All Topics  
Jewish left

 

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Jewish left



 
 
The term "Jewish left" describes Jew
Jew

A Jew is a member of the Jewish people, an ethnoreligious group that traces its ancestry to the Israelites or Hebrews of the Ancient Near East....
s who identify with or support left wing, occasionally liberal
Liberalism

Liberalism is a broad class of political philosophy that considers individualism liberty and equality to be the most important political goals....
 causes, consciously as Jews, either as individuals or through organizations. There is no one organization or movement which constitutes the "Jewish left," however. Jews have been major forces in the history of the labor movement, the Settlement house movement, the women's rights
Women's rights

The term women's rights refers to Freedom and entitlements of women and girls of all ages. These rights may or may not be institutionalized, ignored or suppressed by law, local custom, and behavior in a particular society....
 movement, anti-racist work, and anti-fascist organizing of many forms.

Realizing that the expression "on the left" covers a range of politics, it is worth noting that many well-known figures "on the left" have been Jews, for instance, Murray Bookchin
Murray Bookchin

Murray Bookchin was an United States Libertarian socialism, political and social philosopher, speaker and writer. For much of his life he called himself an anarchist, although as early as 1995 he privately renounced his identification with the anarchist movement....
, Judith Butler
Judith Butler

Judith Butler is an United States post-structuralist philosopher, who has contributed to the fields of feminism, queer theory, political philosophy, and ethics....
, Noam Chomsky
Noam Chomsky

Avram Noam Chomsky is an United States linguistics, philosopher, cognitive science, political activist, author, and lecturer. He is an Institute Professor emeritus and professor emeritus of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology....
, Eric Hobsbawm
Eric Hobsbawm

Eric John Ernest Hobsbawm Companion of Honour, FBA, is a United Kingdom historical materialism and author....
, Karl Marx
Karl Marx

Karl Heinrich Marx was a Germanphilosophy, political economy, historian, sociologist, humanism, political theorist and revolutionary credited as the founder of communism....
, Harold Pinter
Harold Pinter

Harold Pinter, Companion of Honour, Order of the British Empire , an English people playwright, screenwriter, actor, Theatre director, poet, author, political activist, and the 2005 Nobel Prize in Literature, was at the time of his death considered by many "the most influential and imitated dramatist of his generation."...
, Erich Fromm
Erich Fromm

Erich Seligmann Fromm was an internationally renowned social psychology, psychoanalyst, and humanism philosophy. He was associated with what became known as the Frankfurt School of critical theory....
, Naomi Klein
Naomi Klein

Naomi Klein is a Canada journalist, author and Activism well known for her political analyses and criticism of corporate globalization....
 and Howard Zinn
Howard Zinn

Howard Zinn is a professor, political science, history, Social criticism, democratic socialist, activist and playwright, best known as author of the bestseller A People's History of the United States....
, who were born into Jewish families and have various degrees of connection to Jewish communities, Jewish culture, Jewish tradition or the Jewish religion in its many variants.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Jewish left'
Start a new discussion about 'Jewish left'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Encyclopedia


The term "Jewish left" describes Jew
Jew

A Jew is a member of the Jewish people, an ethnoreligious group that traces its ancestry to the Israelites or Hebrews of the Ancient Near East....
s who identify with or support left wing, occasionally liberal
Liberalism

Liberalism is a broad class of political philosophy that considers individualism liberty and equality to be the most important political goals....
 causes, consciously as Jews, either as individuals or through organizations. There is no one organization or movement which constitutes the "Jewish left," however. Jews have been major forces in the history of the labor movement, the Settlement house movement, the women's rights
Women's rights

The term women's rights refers to Freedom and entitlements of women and girls of all ages. These rights may or may not be institutionalized, ignored or suppressed by law, local custom, and behavior in a particular society....
 movement, anti-racist work, and anti-fascist organizing of many forms.

Realizing that the expression "on the left" covers a range of politics, it is worth noting that many well-known figures "on the left" have been Jews, for instance, Murray Bookchin
Murray Bookchin

Murray Bookchin was an United States Libertarian socialism, political and social philosopher, speaker and writer. For much of his life he called himself an anarchist, although as early as 1995 he privately renounced his identification with the anarchist movement....
, Judith Butler
Judith Butler

Judith Butler is an United States post-structuralist philosopher, who has contributed to the fields of feminism, queer theory, political philosophy, and ethics....
, Noam Chomsky
Noam Chomsky

Avram Noam Chomsky is an United States linguistics, philosopher, cognitive science, political activist, author, and lecturer. He is an Institute Professor emeritus and professor emeritus of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology....
, Eric Hobsbawm
Eric Hobsbawm

Eric John Ernest Hobsbawm Companion of Honour, FBA, is a United Kingdom historical materialism and author....
, Karl Marx
Karl Marx

Karl Heinrich Marx was a Germanphilosophy, political economy, historian, sociologist, humanism, political theorist and revolutionary credited as the founder of communism....
, Harold Pinter
Harold Pinter

Harold Pinter, Companion of Honour, Order of the British Empire , an English people playwright, screenwriter, actor, Theatre director, poet, author, political activist, and the 2005 Nobel Prize in Literature, was at the time of his death considered by many "the most influential and imitated dramatist of his generation."...
, Erich Fromm
Erich Fromm

Erich Seligmann Fromm was an internationally renowned social psychology, psychoanalyst, and humanism philosophy. He was associated with what became known as the Frankfurt School of critical theory....
, Naomi Klein
Naomi Klein

Naomi Klein is a Canada journalist, author and Activism well known for her political analyses and criticism of corporate globalization....
 and Howard Zinn
Howard Zinn

Howard Zinn is a professor, political science, history, Social criticism, democratic socialist, activist and playwright, best known as author of the bestseller A People's History of the United States....
, who were born into Jewish families and have various degrees of connection to Jewish communities, Jewish culture, Jewish tradition or the Jewish religion in its many variants. It also includes such people as rabbis Michael Lerner
Michael Lerner (rabbi)

Michael Lerner is an United States rabbi, political activist, the editor of Tikkun , a Progressivism Jewish and interfaith magazine based in Berkeley, California, and the rabbi of Beyt Tikkun Synagogue of San Francisco....
 and Arthur Waskow
Arthur Waskow

Arthur Ocean Waskow, born Arthur I. Waskow, is an United States author, political activist, and rabbi associated with the Jewish Renewal movement....
, both in their own way religiously devout and culturally identified Jews. It includes as well many secular, cosmopolitan people who nonetheless remain connected to Jewish culture, such as Rosa Luxemburg
Rosa Luxemburg

Rosa Luxemburg was a Poland Germany Marxist theory, Socialism philosopher, and revolutionary for the Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania, the German Social Democratic Party of Germany, the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany and the Communist Party of Germany....
, Emma Goldman
Emma Goldman

Emma Goldman was an anarchism known for her political activism, writing and speeches. She played a pivotal role in the development of anarchist political philosophy in North America and Europe in the first half of the twentieth century....
, Rose Schneiderman
Rose Schneiderman

Rose Schneiderman was a prominent United States trade union leader and socialism of the first part of the twentieth century....
, Muriel Rukeyser
Muriel Rukeyser

Muriel Rukeyser was an American poet and political activist, best known for her poems about equality, feminism, social justice, and Judaism. Kenneth Rexroth said that she was the greatest poet of her "exact generation"....
 and Susan Sontag
Susan Sontag

Susan Sontag was an United States author, filmmaker, philosopher, literary theorist, and activism....
. Views regarding Zionism
Zionism

Zionism is the international Jewish political movement that originally supported the reestablishment of a homeland for the Jewish People in Palestine....
 among those either identified or self-identified as being among the Jewish left can be quite varied, and are often independent of their other political and social views.

