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{{Short description|Russian Revisionist Zionist leader (1880–1940)}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2020}} | |||
{{Infobox person | |||
| name = Ze'ev Jabotinsky<br/>{{Nobold|{{Lang|ru| Владимир Жаботинский}}<br/>{{Script/Hebrew|זאב זשאַבאָטינסקי}}}} | |||
| honorific_suffix = ] | |||
| image = File:PORTRAIT OF VLADIMIR JABOTINSKY TAKEN BY BRITT IN PARIS. פורטרט, זאב ז'בוטינסקי.D850-062 (cropped).jpg | |||
| caption = Jabotinsky in 1926 | |||
| birth_name = Vladimir Yevgenyevich Zhabotinsky | |||
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1880|10|17}}<ref name="bio-dic" /> | |||
| birth_place = ], Russian Empire<ref name=Arutz_Halkin>{{cite news|author-link=Ronn Torossian |last=Torossian |first=Ronn |title=Jabotinsky: A Life, by Hillel Halkin - Read and Wonder |url=http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/15025#.U3vbRSgXKuw |newspaper=Israel National News|date=19 May 2014}}</ref> | |||
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1940|08|03|1880|10|17}}<ref>{{cite web |title=Ze'ev Jabotinsky |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Vladimir-Jabotinsky|website=] |access-date=11 August 2019}}</ref> | |||
| death_place = ], U.S. | |||
| body_discovered = | |||
| resting_place = {{Plain list| | |||
* 1940–1964: ], New York, U.S. | |||
* 1964–present: ], ] | |||
}} | |||
| resting_place_coordinates = {{Coord|31|46|26|N|35|10|50|E|type:landmark_region:IL-JM|display=inline}} | |||
| citizenship = ] | |||
| other_names = | |||
| known_for = ] | |||
| education = | |||
| alma_mater = ] | |||
| occupation = {{hlist|Zionist activist|military leader|author|journalist}} | |||
| awards = Member of the ] (1919) | |||
| years_active = 1898–1940 | |||
| party = ] | |||
| children = ] | |||
| spouse = {{marriage|Hanna Markovna Halpern|1907|1940}} | |||
| module = {{Infobox military person | |||
| embed = yes | |||
| allegiance = {{flag|United Kingdom}} | |||
| branch = {{army|United Kingdom}}<br />{{*}}] | |||
| serviceyears = 1915–1919 | |||
| rank = ] ] | |||
| unit = ], ] <br/> ] | |||
| commands = | |||
| battles = ] | |||
}} | |||
}} | |||
'''Ze'ev Jabotinsky'''{{efn|{{IPAc-en|ˌ|(|d|)|ʒ|æ|b|ə|ˈ|t|ɪ|n|s|k|i|,|ˌ|(|d|)|ʒ|ɑː|b|ə|-}} {{respell|ZHA(H)B|ə|TIN|skee|,|JA(H)B|-}}.}}{{efn|{{langx|he|זְאֵב זַ׳בּוֹטִינְסְקִי|Ze'ev Zhabotinski}}; {{langx|yi|וואלף זשאַבאָטינסקי|Wolf Zhabotinski}}}} {{Post-nominals|country=GBR|MBE}} (born '''Vladimir Yevgenyevich Zhabotinsky''';{{efn|{{langx|ru|Влади́мир Евге́ньевич Жаботи́нский}}.}} 17 October 1880<ref name="bio-dic" /> – 3 August 1940)<ref>Most of the books say that Jabotinsky died on 4 August, because they wrongly convert the date from the Hebrew calendar. See details below.</ref> was a Russian-born{{efn|<ref>{{Cite journal |date=2017 |title=Vladimir Jabotinsky: A Zionist Activist on the Rise, 1905–1906 |url=https://www.ejournals.eu/SJ/2017/Numer-1-39/art/10417/ |journal=Studia Judaica |volume=39 |doi=10.4467/24500100STJ.17.005.7731 |page=105}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Gitelman |first1=Zvi Y. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=m61_CwAAQBAJ |title=New Jewish Identities: Contemporary Europe and Beyond |last2=Kosmin |first2=Barry Alexander |last3=Kovács |first3=András |date=2003-01-01 |publisher=Central European University Press |isbn=978-963-9241-62-6 |language=en |page=147}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Marmur |first1=Michael |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3vMhEQAAQBAJ |title=American Jewish Thought Since 1934: Writings on Identity, Engagement, and Belief |last2=Ellenson |first2=David |date=2020-05-22 |publisher=Brandeis University Press |isbn=978-1-68458-014-9 |language=en |page=154}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Alfandary |first=Rony |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hoAxEAAAQBAJ |title=Postmemory, Psychoanalysis and Holocaust Ghosts: The Salonica Cohen Family and Trauma Across Generations |date=2021-07-22 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-000-41184-3 |language=en |page=158}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Englander |first=David |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UKVtAAAAMAAJ |title=A Documentary History of Jewish Immigrants in Britain, 1840-1920 |date=1994 |publisher=Leicester University Press |isbn=978-0-7185-1517-1 |language=en |page=322}}</ref>}} author, poet, orator, soldier, and founder of the ] movement and the Jewish Self-Defense Organization in ]. | |||
