an American Jewish Friend: The Case for Life in Israel (1977, 2013)
Dennis Prager and Joseph Telushkin
Nine Questions People Ask about Judaism (1975)
Alex Singer
Alex: Building a Life (1983, 1986, 1996)
Blu Greenberg
What Do American Jews Believe? A Symposium (1996)
Part Three. Torchbearers: Reassessing, Redirecting, Reinvigorating
13. Torchbearers: Political Zionism
Michael Oren
Jews and the Challenge of Sovereignty (2006)
Tal Becker
Beyond Survival: Aspirational Zionism (2011)
Michael Walzer
The State of Righteousness: Liberal Zionists Speak Out (2012)
Aharon Barak
Address to the 34th World Zionist Congress in Jerusalem (2002)
Yael “Yuli” Tamir
A Jewish and Democratic State (2)
Ze’ev Maghen
John Lennon and the Jews: A Philosophical Rampage (2010)
Daniel Gordis
The Promise of Israel (2012)
Leon Wieseltier
Brothers and Keepers: Black Jews and the Meaning of Zionism (1985)
Irwin Cotler
Speech to the United Jewish Communities General Assembly (2006)
Gadi Taub
In Defense of Zionism (2014)
Bernard-Henri Lévy
The Genius of Judaism (2017)
Asa Kasher
idf Code of Ethics (1994)
14. Torchbearers: Labor Zionism
Anita Shapira
The Abandoned Middle Road (2012)
Ephraim Katchalski-Katzir
My Contributions to Science and Society (2005)
Ruth Gavison
Statement of Principles, Gavison-Medan Covenant (2003)
Einat Wilf
Zionism: The Only Way Forward (2012)
Chaim Gans
The Zionism We Really Want (2013)
David Grossman
Speech at Rabin Square (2006)
Nitzan Horowitz
On the Steps of Boorishness (2013)
Alon Tal
Pollution in a Promised Land (2002, 2017)
Peter Beinart
The Failure of the American Jewish Establishment (2010)
Ari Shavit
Back to Liberal Zionism (2014)
A Missed Funeral and the True Meaning of Zionism (2013)
Stav Shaffir
Knesset Speech (2015)
15. Torchbearers: Revisionist Zionism
Yoram Hazony
The End of Zionism? (1995)
Israel’s Jewish State Law and the Future of the Middle East (2014)
Shmuel Trigano
There Is No “State of All Its Citizens” (2015, 2017)
Israel Harel
We Are Here to Stay (2001)
Caroline Glick
The Israeli Solution: A One-State Plan for Peace in the Middle East (2014)
Ruth Wisse
Jews and Power (2007)
David Mamet
Bigotry Pins Blame on Jews (2006, 2011)
The Secret Knowledge: On the Dismantling of American Culture (2011)
Ze’ev B. “Benny” Begin
The Essence of the State of Israel (2015, 2017)
Reuven Rivlin
Remarks of President Rivlin: Vision of the Four Tribes (2015)
Ayelet Shaked
Pathways to Governance (2016)
16. Torchbearers: Religious Zionism
Daniel Polisar
Is Iran the Only Model for a Jewish State? (1999)
Benjamin Ish-Shalom
Jewish Sovereignty: The Challenges of Meaning, Identity, and Responsibility (2014)
Eliezer Sadan
Religious Zionism: Taking Responsibility in the Worldly Life of the Nation (2008)
Yaacov Medan
Statement of Principles, Gavison-Medan Covenant (2003)
Yehuda Amital
Reishit Tzemichat Ge’ulatenu: What Kind of Redemption Does Israel Represent? (2005)
Benjamin “Benny” Lau
The Challenge of Halakhic Innovation (2010)
Yedidia Z. Stern
Ani Ma’amin, I Believe (2005)
Leah Shakdiel
The Reason You Are Here Is Because You Are a Jew! (2004)
Arnold Eisen
What Does It Mean to Be a Zionist in 2015? Speech to the 37th Zionist Congress: (2015)
Conservative Judaism Today and Tomorrow (2015)
David Ellenson
Reform Zionism Today: A Consideration of First Principles (2014)
17. Torchbearers: Cultural Zionism
Gil Troy
Why I Am a Zionist (2008)
Yair Lapid
I Am a Zionist (2009)
Micah Goodman
From the Secular and the Holy (2018)
Ronen Shoval
Herzl’s Vision 2.0 (2013)
A. B. Yehoshua
The Basics of Zionism, Homeland, and Being a Total Jew (2017)
Erez Biton
Address at the President’s House on the Subject of Jerusalem (2016)
Bernard Avishai
The Hebrew Republic (2008)
Saul Singer
They Tried to Kill Us, We Won, Now We’re Changing the World (2011)
Sharon Shalom
A Meeting of Two Brothers Who Had Been Separated for Two Thousand Years (2017)
Einat Ramon
Zionism: A Jewish Feminist-Womanist Appreciation (2017)
Adam Milstein
Israeliness Is the Answer (2016, 2017)
Rachel Sharansky Danziger
A New Kind of Zionist Hero (2015, 2017)
18. Torchbearers: Diaspora Zionism
Jonathan Sacks
Will We Have Jewish Grandchildren? (1994)
Alan Dershowitz
The Vanishing American Jew (1997)
Yossi Beilin
His Brother’s Keeper: Israel and Diaspora Jewry in the Twenty-First Century (2)
Scott Shay
Getting Our Groove Back: How to Energize American Jewry (2007)
Donniel Hartman
Israel and World Jewry: The Need for a New Paradigm (2011)
Yossi Klein Halevi
A Jewish Centrist Manifesto (2015)
Ellen Willis
Is There Still a Jewish Question? I’m an Anti-Anti-Zionist (2003)
Theodore Sasson
The New American Zionism (2013)
Central Conference of American Rabbis
A Statement of Principles for Reform Judaism (1999)
The World Zionist Organization
Jerusalem Program (1951)
Jerusalem Program (2004)
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