While there is a slight increase of Jews "on the left" connecting their politics to their spirituality
Spirituality

Spirituality, in a narrow sense, concerns itself with matters of the spirit, a concept closely tied to religion and faith, transcendence , or one or more Deity....
, this is a somewhat new phenomenon, when contrasted with the long history of secular socialist and communist Jewish activist history (e.g., The Workmen's Circle/Arbeter Ring
The Workmen's Circle/Arbeter Ring

The Workmen?s Circle or Arbeter Ring is a Yiddish language-oriented USA Jewish fraternal organization committed to Social Justice, Jewish Community, and Ashkenazic Culture....
) as well as anarchist-Jewish
Jewish anarchism

Jewish anarchism is a general term encompassing various expressions of anarchism within the Jewish community....
 activism which was not only explicitly secular but had from time to time denounced religion. From the late 1880s through the mid-1950s, there was a range of Jewish left newspapers (and other publications) in Yiddish
Yiddish language

Yiddish is a non-territorial High German languages of Jewish origin, spoken throughout the world. Unlike other such languages, Yiddish is written with the Hebrew alphabet as opposed to a Latin alphabet....
 that covered the spectrum of Jewish left-wing political and cultural expression in Eastern and Central Europe, as well as both North and South America, and in Mandatory Palestine's Yishuv
Yishuv

Yishuv or Ha-Yishuv A distinction is sometimes drawn between the Old Yishuv and the New Yishuv.The Old Yishuv refers to all the Jews living there before the aliyah of 1882 by the Zionist movement....
, as well as the early years of the State of Israel.

Jewish religious values and social justice


A range of left-wing values vis-à-vis social justice
Social justice

Social justice, sometimes called civil justice, refers to the concept of a society in which justice is achieved in every aspect of society, rather than merely the administration of law....
 can be traced to Jewish
Judaism

Judaism is a set of beliefs and practices originating in the Hebrew Bible , as later further explored and explained in the Talmud and other texts....
 religious texts, including the Tanakh
Tanakh

The Tanakh is the Bible used in Judaism. The name "Tanakh" is a Hebrew language Acronym and initialism formed from the initial Hebrew alphabet of the Tanakh's three traditional subdivisions: The Torah , Nevi'im and Ketuvim - hence TaNaKh....
 and later texts, which include a strong endorsement of hospitality to "the stranger" and the principle of redistribution of wealth in the Biblical idea of Jubilee
Jubilee (Biblical)

The Jubilee year, is the year at the end of seven cycles of Sabbatical year s , and according to Bible regulations had a special impact on the ownership and management of land, in the territory of the kingdom of Israel and kingdom of Judah; there is some debate whether it was the 49th year , or whether it was the following 50th year....
 — as well as a tradition of challenging authority, as exemplified by the Biblical Prophet
Prophet

In religion, a prophet is a person who has claimed to have encountered the supernatural or the Divinity, often one who serves as an intermediary with humanity....
s.

In the twentieth century, Jewish theologians — notably Abraham Joshua Heschel
Abraham Joshua Heschel

Abraham Joshua Heschel was a Warsaw-born American rabbi and one of the leading Jewish theologians of the 20th century....
, Arnold Jacob Wolf
Arnold Jacob Wolf

Rabbi Arnold Jacob Wolf was an important American Reform Rabbi, and a longtime champion of peace and progressive politics....
, Arthur Waskow
Arthur Waskow

Arthur Ocean Waskow, born Arthur I. Waskow, is an United States author, political activist, and rabbi associated with the Jewish Renewal movement....
 and Mordecai Kaplan
Mordecai Kaplan

Mordecai Menahem Kaplan was a rabbi and the founder of Reconstructionist Judaism.Kaplan was born in Lithuania and was Semicha at Jewish Theological Seminary in New York City in 1902....
, more recently Michael Lerner and Daniel Boyarin
Daniel Boyarin

Daniel Boyarin is a philosopher and historian of religion. Born Asbury Park, New Jersey, he holds dual United States and Israeli citizenship. Trained as a Talmudic scholar, in 1990 he was appointed Professor of Talmudic Culture, Departments of Near Eastern Studies and Rhetoric, University of California, Berkeley, a post which he still holds....
 — have emphasised these social justice aspects of the religion.

See also: Anarchism and Orthodox Judaism
Anarchism and Orthodox Judaism

While there is no organized Orthodox Judaism anarchism, various anarchistic ideas are common in the works of many Kabbalah and Hasidism teachers. Since the antiquity, some Jewish mystical groups were based on anti-authoritarian or radically communal principles, somewhat similar to the Christian Quakers, Dukhobors and other similar movements....


History


Enlightenment and Emancipation

In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a movement for Jewish Emancipation
Jewish Emancipation

Jewish emancipation was the external and Ashkenazi Jews process of freeing the European Jew of Europe, including recognition of their rights as equal citizens, and the formal granting of citizenship as individuals; it occurred gradually between the late eighteenth century and the early twentieth century....
 spread across Europe
Europe

Europe is, conventionally, one of the world's seven continents. Comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, Europe is generally divided from Asia to its east by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural , the Caspian Sea, and by the Caucasus Mountains to the southeast....
, strongly associated with the emergence of political liberalism
Political liberalism

Political liberalism or constitutional liberalism is a body of thought that attempts to provide justification for the principles of limited government, including most or all of the following: restrictions against arbitrary use of power, constitutional definition of legitimate government power, the rule of law, government that exists by...
, based on the Enlightenment
Age of Enlightenment

The Age of Enlightenment or The Enlightenment is a term used to describe a time in Western philosophy and cultural life centered upon the eighteenth century, in which rationalism was advocated as the primary source and legitimacy for authority....
 principles of rights and equality under the law. Because liberals represented the political left of the time (see left-right politics
Left-Right politics

Left-right politics or the left-right political spectrum is a common way of classifying political positions, ideology, or political party along a one-dimensional political spectrum, with the far-left being radical politics, the Left liberal, the Right conservative, and the far-right reactionary....
), emancipated Jews, as they entered the political culture of the nations where they lived, became closely associated with liberal parties. Thus, many Jews supported the American Revolution
American Revolution

The American Revolution refers to the political upheaval during the last half of the 18th century in which the Thirteen Colonies of North America overthrew the governance of the British Empire and then rejected the British monarchy to become the sovereign United States of America....
 of 1776, the French Revolution
French Revolution

