Jewish Socialist Democratic Workers' Party Poale Zion
Jewish Socialist Democratic Workers' Party Poale Zion | |
---|---|
Party leader |
Dow Ber Borochow (1906-) Salomon Goldelman (1917) |
founding | 1906 |
Place of foundation | Poltava |
resolution | 1928 |
newspaper | Evrejskaja rabotschaja chronika (1906–1907) Molot (1906–1907) Dos Yidische Arbeterwort (1906–1907) The proletarian thought (1906–1907) Forwerts (1906–1907) Dos wort (1914) |
Alignment | socialist zionist |
Number of members | 1906: 16,000 1909: 400 1917 (February): 2,500 1917 (center): 12,000-16,000 |
The Jewish Socialist Democratic Workers' Party "Poalei Tsion" (usually called the Jewish Social Democratic Workers' Party "Poale Zion" , after 1922 the Jewish Communist Workers' Party ) was a Zionist party in the Russian Empire , then in Ukraine and Poland from 1906 to 1928/1950. She was part of the Poale Zion Movement .
history
In 1906 the party was founded at a congress in Poltava .
Since 1917, representatives of the party participated in the government of the newly independent Ukrainian People's Republic . In 1919 some of the members founded the Jewish Communist Party Poale Zion .
In 1928 it was dissolved in the Soviet Union , in Poland it existed until 1950.
literature
- Mario Keßler : The Comintern and the Poale Zion 1919 to 1922 - A failed synthesis of communism and Zionism , in: Work - Movement - History , Issue II / 2017, pp. 15-30.
- Jan Rybak: Socialist Zionism in the European Revolution 1917 to 1923: Contradictions of Emancipatory Identities , in: Work - Movement - History , Volume II / 2017, pp. 31–48.
- Orel Beilinson: Judaism, Islam and the Russian Revolution: Considerations from the perspective of comparative history , in: Work - Movement - History , Issue II / 2017, pp. 65–85.
Web links
- Poale Zion in Encyclopedia of Ukraine
- Party manifesto from 1906 (Russian)