Everything about Labour Zionist totally explained
Labor Zionism (
Labour Zionism,,
tsionut sotsialistit) can be described as the major stream of the
left wing of the
Zionist movement. If it wasn't for many years the major stream in the Zionist movement, it was a significant tendency among Zionists and Zionist organizational structures. It saw itself as the Zionist sector of the historic Jewish labor movements of Eastern and Central Europe, eventually developing local units in most countries with sizeable Jewish populations. Unlike the "
political Zionist" tendency founded by
Theodor Herzl and advocated by
Chaim Weizmann, Labor Zionists didn't believe that a Jewish state would be created simply by appealing to the international community or to a powerful nation such as
Britain,
Germany or the
Ottoman Empire. Rather, Labor Zionists believed that a Jewish state could only be created through the efforts of the Jewish
working class settling in
Palestine and constructing a state through the creation of a progressive Jewish society with rural
kibbutzim and
moshavim and an urban Jewish proletariat.
Labor Zionism grew in size and influence and eclipsed "political Zionism" by the 1930s both internationally and within the
British Mandate of Palestine where Labor Zionists predominated among many of the institutions of the pre-independence Jewish community
Yishuv, particularly the
trade union federation known as the
Histadrut. The
Haganah — the largest Zionist paramilitary defence force — was a Labor Zionist institution.
Labor Zionists played a leading role in the
1948 Arab-Israeli War and Labor Zionists were predominant among the leadership of the
Israeli military for decades after the formation of the state of
Israel in 1948.
Major thoreticians of the Labor Zionist movement included
Moses Hess,
Nahum Syrkin,
Ber Borochov and
Aaron David Gordon and leading figures in the movement included
David Ben-Gurion and
Berl Katznelson.
Albert Einstein was among a number of prominent Jewish personalities that supported the Labor Zionist Movement.
Ideology
Moses Hess's 1862 work
Rome and Jerusalem. The Last National Question argued for the Jews to settle in
Palestine as a means of settling the
national question. Hess proposed a
socialist state in which the Jews would become
agrarianised through a process of "redemption of the soil" that would transform the Jewish community into a true nation in that Jews would occupy the productive layers of society rather than being an intermediary non-productive merchant class, which is how he perceived European Jews.
Ber Borochov, continuing from the work of
Moses Hess, proposed the creation of a socialist society that would correct the "inverted pyramid" of Jewish society. Borochov believed that Jews were forced out of normal occupations by Gentile hostility and competition, using this dynamic to explain the relative predominance of Jewish professionals, rather than workers. Jewish society, he argued, wouldn't be healthy until the inverted pyramid was righted, and the majority of Jews became workers and peasants again. This, he held, could only be accomplished by Jews in their own country.
Another Zionist thinker,
A. D. Gordon, was influenced by the
völkisch ideas of European romantic nationalism, and proposed establishing a society of Jewish peasants. Gordon made a religion of work. These two figures, and others like them, motivated the establishment of the first Jewish collective settlement, or
kibbutz,
Degania, on the southern shore of the
Sea of Galilee, in 1909 (the same year that the city of
Tel Aviv was established). Deganiah, and many other
kibbutzim that were soon to follow, attempted to realise these thinkers' vision by creating communal villages, where newly arrived European Jews would be taught agriculture and other manual skills.
Parties
Initially two labor parties were founded by the Second
Aliyah (1904-1914) immigrants: the nationalistic and anti-socialist Hapo'el Hatza'ir (Young Worker) party and the
Poale Zion party, with socialist roots. The Poale Zion Party had a left wing and a right wing. In 1919 the right wing, including Ben-Gurion, and anti-Marxists non-party people founded Ahdut Ha'avoda (United Labor). In 1930 Ahdut Ha'avoda and Hapo'el Hatza'ir fused into the
Mapai party, which included all of mainstream Labor Zionism. Until the 1960s these parties were dominated by members of the Second Aliyah.
The Left Poale Zion party ultimately merged with the kibbutz-based
Hashomer Hatzair, the urban Socialist League and several smaller left-wing groups to become the
Mapam party, which in turn later joined with other parties to create
Meretz.
The
Mapai party later became the
Israeli Labor Party, which for a number of years was linked with Mapam in
Alignment. These two parties were initially the two largest parties in the
Yishuv and in the
first Knesset, whilst Mapai and its predecessors dominated Israeli politics both in the pre-independence
Yishuv and for the first three decades of Israel's independence, until the late 1970s.
Decline and transformation
Already in the 1920s the Labor movement disregarded its socialist roots and concentrated on building the nation by constructive action. According to Tzahor its leaders didn't "abandon fundamental ideological principles". However according to Ze'ev Sternhell in his book
The Founding Myths of Israel, the labor leaders had already abandoned socialist principles by 1920 and only used them as "mobilizing myths".
In Israel the Labor Party has followed the general path of other governing
social democratic parties such as the
British Labour Party and is now fully oriented towards capitalism and even
neo-liberalism, though recently it has rediscovered the
welfare state under the leadership of
Amir Peretz.
Labor Zionism is ironically associated within Israeli society as representing the country's ruling class and political elite whereas working-class Israelis have traditionally voted for the Likud since the Begin Revolution of 1977.
What distinguishes modern Labor Zionism from other streams isn't economic policy, an analysis of capitalism or any class analysis or orientation but its attitude towards the
peace process in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict with Labor Zionists tending to support the
Israeli peace camp to varying degrees.
Youth Movements
Labor Zionism exists today organizationally, manifesting itself in such
Zionist youth movements as
Habonim Dror,
Hashomer Hatzair and college-age campus activist groups such as the
Union of Progressive Zionists of the U.S. and Canada.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Labour Zionist'.
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