The French Revolution was a period of political and social upheaval and radical change in the history of France, during which the French governmental structure, previously an absolute monarchy with feudalism for the aristocracy and Roman Catholic Church clergy, underwent radical change to forms based on Age of Enlightenment principles of cit...
 of 1789, and the European Revolutions of 1848
Revolutions of 1848

The European Revolutions of 1848, known in some countries as the Spring of Nations or the Year of Revolution, were a series of political upheavals throughout the European continent....
; while Jews in England
History of the Jews in England

The first written records of Jewish settlement in England date from the time of the Norman Conquest, mentioning Jews who arrived with William the Conqueror in 1066 although it is believed that there were Jews present in Great Britain since Roman times....
 tended to vote for the Liberal Party
Liberal Party (UK)

The Liberal Party was one of the two major British political parties from the early 19th century until the rise of the Labour Party in the 1920s, and a third party of varying strength and importance up to 1988, when it merged with the Social Democratic Party to form a new party which would become known as the Liberal Democrats....
, which had led the parliamentary struggle for Jewish Emancipation
Emancipation of the Jews in England

Freedom for Catholics bodes well for JewsWhen in 1829 the Roman Catholics of England were freed from all their civil disabilities, the hopes of the Jews rose high; and the first step toward a similar alleviation in their case was taken in 1830 when William Huskisson presented a petition signed by 2,000 merchants and others of Liverpool....
 — an arrangement called by some scholars “the liberal Jewish compromise”.

The emergence of a Jewish working class

In the age of industrialisation
Industrialisation

Industrialization is the process of social and economic change whereby a human group is transformed from a pre-industrial society into an industry one....
 in the late nineteenth century, a Jewish working class
Working class

Working class is a term used in academic sociology and in ordinary conversation to describe, depending on context and speaker, those employed in specific fields or types of work....
 emerged in the cities of Eastern
Eastern Europe

Eastern Europe is a term that applies to the geopolitical region encompassing the easternmost part of the Europe. Throughout history and to a lesser extent today, parts of Eastern Europe has been distinguishable from Western Europe and other regions due to cultural, religious, economic, and historical reasons, even though there i...
 and Central Europe
Central Europe

Central Europe is the region lying between the variously and vaguely defined areas of Eastern Europe and Western Europe Europe. In addition, Northern Europe, Southern Europe and Southeastern Europe may variously delimit or overlap into Central Europe....
. Before long, a Jewish labour movement
Labour movement

The term labour movement or labor movement is a broad term for the development of a collective organization of working class, to campaign in their own interest for better treatment from their employers and political governments, in particular through the implementation of labour and employment law....
 emerged too. The Jewish Labour Bund – General Jewish Labor Union
General Jewish Labor Union

The General Jewish Labour Union of Lithuania, Poland and Russia, in Yiddish the Algemeyner Yidisher Arbeter Bund in Lite, Poyln un Rusland , generally called The Bund or the Jewish Labor Bund, was a Jewish political party in several European countries operating predominantly between the 1890s and the 1930s with remnants o...
 – was formed in Vilna in Lithuania
Lithuania

Lithuania , officially the Republic of Lithuania is a country in Northern Europe, the southernmost of the three Baltic states. Situated along the southeastern shore of the Baltic Sea, it shares borders with Latvia to the north, Belarus to the southeast, Poland, and the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad Oblast to the southwest....
 in 1897. Distinctive Jewish Anarchist and socialist organisations formed and spread across the Jewish Pale of Settlement
Pale of Settlement

The Pale of Settlement was the term given to a region of Russian Empire, along its western border, in which permanent residence of Jews was allowed, and beyond which Jewish residence was generally prohibited....
 in the Russian Empire
Russian Empire

File:Russian Emperor Flag.jpgFile:Romanov Flag.svgThe Russian Empire was a state that existed from 1721 until the Russian Revolution of 1917....
. There were also a significant number of people of Jewish origin who did not explicitly identify as Jews per se but were active in anarchist, socialist and social democratic as well as communist organizations, movements and parties.

As Zionism
Zionism

Zionism is the international Jewish political movement that originally supported the reestablishment of a homeland for the Jewish People in Palestine....
 grew in strength as a political movement, socialist Zionist parties were formed, such as Ber Borochov
Ber Borochov

Dov Ber Borochov was a Marxist Zionism and one of the founders of the Labor Zionism movement as well as a pioneer in the study of Yiddish as a language....
’s Poale Zion
Poale Zion

Poale Zion was a Movement of Marxism Zionism Jewish workers circles founded in various cities of the Russian Empire about the turn of the century after the General Jewish Labor Union rejected Zionism in 1901....
.

There were non-Zionist left-wing forms of Jewish nationalism, such as territorialism
Territorialism

Territorialism was a Jewish political movement calling for creation of a sufficiently large and compact Jewish territory , not necessarily in the Land of Israel and not necessarily fully autonomous....
 (which called for a Jewish national homeland, but not necessarily in Palestine
Palestine

Palestine is a name which has been widely used since Roman times to refer to the region between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River. It is derived from a name used already much earlier for a narrower geographical region, mainly along the coastal region....
), autonomism
Jewish Autonomism

Jewish Autonomism was a non-Zionist Jewish political movements that emerged in Eastern Europe in the late 19th and early 20th century. One of its major proponents was a historian and activist Simon Dubnow, who also called his ideology folkism....
 (which called for non-territorial national rights for Jews in multinational empires) and the folkism
Folkspartei

The Folkspartei was founded after the 1905 pogroms in the Russian Empire by Simon Dubnow and Israel Efrojkin. The party took part to several elections in Poland and Lithuania in the 1920s and 1930s and did not survive the Shoah....
, advocated by Simon Dubnow
Simon Dubnow

Simon Dubnow was a Jewish historian, writer and activist....
, (which celebrated the Jewish culture
Cultural Judaism

Cultural Judaism, although often confused with Secular Judaism, is a stream of Judaism that encourages individual thought and understanding in Judaism....
 of the Yiddish-speaking masses).

As Eastern European Jews migrated West from the 1880s, these ideologies took root in growing Jewish communities, such as London
London

London is the capital of both England and the United Kingdom, and the most populous municipality in the European Union. An important settlement for two millennia, History of London goes back to its founding by the Roman Empire....
’s East End, Paris
Paris

Paris is the Capital of France and the country's largest city. It is situated on the river Seine, in northern France, at the heart of the ?le-de-France Regions of France ....
's Pletzl
Pletzl

The Pletzl is the jewish quarter in the IVe arrondissement of Paris, France. The :fr:Place Saint-Paul in Paris was once called "Pletzl" when the quarter around was inhabited with jews coming from east Europa at the end of 19 century and beginning of 20 century....
, New York
New York

The State of New York is a U.S. state in the Mid-Atlantic States and Northeastern United States regions of the United States and is the nation's List of U.S....
’s Lower East Side and Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires

Buenos Aires is the Capital and largest city of Argentina. It is located on the southern shore of the R?o de la Plata, on the southeastern coast of the South American continent....
. There was a lively Jewish anarchist scene in London, a central figure of which was, perhaps ironically, the non-Jewish German thinker and writer Rudolf Rocker
Rudolf Rocker

