Zionism, or Jewish nationalism, is a modern
political movement. Its core beliefs are that all Jews constitute one nation
(not simply a religious or ethnic community) and that the only solution to
anti-Semitism is the concentration of as many Jews as possible in
Palestine/Israel and the establishment of a Jewish state there. The World
Zionist Organization, established by Theodor Herzl in 1897, declared that the
aim of Zionism was to establish "a national home for the Jewish people
secured by public law."
Zionism drew on Jewish religious attachment to
Jerusalem and the Land of Israel (Eretz Israel). But the politics of Zionism
was influenced by nationalist ideology, and by colonial ideas about Europeans'
rights to claim and settle other parts of the world.
Zionism gained adherents among Jews and support
from the West as a consequence of the murderous anti-Jewish riots (known as
pogroms) in the Russian Empire in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The
Nazi genocide (mass murder) of European Jews during World War II killed over
six million, and this disaster enhanced international support for the creation
of a Jewish state.
There are several different forms of Zionism.
From the 1920s until the 1970s, the dominant form was Labor Zionism, which
sought to link socialism and nationalism. By the 1920s, Labor Zionists in
Palestine established the kibbutz movement (a kibbutz is a collective commune,
usually with an agricultural economy), the Jewish trade union and cooperative
movement, the main Zionist militias (the Haganah and Palmach) and the political
parties that ultimately coalesced in the Israeli Labor Party in 1968.
A second form of Zionism was the Revisionist
movement led by Vladimir Jabotinsky. They earned the name
"Revisionist" because they wanted to revise the boundaries of Jewish
territorial aspirations and claims beyond Palestine to include areas east of
the Jordan River. In the 1920s and 1930s, they differed from Labor Zionists by
declaring openly the objective to establish a Jewish state (rather than the
vaguer formula of a "national home") in Palestine. And they believed
that armed force would be required to establish such a state. Their pre-state
organizations that included the Betar youth movement and the ETZEL (National
Military Organization) formed the core of what became the Herut (Freedom) Party
after Israeli independence. This party subsequently became the central
component of the Likud Party, the largest right wing Israeli party since the
1970s.
Although many Jews became Zionists by the early
20th century, until the rise of Adolf Hitler in Germany and the institution of
a "Final Solution" to exterminate world Jewry, most Jews were not
Zionists. Most orthodox Jews were anti-Zionist. They believed that only God
should reunite Jews in the Promised Land, and regarded Zionism as a violation
of God's will. Some Jews in other parts of the world, including the United
States, opposed Zionism out of concern that their own position and rights as
citizens in their countries would be at risk if Jews were recognized as a
distinct national (rather than religious) group. But the horrors of the
Holocaust significantly diminished Jewish opposition or antipathy to Zionism,
and following World War II most Jews throughout the world came to support the
Zionist movement and demand the creation of an independent Jewish state.
Israel's victory in the 1967 war gave rise to a more religious
form of Zionism.
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Although orthodox Jews continued to oppose the
creation of a Jewish state for several more decades, they supported mass
settlement of Jews in Palestine as a means of strengthening and protecting the
community. And following the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, most orthodox Jews who
previously had resisted Zionism adopted the belief that Israel's overwhelming
victory in the war was a sign of God's support, and a fulfillment of God's
promise to bring about the Messianic era. The areas captured and occupied in
1967, especially the West Bank, were important to religious Jews because they
are the core of the biblical Land of Israel (Judea and Samaria). Consequently,
Israel's victory in 1967 gave rise to a more religious variation of Zionism.
Some existing political parties representing orthodox Jews came to embrace
religious nationalism, and new parties and movements formed to advocate
Israel's permanent control and extensive Jewish settlement in the West Bank and
Gaza.
The religious-nationalist parties and groups
that constitute the far right of the Israeli political spectrum maintain a hard
line on matters relating to territory and the Arab-Israeli conflict. They have
allied with the Likud Party. Although the Labor Party also has supported Jewish
settlement in the West Bank and Gaza, a key difference is a willingness to
consider a territorial compromise with Palestinians as a means of ending the
conflict. The Likud and its allies oppose any territorial withdrawal. In 1977,
the Likud won the national election, for the first time unseating the Labor
Party that had governed Israel since independence. Since then, Likud and Labor
have alternated as the governing party, sometimes forming coalition governments
when neither could achieve a clear electoral victory.
A minority of Jewish Israelis belongs to
left-wing Zionist parties, which formed a political coalition known as Meretz
in the 1980s. Meretz often joins Labor-led governments. Leftist Zionists are
fully committed to maintaining Israel as a Jewish state, but tend to be more
willing than the Labor Party to compromise on territorial issues, and have
relatively greater sympathy for Palestinian national aspirations for a state of
their own. A tiny minority of ultra-leftist Jewish Israelis identify themselves
as non- or anti-Zionists. Some of them aspire to see all of Israel/Palestine
transformed into a single state with citizenship and equal rights for all
inhabitants, and others advocate the creation of a Palestinian state in all of
the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
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