Political Movement - Zionist Organizations - World Zionist Organization
The World Zionist Organization, or WZO,
was founded as the Zionist Organization, or ZO, on September 3, 1897, at
the First Zionist Congress held in Basel, Switzerland. The ZO served as
an umbrella organization for the Zionist movement. Theodor Herzl, who
organized the first Congress, later wrote, "At Basle I founded the
Jewish State...Perhaps in five years, and certainly in fifty, everyone
will know it."
When the State of Israel was declared fifty years later, on May 14,
1948, many of its new administrative institutions were already in place,
having evolved during the regular Zionist Congresses of the previous
decades. Some of these institutions remain to this day.
In 1960 the ZO changed its name to the World Zionist Organization.
Membership and delegations
Membership in the WZO was open to all Jews, and the right to vote for
delegates to the Congresses was secured by the purchase of the Zionist
Shekel. Delegations from all around the world, and from many different
political backgrounds and religious traditions, took part in each
Congress; delegations/parties were mainly grouped by ideology, rather
than by geography.
Sister organizations
The finances of the WZO were conducted by the Jewish Colonial Trust
(founded in 1899), and acquisition of land was conducted by the Jewish
National Fund (founded in 1901). Keren Hayesod (founded 1920) funded
Zionist and Yishuv activities prior to the creation of the state of
Israel through enterprises such as the Palestine Electric Company, the
Palestine Potash Company and the Anglo-Palestine Bank.
World Zionist Congress
From 1897 to 1946 , a Zionist Congress was held every two years in
various European cities, save for interruptions during the two World
Wars. Their goal was to build an infrastructure to further the cause of
Jewish settlement in Palestine.
As of 1997, the WZO is still holding a semi regular World Zionist
Congress, based on the same structure it has had for a century. However,
support for the concept and voter turnout are waning. Below is a quote
from a speech given that year by Ismar Schorsch, then chancellor of the
Jewish Theological Seminary.
This week I will leave for Israel to attend the World Zionist Congress
along with 37 other delegates from MERCAZ, the official Zionist party of
the Conservative Movement in the United States. Despite the overblown
rhetoric that will be heard in Jerusalem, no one should imagine that
this Congress is a matter of any consequence. Zionism is alive and well,
but the World Zionist Organization died a long time ago. In Jewish life
we simply can't muster the political will to dismantle organizational
structures designed for a specific purpose after they have been crowned
with success.
The recent elections in America for the World Zionist Congress prove my
point incontrovertibly. Only 150,000 Jews registered to vote and no more
than 110,000 of them actually saw fit to vote. Surely more than 2% of
American Jewry is devoted to the cause of Zionism! Rather, the existing
organizational structure, a relic of the heyday of the pre-state Zionist
movement, is no longer adequate to give expression to the nature and
expanse of Zionist sentiment in America. And no amount of campaign
spending is going to rev up a political machinery encrusted with so much
rust.
From:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Zionist_Organization
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