Johann Rudolf Rocker was an Anarcho-syndicalism writer and activist. A self-professed anarchist without adjectives, Rocker believed that anarchist schools of thought represented "only different methods of economy" and that the first objective for anarchists was "to secure the personal freedom and social freedom of men"....
. The important Jewish socialist movement in the United States, with its Yiddish-language daily, The Forward
The Forward

The Forward is a Jewish-American weekly newspaper published in New York City.As of 2008, the Forward is published as a weekly news magazine in separate Yiddish and English language editions....
, and trade unions such as the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union
International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union

The International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union was once one of the largest trade unions in the United States, one of the first U.S. unions to have a primarily female membership, and a key player in the labor history of the 1920s and 1930s....
 and the Amalgamated Clothing Workers. Important figures in these milieux included Rose Schneiderman
Rose Schneiderman

Rose Schneiderman was a prominent United States trade union leader and socialism of the first part of the twentieth century....
, Abraham Cahan
Abraham Cahan

Abraham Cahan was one of New York City's leading Jew-American socialist newspaper editors, novelists, and politicians for over half a century....
, Morris Winchevsky
Morris Winchevsky

'Morris Winchevsky' was a prominent Jewish socialist leader in London, England and the United States of America in the late 1800s.Born in Kovno, Poland in 1856, Winchevsky later moved to London where, already a well known socialist, he founded the Dos Poilishe Yidl , one of the first Yiddish daily socialist newspapers; and the Arbeter...
 and David Dubinsky
David Dubinsky

David Dubinsky was an United States of America labor leader. He served as president of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union between 1932 and 1966, took part in the creation of the Congress of Industrial Organizations and was one of the founders of the American Labor Party and the Liberal Party of New York....
.

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Jews played a major role in the Social Democratic parties of Germany
Social Democratic Party of Germany

The Social Democratic Party of Germany is Germany's oldest political party. After World War II, under the leadership of Kurt Schumacher, the SPD reestablished itself as an ideological party, representing the interests of the working class and the trade unions....
, Russia
Russian Social Democratic Labour Party

The Russian Social-Democratic Labour Party, or RSDLP , also known as the Russian Social-Democratic Workers' Party and the Russian Social-Democratic Party, was a revolutionary socialist Russian political party formed in 1898 in Minsk to unite the various revolutionary organizations into one party....
, Austria-Hungary
Social Democratic Party of Austria

The Social Democratic Party of Austria is one of the oldest parties in Austria. The SP? is one of the major parties in Austria and has particularly strong ties to labor unions and the Austrian Chamber of Labour ....
 and Poland
Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania

The Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania was a Marxist political party founded in 1893. Its original name was the "Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland" and it eventually became part of the Communist Workers Party of Poland....
. Historian Enzo Traverso
Enzo Traverso

Enzo Traverso is a Italians historian living and working in France who has written on issues relating to the Holocaust and Totalitarianism. He is a professor of political science at the Jules Verne University of Picardy in France....
 has used the term "Judeo-Marxism" to describe the innovative forms of Marxism
Marxism

Marxism is the political philosophy and practice derived from the work of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. Marxism holds at its core a Marxist analysis of Critique of capitalism and a theory of social change....
 associated with these Jewish socialists. These ranged from strongly cosmopolitan
Cosmopolitanism

Cosmopolitanism is the idea that all of human race belongs to a single community, possibly based on a shared morality. This is contrasted with Communitarianism theories, in particular the ideologies of patriotism and nationalism....
 positions hostile to all forms of nationalism
Nationalism

Nationalism refers to an ideology, a feeling, a form of culture, or a social movement that focuses on the nation. While there is significant debate over the historical origins of nations, nearly all Expert accept that nationalism, at least as an ideology and social movement, is a Modernity phenomenon originating in Europe....
 (as with Rosa Luxemburg
Rosa Luxemburg

Rosa Luxemburg was a Poland Germany Marxist theory, Socialism philosopher, and revolutionary for the Social Democracy of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania, the German Social Democratic Party of Germany, the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany and the Communist Party of Germany....
 and, to a lesser extent, Leon Trotsky
Leon Trotsky

Leon Trotsky , born Lev Davidovich Bronstein , was a Bolshevik revolutionary and Marxism theorist. He was one of the leaders of the Russian October Revolution, second only to Lenin....
) to positions more sympathetic to cultural nationalism (as with the Austromarxists or Vladimir Medem). Again, it is probable that most of these figures would not have considered themselves to be part of an explicitly "Jewish" left, but the significant number of Jews active in diverse movements and parties "on the left" is relevant.

Stalinism and fascism

See also: Jewish Bolshevism
Jewish Bolshevism

Jewish Bolshevism, Judeo-Bolshevism, Judeo-Communism, or in Polish language, Zydokomuna, is a pejorative antisemitic expression based on the notion that Jews are the driving force behind the modern Communism ....


As with the American revolution of 1776, the French revolution of 1789 and the German revolution of 1848, many Jews worldwide welcomed the Russian revolution of 1917
Russian Revolution of 1917

The Russian Revolution is the series of revolutions in Russia in 1917, which destroyed the Tsarist autocracy and led to the creation of the Soviet Union....
, celebrating the fall of a regime that had presided over antisemitic pogroms, and believing that the new order in what was to become the Soviet Union would bring improvements in the situation of Jews in those lands. Many Jews became involved in Communist parties, constituting large proportions of their membership in many countries, including the Great Britain and the U.S. There were specifically Jewish sections of many Communist parties, such as the Yevsektsiya
Yevsektsiya

Yevsektsiya , Russian language: ????????, the syllabic abbreviation of the phrase "????????? ??????" was the Jewish section of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union....
 in the Soviet Union
Soviet Union

The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was a Constitution of the Soviet Union socialist state that existed in Eurasia from 1922 to 1991.The name is a translation of the , romanization of Russian Soyuz Sovetskikh Sotsialisticheskikh Respublik, abbreviated ????, SSSR....
. The Communist regime in the USSR pursued what could be characterised as ambivalent policies towards Jews and Jewish culture, at times supporting their development as a national culture (e.g., sponsoring significant Yiddish language scholarship and creating an autonomous Jewish territory
Jewish Autonomous Oblast

Jewish Autonomous Oblast is a federal subjects of Russia of Russia situated in the Far Eastern Federal District federal districts of Russia, bordering Khabarovsk Krai and Amur Oblast of Russia and Heilongjiang province of People's Republic of China....
 in Birobidzhan
Birobidzhan

Birobidzhan is a types of inhabited localities in Russia and the administrative center of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast, Russia. It is located on the Trans-Siberian railway, close to the border with the People's Republic of China, and is the home of two synagogues, including the Birobidzhan Synagogue, and the Jewish religious community of the...
), at times pursuing antisemitic purges, such as that in the wake of the so-called Doctors' plot
Doctors' plot

The Doctors' plot was an alleged conspiracy to eliminate the leadership of the Soviet Union by means of Jewish doctors poisoning top leadership....
. (See also Komzet
Komzet

Komzet was the Committee for the Settlement of Toiling Jews on the Land in the Soviet Union. The primary goal of the Komzet was to help impoverished and persecuted Jewish population of the former Pale of Settlement to adopt agricultural labor....
.)