'''Ze'ev (Vladimir) Jabotinsky''' ] (alternatively '''Zhabotinski''') ({{lang-he|זאב ז'בוטינסקי}}, {{lang-ru|Зеэв (Владимир Евгеньевич) Жаботинский}}; ], ] - ], ]) was a ] leader, author, orator, soldier, and founder of the ] in ]. | |||
With ], he co-founded the ] of the ] in ].<ref>{{cite web |title=The Struggle for the Jewish Legion and The Birth of the IDF |url=http://jewishmag.com/148mag/jewish_legion/jewish_legion.htm |first=Jerry |last=Klinger|work=Jewish Magazine |access-date=5 December 2010 |date=October 2010}}</ref> Later he established several Jewish organizations, including the paramilitary group ] in Latvia, the youth movement ] and the militant organization ] in ]. | |||
==Early life== | ==Early life== | ||
]; Standing: 1) Arnold Zeidman, 2) Alexander Goldstein, 3) Shlomo Gefstein]] | |||
Born in ], ], he was raised in a traditional ] home and learned ], and ] as a child, but as he grew older, he came to identify with the secular Jewish youth of the city. | |||
Vladimir Yevgenyevich (Yevnovich) Zhabotinsky<ref>{{cite web |author=Nataliya and Yuri Kruglyak |title=Archival documents on Zhabotinsky |language=ru |publisher=Odessitclub.org |date= 27 July 1939 |url=http://www.odessitclub.org/reading_room/sokolyansky/konechno_v_odesse.htm |access-date=28 November 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110929073418/http://www.odessitclub.org/reading_room/sokolyansky/konechno_v_odesse.htm |archive-date=29 September 2011 |url-status=dead}}</ref> was born in ],<ref name=Arutz_Halkin /> ] (modern ]) into an assimilated Jewish family.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://dbs.bh.org.il/luminary/jabotinsky-zeev-vladimir |title=Heroes - Trailblazers of the Jewish People |website=Beit Hatfutsot |access-date=17 November 2019 |archive-date=17 November 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191117104803/https://dbs.bh.org.il/luminary/jabotinsky-zeev-vladimir |url-status=dead }}</ref> His father, Yevno (Yevgeniy Grigoryevich) Zhabotinsky, hailed from ], ]. He was a member of the Russian Society of Sailing and Trade and was primarily involved in wheat trading. His mother, Chava (Eva Markovna) Zach (1835–1926), came from ], ]. Jabotinsky's older brother Myron died when Vladimir was six months old, and his father died when he was six years old. His sister, Tereza (Tamara Yevgenyevna) Zhabotinskaya-Kopp, founded a private ] for girls in Odessa. In 1885, the family moved to Germany due to his father's illness, returning a year later after his father's death. | |||
==Education== | |||
Jabotinsky's talents as a ] became apparent even before he finished high school. His first writings were published in Odessa newspapers when he was 16. Upon graduation he was sent to ], ] and later to ] as a reporter for the ] press. He wrote under the ] "Altalena" (the ] word for ']'; see also ]). While abroad, he also studied ] at ]<!--WHICH ONE?-->, but it was only upon his return to ] that he qualified as an attorney. His dispatches from Italy earned him recognition as one of the brightest young Russian-language journalists: he later edited ]s in ], ], and ]. | |||
Raised in a middle-class Jewish home, Jabotinsky was educated in Russian schools. Although he studied Hebrew as a child, he wrote in his autobiography that his upbringing was divorced from ] and tradition. His mother ran a stationery store in Odessa. Jabotinsky dropped out of school at the age of 17 with a guarantee of a job as a correspondent for a local Odessan newspaper,{{sfn|Halkin|2014|pp=16–17}} the ''Odesskiy Listok'', and was sent to ] and ] as a correspondent. He also worked for the ''Odesskie Novosti'' after his return from Italy.{{sfn|Halkin|2014|pp=28–29}} Jabotinsky was a childhood friend of Russian journalist and poet ].<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6vPlCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA138|title=Vladimir Jabotinsky's Story of My Life|first=Vladimir|last=Jabotinsky|date=5 December 2015|publisher=Wayne State University Press|isbn=9780814341391 |via=Google Books}}</ref> | |||
