Misplaced Pages

Arbeter-ring in Yisroel – Brith Haavoda

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Arbeter-ring in Yisroel - Brith Haavoda) ‹ The template Infobox political party is being considered for merging. ›Political party in Israel
Arbeter-ring in Yisroel – Brith Haavoda אַרבעטער-רינג - ברית עבודה
PresidentJosef Fraind
Founded1951
Dissolved2019
Headquarters48 Kalisher Street, Tel-Aviv 65165 (until 2019)
IdeologyBundism
Socialism
Jewish anti-Zionism
International affiliationInternational Jewish Labor Bund (defunct)
Part of a series on
Bundism
Jewish Bund rally, 1917
1890s to World War I
Offshoots
Interwar years and World War II
After 1945
Branches
People
Press
Songs
Associated organisations
Sotsyalistishe Kinder
Farband (SKIF)
Splinter groups
Communist Bund
Categories

The Arbeter-ring in Yisroel – Brith Haavoda (ברית עבודה - אַרבעטער-רינג אין ישׂראל lit., Worker's Circle in Israel – Labor Alliance) was the Israeli branch of the International Jewish Labor Bund, launched in 1951 and disbanded in 2019.

History

The Bund in Israel was founded by Holocaust refugees that settled in Israel as a result of the situation-post and having family in Israel rather than political conviction; many of them had come from states with active Bundist movements like Poland and Lithuania and had opposed Zionism in diaspora.

During the 1950s and 60s the organisation had c.2,000 members.

Upon its dissolution the organisation transferred most of its assets to the Beit Shalom Aleichem; a Yiddishist-Zionist organisation.

Electoral participation

The Israeli Bund chapter presented a list at the 1959 Knesset election, under the name Socialist Union, but failed to win a seat with only 1,322 (0.1%) votes of the roughly 8,100 required.

Ideology

As such, the organisation became focused on the Bundist ideals of Doikeit or "Hereness", promoting Yiddish culture in Israel in the same way they had in their countries of origin. While the group openly supported justice for Palestinians and Mizrahi Jews alike, it found difficulty reaching out to these groups due to its refusal to organise in any language other than Yiddish. The Israeli Bund opposed the anti-Yiddish policies of the Zionist movement and Israeli government, although failed to preserve the language; with many of its own members not teaching the next generation how to speak it.

Activities

The Israeli Bund ran biweekly meetings, lectures, a theatre troupe, and a choir.

Staff

Secretaries

Its first secretary was Isachar (Oskar) Artuski (birth name: Eichenbaum/Aykhenboym, 1903 or 1908-1971), a former Polish Communist who had joined the Bund in 1935. He was also the founder and first editor of Lebns Fragn (see below) and a correspondent of an American Trotskyist magazine “Labor Action”.

Since 2006 the present secretary has been Josef Fraind, who immigrated to Israel from Warsaw in 1952.

Other

Bella Bryks-Klein has been the Director of Cultural Events and Library since January 2007 to the present.

Lebns Fragn

See also: Lebns Fragn

The Israeli Bundist magazine was Lebns Fragn (Yiddish: לעבנס־פֿראַגן, Life questions), founded in May 1951 by Isachar Artuski, the responsible editor was Ben-Zion "Bentsl" Tsalevitsh (1883-1967), who moved to Mandatory Palestine in 1922. After Artuski's death in November 1971, Yitskhok Luden became its editor. Ceased publication in 2014.

Sources

  1. ^ Shani Littman, "An anti-Zionist Movement That Promoted Judaism as a Secular Culture Shuts Its Doors", Haaretz, 19 September 2019
  2. ^ Grabsky, August (August 10, 2005). "The Anti-Zionism of the Bund (1947-1972)". Workers' Liberty. Retrieved 2009-11-10.
  3. the program for these elections was published under the title: Yiddish: Igud sotsialisti Bund, b.-Y. Vol-platform fun "Bund" tsu der ferter Kneset. Tel Aviv : Igud sotsialisti "Bund" be-Yisrael, 1959, cf. Social Movements: Bund, Brief bibliography of Yiddish sources
  4. "Israel's Yiddish Romance". Eretz Magazine. Vol. 106. December 2006. Retrieved 2009-11-04.
  5. https://www.facebook.com/bella.bryksklein?ref=mf#/bella.bryksklein?v=info&ref=mf
  6. ""לעבנס-פֿראַגן" (Lebns Fragn)" (in Yiddish). Tel Aviv: לעבנס-פֿראַגן. Retrieved 2009-11-04.

Iconography

Filmography

Categories: