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Political Movement -
Zionism - Labor Zionism
Labor Zionism (or Labour Zionism) is the
traditional left-wing of the Zionist ideology. Unlike the "political
Zionist" tendency founded by Theodor Herzl and advocated by Chaim
Weizmann, Labor Zionists did not 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 as
part of the class struggle though the efforts of the Jewish working
class settling in Palestine and constructing a state through the
creation of kibbutzim in the countryside and a Jewish proletariat in the
cities.
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 dominated the institutions of
the Yishuv, particularly the trade union federation known as the
Histadrut. The Haganah (later the Palmach) -- the largest Zionist
paramilitary force -- was a Labour Zionist institution. It played a
leading role in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War and its former members
dominated the Israeli military for decades after the formation of the
state of Israel in 1948.
Philosophers of the Labor Zionist movement included Nahum Syrkin and Ber
Borochov and leading figures in the movement included David Ben-Gurion.
The main vehicle of the Labor Zionist movement was the Poale Zion party
which split into a Left Poale Zion and Right Poale Zion factions. The
Left Poale Zion party ultimately merged with Hashomer Hatzair to become
the Mapam party, which in turn later joined with other parties to create
Meretz and Yachad. The Right Poale Zion became the Mapai party, later
the Israeli Labour Party. These two parties were initially the two
largest parties in the Yishuv and in the first Israeli Knesset and the
Mapai/Labour Party in particular dominated Israeli politics both in the
pre-independence Yishuv and for the first three decades of the state of
Israel, until Revisionist Zionism (represented by the Likud political
party) became an increasingly strong power in Zionist politics.
From:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labour_Zionism
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