==Active Zionist== | |||
After the ] of 1903, Jabotinsky joined the Zionist movement, where he quickly earned a reputation as a talented speaker and leader of the intellectually oriented youth. During that time, he concentrated on learning ] as a spoken language. During the ensuing ]s, he organized self-defense units in the various ]ish communities throughout Russia and struggled for the civil rights of the Jewish population as a whole. Jabotinsky was elected as a delegate to the Sixth Zionist Congress, the last for ]. | |||
===Studies in Rome and return to Odessa=== | |||
==World War One== | |||
From the autumn of 1898 onward, Jabotinsky was registered for three years as a law student at the ],{{sfn|Halkin|2014|pp=20}} but hardly attended any classes and did not graduate, leading a bohemian lifestyle instead. In addition to ], ] and ], he learned to speak fluent ].{{sfnp|Schechtman|1956|pp=49, 60}} | |||
] | |||
After returning as a news reporter to Odessa, he was arrested in April 1902 for writing ] in an anti-establishment tone, as well as contributing to a radical Italian journal. He was held isolated in a prison cell in the city for two months, where he communicated with other inmates through shouting and passing written notes.{{sfn|Halkin|2014|p=33}} | |||
During World War I, he conceived of the idea of establishing a Jewish Legion to fight alongside the ] against the ] who then controlled ]. Together with ], he created the ], which consisted of several hundred Jewish men, mainly Russians, who had been exiled from Palestine by the Turks and had settled in ]. The unit served with distinction in the ]. When the Zion Mule Corps was disbanded, Jabotinsky traveled to ], where he continued in his efforts to establish Jewish units to fight in Palestine as part of the ]. Only in 1917, however, did the government agree to establish three Jewish units. Jabotinsky himself fought against the Turks in the ] in 1918 and was decorated for bravery. One of his main regrets was that the Jewish soldiers could not participate in even more ] engagements because the British tended to restrain them by keeping the Zion Mule Corps in the background. | |||
In October 1907 Jabotinsky married Joanna (or Ania) Galperina.<ref name=ReferenceA>Жаботинский З. Повесть моих дней. — Библиотека-Алия, 1985</ref> | |||
==Founder of the Revisionist movement== | |||
After the war, Jabotinsky was elected to the first legislative assembly in Palestine, and in 1921, he was elected to the executive council of the ]. He quit the latter group in 1923, however, due to differences of opinion between him and its chairman, ], and established the new ] party called ] and its ], '']'' (a Hebrew acronym for the "League of Joseph Trumpeldor"). His new party demanded that the Zionist movement recognize as its objective the establishment of a Jewish state along both banks of the ]. His main goal was to establish a modern Jewish state with the aid of the British Empire. His philosophy contrasted with the socialist oriented ], in that it focused economic and social policy on the ideal of the Jewish Middle class in Europe. An Anglophile, his ideal for a Jewish state was a modern liberal democracy based on the British model. His support base was mostly located in Poland, and his activities focused on attaining British support to help in the development of the Yishuv. | |||
== |
==Early activism and militancy== | ||
===Zionist activism in Russia=== | |||
].]] | |||