With the advent of fascism
Fascism

Fascism is a Political radicalism, Authoritarianism Nationalism ideology that aims to create a single-party state with a government led by a dictator who seeks national unity and development by requiring individuals to subordinate self-interest to the collective interest of the nation or Race ....
 in parts of Europe in the 1920s and 1930s, many Jews responded by becoming actively involved in the left, and particularly the Communist parties, which were at the forefront of the anti-fascist movement. For example, many Jewish volunteers fought in the International Brigades
International Brigades

The International Brigades were Second Spanish Republic military units in the Spanish Civil War, formed of many non-state sponsored volunteers of different countries who traveled to Spain, to fight for the republic in the Spanish Civil War between 1936 and 1939....
 in the Spanish Civil War
Spanish Civil War

The Spanish Civil War was a major conflict in Spain that started after an attempted coup d'?tat by a group of Spanish Army generals, supported by the conservative Spanish Confederation of the Autonomous Right , Carlist groups and the fascistic Falange, against the government of the Second Spanish Republic, then under the leadership of pr...
 (for instance in the American Abraham Lincoln Brigade
Abraham Lincoln Brigade

The Abraham Lincoln Brigade refers to volunteers from the United States who served in the Spanish Civil War in the International Brigades. They fought for Second Spanish Republic forces against Francisco Franco and the Spain under Franco....
 and in the Polish-Jewish Naftali Botwin Company). Jews and leftists fought Oswald Mosely's British fascists at the Battle of Cable Street
Battle of Cable Street

The Battle of Cable Street or Cable Street Riot took place on Sunday 4 October 1936 in Cable Street in the East End of London. It was a clash between the Metropolitan Police Service, overseeing a legal march by the British Union of Fascists, led by Oswald Mosley, and anti-fascists, including local Jewish, socialist, anarchist, Irish p...
. This mass movement was influenced by the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee
Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee

The Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee was formed in Samara, Russia in April 1942 with the official support of the Soviet authorities. It was designed to influence international public opinion and organize political and material support for the Soviet fight against Nazi Germany, particularly from the Western world....
 in the Soviet Union.

In World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
, the Jewish left played a major part in resistance to Nazism
Resistance during World War II

Resistance movement during World War II occurred in every occupied country by a variety of means, ranging from non-cooperation, disinformation and propaganda to hiding crashed pilots and even to outright warfare and the recapturing of towns....
. For example, Bundists and left Zionists were key in Zydowska Organizacja Bojowa
Zydowska Organizacja Bojowa

The Zydowska Organizacja Bojowa was a World War II resistance movement, which was instrumental in engineering the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. ZOB took part in a number of other resistance activities as well....
 and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising was the History of the Jews in Poland insurgency that arose within the Warsaw Ghetto in Occupation of Poland during World War II, and which opposed Nazi Germany's effort to transport the remaining ghetto population to the Treblinka extermination camp....
.

Radical Jews in Central and Western Europe

As well as the movements rooted in the Jewish working class, relatively assimilated
Jewish assimilation

Jewish Assimilation encompasses the outward social and genetic process, as well as the internal religious process of assimilation and integration of the previously segregated Jewish people into predominantly non-Jewish Europe and later, the wider world....
 middle class
Middle class

Middle class is the group of people in contemporary society who are between the working class and nobility. This socioeconomic class includes professionals, highly skilled workers, and lower and middle management....
 Jews in Central and Western Europe began to search for sources of radicalism in Jewish tradition. For example, Martin Buber
Martin Buber

Martin Buber was an Austrian-Israeli-Jewish philosopher, translator, and educator, whose work centered on theism ideals of religious consciousness, interpersonal relations, and community....
 drew on Hassidism in articulating his anarchist philosophy, Gershom Scholem
Gershom Scholem

Gershom Scholem , also known as Gerhard Scholem, was a Jewish philosopher and historian raised in Germany. He is widely regarded as the founder of the modern, academic study of Kabbalah, becoming the first Professor of Jewish Mysticism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem....
 was an anarchist and a kabbalah
Kabbalah

Kabbalah is a discipline and school of thought discussing the mysticism aspect of Judaism. It is a set of esoteric teachings that are meant to explain the relationship between an infinite, eternal and essentially unknowable Creator deity with the finite and mortal universe of His creation....
 scholar, Walter Benjamin
Walter Benjamin

Walter Bendix Sch?nflies Benjamin was a Germany-Jewish Marxist literary critic, essayist, translator, and philosopher. He was at times associated with the Frankfurt School of critical theory and was also influenced by the writings of his younger contemporaries Bertolt Brecht, who developed Marxist aesthetics of dialectical materialism, and G...
 was equally influenced by Marxism
Marxism

Marxism is the political philosophy and practice derived from the work of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. Marxism holds at its core a Marxist analysis of Critique of capitalism and a theory of social change....
 and Jewish messianism
Messianism

Messianism is the belief in a messiah, a savior or redeemer. Many religions have a messiah concept, including the Zoroastrian Saoshyant, the Jewish Messiah, the Christian Christ, the Buddhist Maitreya and the Hindu Kalki....
, Gustav Landauer
Gustav Landauer

Gustav Landauer was one of the leading theorists on anarchism in Germany in the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century. He was an advocate of Anarchist communism and an avowed pacifism....
 was a religious Jew and a libertarian communist, Jacob Israël de Haan
Jacob Israël de Haan

Jacob Isra?l de Haan was a The Netherlands Jewish literary writer and Journalism who was assassinated in Jerusalem by the Haganah for his anti-Zionist political activities and contacts with Arab leaders....
 combined socialism with Haredi Judaism, while left-libertarian Bernard Lazare
Bernard Lazare

Bernard Lazare was a History of the Jews in France literary critic, political journalist, Anarchism in France and polemist. He was also among the first Dreyfusards....
 (after a youthful flirtation with antisemitism) became a passionately Jewish Zionist. In Weimar Germany, Walther Rathenau
Walther Rathenau

Walther Rathenau was a Germany industrialist, politician, writer, and statesman who served as Foreign Minister of Germany during the Weimar Republic....
 was a leading figure of the Jewish left.

