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  • 2020-2024  (39)
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  • 1
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל
    Angaben zur Quelle: 37 (תשפב) 37-62
    Keywords: Pinkas, David Zvi Assassination ; Canaanites (Movement) ; Right and left (Political science) History 20th century ; Political violence ; Left-wing extremists History 20th century
    Abstract: The attempted assassination of David-Zvi Pinkas, Israel’s Orthodox cabinetTransport Minister, to protest his efforts to prohibit driving on Shabbat, was aprominent case of political violence in the early years of the State. Although bothsuspects in the attempt, former Lehi members Amos Kenan and Shaltiel Ben-Yair,were immediately apprehended, the criticism was aimed at the Canaanite group ofwhich Kenan was a member. The Canaanites had returned to their pre-State activitieswhich included the establishment of the newspaper Alef and the foundation of asemi-political movement called the ‘Center for Young Hebrews’, which promulgatedradical anti-religious views. The assassination attempt was followed by heatedpublic debate and a delegitimization campaign against them. For the Canaanites,the affair served as a catalyst for radicalization towards a positive view of politicalviolence. The plans for their acts evince the radical stage they had reached, andconversely, their weakness and failure in the public arena. The Shin-Bet whichhad scrutinized them from the start, viewed them as an ‘underground’ movementand was cognizant of their plans. The assassination attempt and the radicalizationof the movement and of those who opposed them impacted its activity and were aprimary cause of its dissolution.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 2
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל
    Angaben zur Quelle: 37 (תשפב) 9-36
    Keywords: Ben-Gurion, David, Criticism and interpretation ; Ben-Gurion, David, Political and social views ; Mifleget poʻale Erets Yiśraʼel (Political party) ; Mifleget ha-poʻalim ha-meʼuḥedet (Israel) ; Communism and Zionism ; Socialism Public opinion ; Israel Politics and government 1948-1956
    Abstract: In January-April 1953, under the pen name ‘Saba Shel Yariv’ (Yariv’s grandfather),Ben-Gurion published a series of articles in the newspaper Davar titled ‘OnCommunism and Zionism in Hashomer Hatzair.’ The series launched a fiercelydisparaging attack on the leadership of the Mapam party, Hakibbutz Haartzi andHashomer Hatzair youth movement owing to their docile support of the SovietUnion.Current research considers BG’s articles in the series as an ideological andeducational move in his struggle with Mapam over the hearts and minds of Israel’selite youth. However, this view is disputable since it fails to take into account thepolitical and ideological weakness Mapam demonstrated in its near-blind supportfor the Soviet Block.Our contention is rather that Ben-Gurion’s main political concern at the timewas not left-wing Mapam but the rise of the right-wing Zionim Klalyim (GeneralZionists) party which had channeled public dissatisfaction with Mapai and the‘Bolshevik’ policies of the Histadrut. Hence, Ben-Gurion lashed out at Mapam inorder to portray Mapai under his leadership as a bulwark against Communism andStalinism and the only bridge between Israel and the West.Likewise, Ben-Gurion used the series to take on the influential Me’orer circle ofMapai which was challenging his socioeconomic policies from a socialist pioneeringpoint of view.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 3
    Article
    Article
    In:  עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל 37 (תשפב) 63-88
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל
    Angaben zur Quelle: 37 (תשפב) 63-88
    Keywords: Irgun tsevaʼi leʼumi Trials, litigation, etc. ; Irgun tsevaʼi leʼumi History ; Trials History 20th century ; Eretz Israel Politics and government 1917-1948, British Mandate period
    Abstract: In February 1944, the Irgun issued a ‘proclamation of revolt’ that ushered in anew era in the organization's attitude toward the mandatory government. In its publications, the Irgun called for a revolt against the mandatory laws, but in its directives to members, it was more moderate and measured. The legal defense in the weapons trials was centralized and managed by the legal organization of the Irgun, which functioned in conjunction with the law firms of Seligman, whom they considered trustworthy, and with Levitsky. Unable to engage in active warfare, the imprisoned members of the Irgun decided to turn the trial into a propaganda arena as the focus of an alternative struggle. A recommended line of defense was of fered after their personal situation had been checked out and their legal status verified by the lawyers. The same considerations that led the Irgun to craft a political line of defense in many of the weapon’s trials led to a legal line of defense for the vast majority of the propaganda trials. The understanding that the propaganda trials did not attract a high degree of resonance in the media, the extreme youth of the defendants, and the possibility of getting them acquitted or at least of largely reducing their sentences, tipped the scales in favor of the decision to adopt a legal line of defense. The decision to continue delegating authority for the propaganda trials to the legal departments of the district was in keeping with the preference for a legal line of defense that did not require centralized and coordinated management. The Irgun's approach in the legal arena was graduated, complex and measured, ranging from adherence to its intrinsic goals and objectives to a concern for the life and freedom of its fighters.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 4
