Zionism without Zion: The Jewish Territorial Organization and Its Conflict with the Zionist Organization

Zionism without Zion: The Jewish Territorial Organization and Its Conflict with the Zionist Organization

by Gur Alroey
Zionism without Zion: The Jewish Territorial Organization and Its Conflict with the Zionist Organization

Zionism without Zion: The Jewish Territorial Organization and Its Conflict with the Zionist Organization

by Gur Alroey

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Overview

Examines an alternative ideology to Zionism that attempted to build a Jewish State outside of Palestine.

While the ideologies of Territorialism and Zionism originated at the same time, the Territorialists foresaw a dire fate for Eastern European Jews, arguing that they could not wait for the Zionist Organization to establish a Jewish state in Palestine. This pessimistic worldview led Territorialists to favor a solution for the Jewish state "here and now"—and not only in the Land of Israel. In Zionism without Zion: The Jewish Territorial Organization and Its Conflict with the Zionist Organization, author Gur Alroey examines this group's unique perspective, its struggle with the Zionist movement, its Zionist rivals' response, and its diplomatic efforts to obtain a territory for the Jewish people in the first decades of the twentieth century.

Alroey begins by examining the British government's Uganda Plan and the ensuing crisis it caused in the Zionist movement and Jewish society. He details the founding of the Jewish Territorial Organization (ITO) in 1903 and explains the varied reactions that the Territorialist ideology received from Zionists and settlers in Palestine. Alroey also details the diplomatic efforts of Territorialists during their desperate search for a suitable territory, which ultimately never bore fruit. Finally, he attempts to understand the reasons for the ITO's dissolution after the Balfour Declaration, explores the revival of Territorialism with the New Territorialists in the 1930s and 1940s, and describes the similarities and differences between the movement then and its earlier version.

Zionism without Zion sheds new light on the solutions Territorialism proposed to alleviate the hardship of Eastern European Jews at the start of the twentieth century and offers fresh insights into the challenges faced by Zionism in the same era. The thorough discussion of this under-studied ideology will be of considerable interested to scholars of Eastern European history, Jewish history, and Israel studies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780814342077
Publisher: Wayne State University Press
Publication date: 05/02/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 372
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Gur Alroey is professor in the department of Israel Studies at the University of Haifa. He is also the author of Bread to Eat and Clothes to Wear: Letters from Jewish Migrants in the Early Twentieth Century (Wayne State University Press, 2011) and An Unpromising Land: The Jewish Migration to Palestine in the Early Twentieth Century.

Table of Contents

Preface vii

Introduction: A Shared Ancestry 1

1 The Big Bang 15

2 A Land Ablaze 73

3 A Land for a People, Not a People for a Land 123

4 The Territorialist Movement in Palestine 172

5 The Search for a Homeland 202

6 Swan Song 254

Conclusion: Zionism Without Zion? 295

Notes 305

Bibliography 333

Index 343

What People are Saying About This

Sady and Ludwig Kahn Professor of Jewish History at the University of California, Los Angeles - David N. Myers

In Zionism without Zion, Gur Alroey, one of today's leading scholars of Jewish migration, offers the fullest and most searching analysis of the Territorialist movement, one of the least-known but most intriguing of Jewish nationalist movements. Exhaustively researched and beautifully conceived, this book unpacks the 'Big Bang' of Territorialism, the 'Uganda' proposal by Theodor Herzl to settle Jews in Eastern Africa in 1903. It moves on to chart the ideological current of Territorialism as it snakes its way through Palestine and other possible sites of Jewish settlement. Readers owe Alroey a considerable debt of gratitude for excavating a largely neglected chapter of twentieth-century Jewish history with such verve and texture.

Daniel E. Koshland Professor in Jewish Culture and History, Stanford University - Steven J. Zipperstein

A learned reminder of the urgency once attached to efforts to locate a Jewish national home outside Palestine. Alroey provides a treasure trove of information regarding a movement that saw itself, not entirely without validity, as the true heir to Theodor Herzl's original vision.

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