Socialist Zionism and the Israeli left

In the twentieth century, especially after the Second Aliyah
Second Aliyah

The Second Aliyah was arguably the most important and influential aliyah. It took place between 1904 and 1914, during which approximately 40,000 Jews immigrated into Ottoman Empire Palestine, mostly from Russia and Poland, some from Yemen....
, socialist Zionism - first developed in Russia by the Marxist Ber Borochov and the non-Marxists Nachman Syrkin
Nachman Syrkin

Nachman Syrkin or Nahman Syrkin was a political theorist and founder of Labour Zionism. Born in Russian Empire , Syrkin was influenced by Zionism and socialism in his youth and dedicated himself to synthesising the two concepts....
 and A. D. Gordon
A. D. Gordon

Aaron David Gordon , more commonly known as A. D. Gordon, was a Zionism ideologue and the spiritual force behind practical Zionism. He founded Hapoel Hatzair, a movement that set the tone for the Zionist movement for many years to come....
 - became a powerful force in the Yishuv
Yishuv

Yishuv or Ha-Yishuv A distinction is sometimes drawn between the Old Yishuv and the New Yishuv.The Old Yishuv refers to all the Jews living there before the aliyah of 1882 by the Zionist movement....
, the Jewish settlement in Palestine
Palestine

Palestine is a name which has been widely used since Roman times to refer to the region between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River. It is derived from a name used already much earlier for a narrower geographical region, mainly along the coastal region....
. Poale Zion, the Histadrut
Histadrut

The Histadrut or HaHistadrut HaKlalit shel HaOvdim B'Eretz Yisrael is the Israeli trade union congress.It was founded in December 1920 in Haifa as a Jewish trade union which would also provide services for members such as an employment exchange, sick pay, and consumer benefits....
 labour union and the Mapai
Mapai

Mapai was a Left-wing politics List of political parties in Israel in Israel, and was the dominant force in Israeli politics until its merger into the Israeli Labor Party in 1968....
 party played a major part in the campaign for an Israeli state
Israel

Israel officially the State of Israel , is a country in the Middle East located on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea. It borders Lebanon in the north, Syria in the northeast, Jordan in the east, and Egypt on the southwest, and contains geographically diverse features within its relatively small area....
, with socialist politicians like David Ben-Gurion
David Ben-Gurion

was the first Prime Minister of Israel. Ben-Gurion's passion for Zionism, which began early in life, culminated in his instrumental role in the founding of the state of Israel....
 and Golda Meir
Golda Meir

Golda Meir was the fourth prime minister of the Israel.Meir was elected Prime Minister of Israel on 17 March 1969, after serving as Minister of Labour and Foreign Minister....
 amongst the founders of the nation. At the same time, the kibbutz
Kibbutz

A kibbutz is a Intentional community in Israel that was traditionally based on agriculture. The kibbutz is a form of communal living that combines socialism and Zionism....
 movement was an experiment in practical socialism.

In the 1940s, many on the left advocated a binational state in Israel/Palestine, rather than an exclusively Jewish state. (This position was taken by Hannah Arendt
Hannah Arendt

Hannah Arendt was an influential Germany-Jewish political theorist. She has often been described as a philosopher, although she always refused that label on the grounds that philosophy is concerned with "man in the singular." She described herself instead as a political theory because her work centers on the fact that "men, not Man, live on...
 and Martin Buber
Martin Buber

Martin Buber was an Austrian-Israeli-Jewish philosopher, translator, and educator, whose work centered on theism ideals of religious consciousness, interpersonal relations, and community....
, for example). Since independence in 1948, there has been a lively Israeli left, both Zionist (the Labour Party, Meretz
Meretz-Yachad

The New Movement-Meretz , previously known as Meretz, then Yachad, and then Meretz-Yachad is a left-wing, Zionist, Social democracy List of political parties in Israel in Israel, which emphasizes the Israeli peace camp, human rights, religious freedom and green politics....
) and anti-Zionist (Palestine Communist Party
Palestine Communist Party

The Palestine Communist Party was a political party in British Mandate of Palestine formed in 1923 through the merger of the Palestinian Communist Party and the Communist Party of Palestine....
, Maki
Maki (historical political party)

Maki was a Communist party List of political parties in Israel in Israel. It is not the same party as the modern day Maki , which split from it during the 1960s and later assumed its name....
). The Labour Party and its predecessors have been in power in Israel for significant periods since 1948.

There are two worldwide groupings of left-wing Zionist organizations. The World Labour Zionist Movement, associated with the Labor Zionist tendency, is a loose association of the Israeli Labour Party (Avoda), the Habonim Dror
Habonim Dror

Habonim Dror is a secular Labour Zionism youth movement formed by the merger in 1982 of the Habonim and Dror youth movements.Habonim Dror's sister movement in Israel is Hanoar Haoved Vehalomed, the Working and Studying Youth....
 Labor Zionist youth movement, the TAKAM
Takam

Takam is the name of the king of goats, a male goat, in the folklore of Azarbaijan, Iran. Takam's effigies are made out of wood and ornamented with coloured glass beads and cock's tail feathers....
 kibbutz federation, the Histadrut
Histadrut

The Histadrut or HaHistadrut HaKlalit shel HaOvdim B'Eretz Yisrael is the Israeli trade union congress.It was founded in December 1920 in Haifa as a Jewish trade union which would also provide services for members such as an employment exchange, sick pay, and consumer benefits....
 and the Na'amat
Na'amat

Na'amat is an Israeli women's organisation linked to the labour Zionist movement.This is Na'amat states that Na'amat is "the largest women's movement in Israel with a membership of 800,000 women, representing the entire spectrum of Israel society", most of whom are volunteers....
. The World Union of Meretz, associated with what was historically known as the Socialist Zionist tendency, is a loose association of the Israeli Meretz party, the Hashomer Hatzair
Hashomer Hatzair

Hashomer Hatzair is a Socialist-Zionism youth movement founded in 1913 in Galicia , Austria-Hungary, and was also the name of the group's political party in the Yishuv in the pre-1948 British Mandate of Palestine....
 Socialist Zionist youth movement, the Kibbutz Artzi Federation
Kibbutz Movement

The Kibbutz Movement is the largest settlement movement for kibbutzim in Israel. It was formed in 1999 by a partial merger of the United Kibbutz Movement and Kibbutz Artzi....
 and the Givat Haviva research and study center. Both movements exist as factions within the World Zionist Organization
World Zionist Organization

The World Zionist Organization , or WZO, was founded as the Zionist Organization , or ZO, in 1897 at the First Zionist Congress, held from August 29 to August 31 in Basel, Switzerland....
, as well as regional or country-specific Zionist movements; the two roughly correspond to the interwar split between the Poale Zion Right (the tradition that led to Avoda) and the Poale Zion Left (Hashomer Hatzair, Mapam, Meretz).

Contemporary Jewish left

As the Jewish working class died out in the years after the Second World War, its institutions and political movements did too. The Arbeter Ring in England, for example, came to an end in the 1950s and Jewish trade unionism in the US ceased to be a major force at that time. There are, however, still some survivals of the Jewish working class left today, including the Jewish Labor Committee
Jewish Labor Committee

The Jewish Labor Committee is an United States secular Jewish culture organization dedicated to promoting trade union interests in Jewish communities, and Jewish interests within unions....
 and
Forward newspaper in New York, the Bund in Melbourne, Australia, or Labour Friends of Israel
Labour Friends of Israel

Labour Friends of Israel is a UK Parliament-based lobby group promoting support within the British Labour Party for a strong bilateral relationship between United Kingdom and Israel....
 in the UK.