    Article
    Article
    In:  עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל 37 (תשפב) 91-117
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל
    Angaben zur Quelle: 37 (תשפב) 91-117
    Keywords: Israel. History ; Six Day War, 1967 Influence ; Arab-Israeli conflict Territorial questions ; Israel Boundaries ; Political aspects
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  • 5
    Article
    Article
    In:  עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל 37 (תשפב) 121-146
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל
    Angaben zur Quelle: 37 (תשפב) 121-146
    Keywords: Motion pictures Censorship 20th century ; History ; Foreign films ; Cold War Influence ; Israel Politics and government 1948-1967
    Abstract: The article examines the impact of the Cold War on film censorship in Israel duringthe first two decades of the state and sheds light on the Israeli Film CensorshipBoard’s collaboration with other government bodies, above all the Foreign Ministryin the censorship of western anti-communist films, and to a lesser extent, Sovietanti-American films. Such Cold War-related film censorship was carried out inresponse to domestic criticism but also to prevent any possible damage to Israel’sdiplomatic relations, particularly with the Soviet Bloc, owing to the large numberof films imported from the United States. In addition to discussing film censorshippolicies and practices, the article demonstrates the crucial impact of Cold War cultureon the political world in Israel, particularly during the early years of the state. The article's main argument is that the diplomatic impetus for censoring Cold War filmsattests to Israel’s insecurity vis-à-vis its international status prior to the 1967 War aswell as to the ultimately unsuccessful attempt by the government to preserve whatwas left of its deteriorating relations with the Soviet Bloc.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 6
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל
    Angaben zur Quelle: 37 (תשפב) 147-169
    Keywords: Koenig, Lea, ; Zohar, Miriam, ; Actresses ; Holocaust survivors ; Theater Social aspects ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), and the theater ; Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945) Influence ; Collective memory
    Abstract: The art of theater takes place, as a rule, in the ‘here and now’ of the present, yetall participants in a theatrical production (first and foremost the actors) contributetheir personal and professional ‘past’ to this ‘present.’ Both ‘first ladies’ of Israelitheater, Lea Koenig and Miriam Zohar, are Holocaust survivors and ninety years old.Throughout rich careers which span over seven decades, Lea Koenig andMiriam Zohar have been cast in ‘Holocaust Plays.’ This essay examines the waythey incorporated personal biography in their theatrical performances and theirinterpretations of dramatic texts.An examination of the different projects in which they were involved revealsthat each of them made use of a different strategy to address the memory of theHolocaust in Israel. Their personal cases can both teach us about the role of the artistas an agent of memory within the society in which he or she lives and performs andexemplify more general patterns in Israel’s memory of the Holocaust.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 7
    Article
    Article
    In:  עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל 37 (תשפב) 173-200
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל
    Angaben zur Quelle: 37 (תשפב) 173-200
    Keywords: Bedouins History To 1947 ; Galilee (Israel) History 1917-1948, British Mandate period ; Galilee (Israel) Economic conditions ; Eretz Israel Population 20th century ; History
    Abstract: The article reviews the historical events that prompted the Bedouin populationto settle in existing Fellahin towns and villages in the Galilee during the BritishMandate period, 1918-1948, in Palestine. The process began with the migration ofBedouin tribes from the Arabian Peninsula to Iraq and Syria, forcing local tribes tomigrate west, and continued under the Ottoman rule with the laying of infrastructurefor Bedouin to settle in the Arab towns and villages of the Galilee. This trendcontinued under the British Mandate which ended in 1948.The aim of the article is to analyze the dynamic circumstances that led to themigration of Bedouin communities into Fellahin towns and villages. It argues thatBedouin settlement during this period was affected by centralized governmentpolicy; by the influence of Zionist institutions on land acquisition; and by the waysin which local pressures on intra-tribal and rural relations played out.The study rests on archival sources, research literature, and seven in-depthinterviews with Bedouin and Fellahin inhabitants of various Arab towns and villagesin the Galilee, conducted between the years 2013-2015.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 8