Meanwhile, the 1960s-1980s saw a resurgence in interest in cultural heritage and ethnic identity, prompting a renewal of interest among assimilated Jews in the West in Jewish working class culture and the various radical traditions of the Jewish past. This led to a growth in a new sort of radical Jewish organisations, interested in Yiddish culture, Jewish spirituality and social justice. For example, in the decade of 1980–1992 one organization, New Jewish Agenda
New Jewish Agenda

New Jewish Agenda was a multi-issue membership organization active in the United States between 1980 and 1992 and made up of about 50 local chapters....
, functioned as a national, multi-issue progressive membership organization with the mission of acting as a "Jewish voice on the Left and a Left voice in the Jewish Community." The Jewish Socialists' Group
Jewish Socialists' Group

The Jewish Socialists' Group is a Jewish socialist collective in United Kingdom, formed in the 1970s.The JSG was founded in Manchester/Liverpool in the mid-1970s as lobby group campaigning against the fascist British National Front and for the left-wing politics to relate more positively to Jewish issues....
 in Britain and Rabbi Michael Lerner
Michael Lerner (rabbi)

Michael Lerner is an United States rabbi, political activist, the editor of Tikkun , a Progressivism Jewish and interfaith magazine based in Berkeley, California, and the rabbi of Beyt Tikkun Synagogue of San Francisco....
's Tikkun
Tikkun (magazine)

Tikkun is a bi-monthly English language magazine, published in the United States, that analyzes American and Israeli culture, politics, religion and history from a Left-wing politics-Progressivism Judaism viewpoint, and provides commentary about Israeli politics and Jewish life in North America....
 have continued this tradition, while more recently groups like Jewdas
Jewdas

Jewdas is a radical Jewish diaspora group based in London, although many of the founder members trace their roots back to Jewish communities in Iceland and other Scandinavian countries....
 and Heeb Magazine
Heeb Magazine

Heeb is a Jewish magazine aimed at young intellectual Jews. The name of the magazine is a variation of the anti-Semitic ethnic slur hebe. However, in this case, the word "heeb" seeks to function as empowerment for the Jewish community, thus eliminating the hatred associated with the word....
 have taken an even more eclectic and radical approach to Jewishness.

In the U.S. in the last decade, the Jewish vote has gone to Democrats
Democratic Party (United States)

The Democratic Party is one of two major party contemporary political parties in the United States, along with the Republican Party . It is the oldest political party in continuous operation in the United States and it is one of the oldest parties in the world....
 by 76-80% in each election, leading to the reasonable conclusion that the majority of American Jews remain in at least some way more supportive of the liberal to left side of the political spectrum vs. the conservative to right side of the spectrum.

Because of the emotional connection many Jews have for Israel, the issue has generated strong passions among left-wing Jews. There is a significant Jewish presence in the disparate political movement known as the "liberal hawks" or the pro-war Left
Pro-war Left

The Pro-War Left is a grouping of United Kingdom left wing journalists and bloggers who disagree with some of the tenets they claim are held by the majority British Left-wing politics....
, which is strongly committed to liberal or leftist social policy, while supporting a liberal interventionist
Liberal internationalism

Liberal internationalism is a foreign policy doctrine that argues that liberal states should intervene in other sovereign states in order to pursue liberal objectives....
, hawkish or pro-Israel foreign policy
Foreign policy

A state's foreign policy, also called the international relations policy, is a set of goals outlining how the country will interact with other countries economically, politically, socially and militarily, and to a lesser extent, how the country will interact with non-state actors....
. (Examples include Joe Lieberman
Joe Lieberman

Joseph Isadore "Joe" Lieberman is the Junior senator United States Senate from Connecticut. Lieberman was first elected to the United States Senate in 1988, and was United States Senate elections, 2006 on November 7, 2006....
, Christopher Hitchens
Christopher Hitchens

Christopher Eric Hitchens is a United Kingdom-born, United Kingdom and United States author, journalist and literary critic. Currently living in Washington, D.C., he has been a columnist at Vanity Fair magazine, The Atlantic, World Affairs , The Nation , Slate , Free Inquiry, and a variety of other media outlets....
, many of the contributors to
Dissent magazine
Dissent (magazine)

Dissent is a leading intellectual magazine of politics and culture. It was founded in 1954 by a group of New York Intellectuals, which included Irving Howe, Lewis A....
 and many of the signatories of the Euston Manifesto
Euston Manifesto

The Euston Manifesto is a declaration of principles by a group of academics, journalists, and activists based in the United Kingdom. The statement is a reaction to what are asserted to be widespread violations of leftist principles by others who are commonly associated with the political Left....
.) At the same time, there is a significant Jewish presence in the anti-Zionist movement, including Norman Finkelstein
Norman Finkelstein

Norman Gary Finkelstein is an United States political science and author, whose primary fields of research are the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the politics of the Holocaust....
, Noam Chomsky
Noam Chomsky

Avram Noam Chomsky is an United States linguistics, philosopher, cognitive science, political activist, author, and lecturer. He is an Institute Professor emeritus and professor emeritus of linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology....
, Judith Butler
Judith Butler

Judith Butler is an United States post-structuralist philosopher, who has contributed to the fields of feminism, queer theory, political philosophy, and ethics....
 and key UK advocates of an academic boycott of Israel
Academic boycotts of Israel

Several proposals have been made by academics and organisations in the United Kingdom to boycott Israeli universities and academics. The goal of proposed academic boycotts is to isolate Israel in order to force a change in Israel's policies towards the Palestinians which opponents claim to be discriminatory or oppressive....
 like Stephen and Hilary Rose.

Contemporary Israeli left


Operating in a parliamentary
Parliamentary system

Parliamentary systems are characterized by no clear-cut separation of powers between the executive and legislative branches, leading to a different set of checks and balances compared to those found in presidential systems....
 governmental system based on proportional representation
Proportional representation

Proportional representation , sometimes referred to as full representation, is a category of voting systems aimed at a close match between the percentage of votes that groups of candidates obtain in elections and the percentage of seats they receive ....
, left-wing political parties and blocs in Israel have been able to elect members of the Knesset
Knesset

The Knesset is the legislature of Israel, located in Givat Ram, Jerusalem....
 with varying degrees of success. Over time those parties have evolved, with some merging, others disappearing, and new parties arising.

Israeli left-wing parties have included:

  • Mapam
    Mapam

    Mapam was a List of political parties in Israel in Israel and is one of the ancestors of the modern-day Meretz-Yachad party....
  • Meretz-Yachad
    Meretz-Yachad

    The New Movement-Meretz , previously known as Meretz, then Yachad, and then Meretz-Yachad is a left-wing, Zionist, Social democracy List of political parties in Israel in Israel, which emphasizes the Israeli peace camp, human rights, religious freedom and green politics....
  • Progressive List for Peace
    Progressive List for Peace

    The Progressive List for Peace was an Israeli political party formed from an alliance of both Arab and Jewish left-wing activists.Two candidates were successfully elected to the Israeli_legislative_election%2C_1984 Knesset in 1984: Mohammed Miari and Mattityahu Peled....
  • Ratz
  • Left Camp of Israel
    Left Camp of Israel

    The Left Camp of Israel was a Left wing politics List of political parties in Israel in Israel. It was also known as Sheli , an acronym for Peace for Israel ....
  • HaOlam HaZeh – Koah Hadash


Notable figures in these parties have included: Shulamit Aloni
Shulamit Aloni

Shulamit Aloni is an Israeli politician and left-wing activist. She is a prominent member of the Israeli peace camp, founded the Ratz party and was leader of the Meretz party and served as Education Minister of Israel from 1992 to 1993....
, Uri Avnery
Uri Avnery

Uri Avnery , is a Germany-born Israeli journalist, Left-wing politics Israeli peace camp, and former Knesset member, who during his teenager was a member of the Right-wing politics Revisionist Zionism movement....
, Yossi Beilin
Yossi Beilin

Dr. Yosef "Yossi" Beilin is a left-wing Israeli politician and a former Knesset member, Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister of Israel and Justice Minister of Israel, representing both the Israeli Labor Party and Meretz-Yachad, of which he served as chairman between 2003 and 2006....
, Ran Cohen
Ran Cohen

Ran Cohen is an Israeli politician and former Knesset member for Meretz-Yachad. He is a resident of Mevaseret Zion and married with four children....
, Matti Peled
Mattityahu Peled

Mattityahu "Matti" Peled was a well-known Israeli public figure who was at various periods of his life a professional military man who reached the rank of Aluf in the Israel Defense Forces and was a member of the General Staff during the Six Day War of 1967; a notable scholar who headed the Arabic Language and Arabic literature Department o...
, Amnon Rubinstein
Amnon Rubinstein

Amnon Rubinstein is an Israeli law scholar, politician, and columnist. A member of the Knesset between 1977 and 2002, he served in several ministerial positions....
, and Yossi Sarid
Yossi Sarid

Yossi Sarid is a left-wing Israeli news commentator and former politician. Sarid was member of the Meretz-Yachad party in the Knesset until he withdrew from politics shortly before Israeli legislative election, 2006....
.

See also

  • Cosmopolitanism
    Cosmopolitanism

    Cosmopolitanism is the idea that all of human race belongs to a single community, possibly based on a shared morality. This is contrasted with Communitarianism theories, in particular the ideologies of patriotism and nationalism....
  • Internationalism (politics)
    Internationalism (politics)

    Internationalism is a political movement that advocates a greater economic and political cooperation among nations for the theoretical benefit of all....
  • Jewish anarchism
    Jewish anarchism

    Jewish anarchism is a general term encompassing various expressions of anarchism within the Jewish community....
  • History of the Jews in Russia and the Soviet Union
    History of the Jews in Russia and the Soviet Union

    The vast territories of the Russian Empire at one time hosted the largest Jewish diaspora in the world. Within these territories the Jewish community flourished and developed many of modern Judaism's most distinctive theological and cultural traditions, while also facing periods of intense antisemitism discriminatory policies and persecutions....
    • Jewish Bolshevism
      Jewish Bolshevism

      Jewish Bolshevism, Judeo-Bolshevism, Judeo-Communism, or in Polish language, Zydokomuna, is a pejorative antisemitic expression based on the notion that Jews are the driving force behind the modern Communism ....
    • Anti-capitalism
      Anti-capitalism

      Anti-capitalism describes a wide variety of movements, ideas, and attitudes which oppose capitalism. Anti-capitalists, in the strict sense of the word, are those who wish to completely replace capitalism with another system; however, there are also ideas which can be characterized as partially anti-capitalist in the sense that they only...
    • Anti-Zionism
      Anti-Zionism

      Anti-Zionism is opposition to Zionism, the international Jewish political movement that established a homeland for the Jewish People in Palestine , and continues to support the state of Israel....
  • Globalization
    Globalization

    Globalization in its literal sense is the process of transformation of local or regional phenomena into global ones. It can be described as a process by which the people of the world are unified into a single society and function together....
    • Anti-globalization and antisemitism
  • Jewish political movements
    Jewish political movements

    Jewish political movements refer to the organized efforts of Jews to build their own Political party or otherwise represent their interest in politics outside of the Jewish community....
    • Jewish right
      Jewish right

      The term Jewish right refers to Jews who identify with or support right-wing or Conservatism causes. The Jewish right is not a monolithic designation....
    • Neoconservatism
      Neoconservatism

      Neoconservatism is a political philosophy that emerged in the United States. Its key distinction is in international affairs, where it espouses an interventionist approach that seeks to defend what neo-conservatives deem as national interests....
  • Jewish Communist Party (Poalei Zion)
    Jewish Communist Party (Poalei Zion)

    Jewish Communist Party was a political party in Russia 1919-1922. The party was formed at a conference of communist dissident fractions of the Jewish Social Democratic Labour Party , held in Gomel August 10-15, 1919....
  • Independent Australian Jewish Voices
    Independent Australian Jewish Voices

    Independent Australian Jewish Voices is an Australian Jewish advocacy organization that opposes some of the current Israeli government's policies....
  • Independent Jewish Voices
    Independent Jewish Voices

    For the Canadian group see Independent Jewish Voices . For the Australian group see Independent Australian Jewish Voices.Independent Jewish Voices is an organization launched on February 5, 2007 by 150 prominent British Jews such as Nobel laureate Harold Pinter, historian Eric Hobsbawm, lawyer Geoffrey Bindman, film director Mike Leigh...
  • J Street
    J Street

    J Street is a nonprofit advocacy group based in the United States that promotes meaningful American leadership to end the Arab-Israeli conflict and Israeli-Palestinian conflict conflicts peacefully and diplomatically....
  • Liberal elite
    Liberal elite

    In the United States the term liberal elite is a political buzzword used by conservatives to describe affluent, politically left-leaning people....
  • "Progressive Jewish Thought and the New Anti-Semitism
    Progressive Jewish Thought and the New Anti-Semitism

    "Progressive" Jewish Thought and the New Anti-Semitism is a 2006 essay released by the American Jewish Committee, authored by Alvin H. Rosenfeld , with an introduction by the AJC's executive director, David A....
    "
  • Christian left
    Christian left

    The Christian left is a term originating in the United States, used to describe a spectrum of left-wing politics Christian Democratic Party and social movements which largely embraces social justice....
  • Anti-fascism
    Anti-fascism

    Anti-fascism is the opposition to fascism ideologies, organizations, governments and people. Another term for anti-fascism is antifa. Most major Resistance during World War II were anti-fascist....
    • Liberal anti-fascism
  • Contributions to liberal theory
    Contributions to liberal theory

    This is a partial list of individual contributions to Liberalism on a worldwide scale. These individuals are strongly associated philosophers of the Enlightenment....
  • List of Jewish American activists
    List of Jewish American activists

    This is a list of notable Jewish Americans activists and polemicistsFor other notable Jewish Americans, see List of Jewish Americans....
  • Jewish feminism
    Jewish feminism

    Jewish feminism is a movement that seeks to improve the religious, legal, and social status of women within Judaism and to open up new opportunities for religious experience and leadership for Jewish women....
    • List of Jewish feminists
      List of Jewish feminists

      The following is a list of Jewish feminists, organized alphabetically:...


External links