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל
    Angaben zur Quelle: 37 (תשפב) 201-225
    Keywords: Meridor, Yaʻaḳov, ; Gamliel, Haim ; Jewish merchants History 20th century ; Jews, Yemeni Commerce ; Israel and the diaspora ; Zionism History 20th century ; Israel Economic conditions 20th century ; Red Sea Coast (Egypt) ; Red Sea Coast (Eritrea) ; Red Sea Coast (Yemen)
    Abstract: During the age of imperialism, hundreds of Yemeni Jews settled around the RedSea, forming a Jewish-Yemeni trading diaspora. The study examines the fate ofthis diaspora after the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948 and the massmigrations thereto. While the first part of the article is dedicated to the inherentcontradiction between the diaspora and the Zionist project, the second part arguesfor their symbiosis. As the Red Sea area assumed a strategic importance for Israel, the young Jewish state relied heavily on the established Jewish diaspora in theregion to consolidate its power; the diaspora, for its part, was able to find in theIsraeli enterprise a measure of compensation for its lost, pre-national trade. Thealliance between the two, argues the article, allowed the diaspora to persist beyondthe rupture of 1948.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 9
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל
    Angaben zur Quelle: 37 (תשפב) 229-254
    Keywords: Rabbinowitz, Saul Phinehas, ; Ḥibat Tsiyon History ; Ḥibbat Zion Biography ; Haskalah Periodicals
    Abstract: Like many ideological movements, Hibbat Zion sought to construct a pantheonof historical heroes who would legitimize its modern message and attract a wideaudience to its ranks. The first leader who deliberately and methodically engaged inthis effort was Shaul Pinchas Rabinovich. Rabinovich regarded the Jewish nationalmovement as a necessary stratum of the moderate Haskalah movement he advocated.To this end he set up a pantheon of national heroes, historical figures noted for theirnational and Haskalah framework of values: general education, love of mankind,affinity for Eretz Israel and the Hebrew language, knowledge of Jewish law, anda practical understanding of Jewish solidarity. He did so as editor of the Hebrewperiodical, Knesset Israel, the organ of Hibbat Zion, as the Hebrew translator ofZvi Graetz’s comprehensive History of the Jews, and as the author of historicalmonographs and biographies which served to promote Hibbat Zion ideology.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 10
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: עיונים; כתב עת רב-תחומי לחקר ישראל
    Angaben zur Quelle: 37 (תשפב) 255-276
    Keywords: Gordon, Aaron David, ; Environmentalism ; Zionism Philosophy ; Nation-building ; Jewish nationalism History 19th century
    Abstract: The article seeks to identify A. D. Gordon’s thought as a distinctive type of ‘green’Zionism. As opposed to the common tendency in Gordon scholarship to focus onsymbolic aspects of his conception of ‘nature’, the analysis here focuses on itsconcrete values. Refocusing the analysis on biophysical ‘nature’, suggests thatvery much like contemporary environmental thinkers, Gordon sought to shiftthe ontological and ethical weight from the human realm to the interrelationshipbetween the human and the non-human environment. Yet, unlike present-dayenvironmentalists, Gordon anchored this shift in a comprehensive theory ofnationalism. The Jewish nation he believed must transform its characteristicalienation from nature into an avant-garde force that will leads the human effort torehabilitate the relationship with the natural world. In broader terms, my analysiscalls for a reassessment of Gordon’s relationship to Zionism and indicates that whilehe shared the Zionist desire to return the Jewish people to Eretz Israel, he was highlycritical of the widespread Zionist view of the land as a readily available resource foruse by the Jewish nation. The analysis thus identifies an eco-nationalist approachunderpinning Gordon’s critique of the utilitarian, statist and militaristic bent of theZionist movement. It suggests that Gordon saw these trends as indicative of an illintentioned drive to subjugate and exploit the natural environment. To rectify this,Gordon developed an eco-Zionist ideology which held that the primary means forJewish national revival is the protection and conservation of nature in Eretz Israel.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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