Prior to the ] of 1903, Jabotinsky joined the ], where he soon gained a reputation as a powerful speaker and an influential leader.<ref>, quoting from the memoirs of ]: "It was the night of April 7, 1903. Because of Russian Easter, the newspapers had not been issued for the previous two days so we remained without any news from the rest of the world. That night the Jewish audience assembled in the Beseda Club, to listen to the talk of a young Zionist, the Odessa 'wunderkind' V. Jabotinsky The young agitator had great success with his audience. In a particularly moving manner, he drew on Pinsker's parable of the Jew as a shadow wandering through space and developed it further. As for my own impression, this one-sided treatment of our historical problem depressed me: Did he not scarcely stop short of inducing fear in our unstable Jewish youth of their own national shadow?… During the break, while pacing up and down in the neighboring room, I noticed sudden unrest in the audience: the news spread that fugitives had arrived in Odessa from nearby Kishinev and had reported a bloody pogrom in progress there."</ref> With more pogroms looming on the horizon, he established the Jewish Self-Defense Organization, a Jewish militant group, to safeguard Jewish communities throughout Russia. He became a source of great controversy in the Russian Jewish community as a result of these actions. | |||
Around this time, he began learning ], and took a Hebrew name: ''Vladimir'' became ''Ze'ev'' ("wolf"). During the pogroms, he organized self-defence units in ] communities across Russia and fought for the ] of the Jewish population as a whole. His slogan was, "Better to have a gun and not need it than to need it and not have it!" Another slogan was, "Jewish youth, learn to shoot!" | |||
In 1929, Jabotinsky left Palestine to attend the Sixteenth Zionist Congress. The British authorities did not allow him to return due to Arab pressure. The movement he established was not a monolithic entity, but contained three separate factions, of which Jabotinsky was the most moderate. Jabotinsky favored cooperation with the British, while more ]ically-minded individuals like ], ], and ] focused on independent action in Mandate Palestine, fighting politically against Labor, the British Authorities, and retaliating against Arab attacks. ] was commander of the ], while Abba Ahimeir and ] acted as visionaries for ]. It is the ] wing of the Revisionist Party that years later formed ] and then ] by absorbing the centrist ]. One of his greatest disciples was ], past leader of the Irgun and Betar faction and future ]. | |||
In 1903, he was elected as a Russian delegate to the ] in Basel, Switzerland. After ]'s death in 1904, he became the leader of the right-wing Zionists. That year he moved to ] and became one of the co-editors for the Russophone magazine ''Yevreiskaya Zhyzn'' (Jewish Life), which after 1907 became the official publishing body of the Zionist movement in Russia. In the pages of the newspaper, Jabotinsky wrote fierce polemics against supporters of assimilation and the ]. | |||
During the 1930s, Jabotinsky was highly concerned with the situation of the Jewish community in ]. In 1936, Jabotinsky prepared the so-called “evacuation plan”, which called for the evacuation of the entire Jewish population of Poland to the Palestine Mandate. The “evacuation plan” caused much controversy within Polish Jewry with some applauding it while others felt that the plan played into the hands of Polish anti-Semites. In particular, the fact that the “evacuation plan” had the approval of the Polish government was taken by many Polish Jews as indicating Jabotinsky had gained the endorsement of what they considered to be the wrong people. Two years later, in 1938, Jabotinsky stated in a speech that Polish Jews “…were living on the edge of the volcano” and warned that a wave of bloody super-pogroms would be happening in Poland sometime in the near future. Jabotinsky went to warn Jews in Europe that they should immigrate to the Palestine Mandate/Land of Israel as soon as possible. | |||
In 1905, he was one of the co-founders of the "Union for Rights Equality of Jewish People in Russia". The following year, he was one of the chief speakers at the 3rd All-Russian Conference of Zionists in ], ], which called upon the Jews of Europe to engage in ''Gegenwartsarbeit'' (work in the present) and to join together to demand autonomy for ethnic minorities in Russia.<ref name="liberal.org.il">{{cite web|url=http://www.liberal.org.il/the_man.htm |title=Jabotinsky Ze'ev. Liberal and Zionist Leader. Brief Biography |publisher=Liberal.org.il |access-date=22 September 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090620113613/http://www.liberal.org.il/the_man.htm |archive-date=20 June 2009 }}</ref> This liberal approach was later apparent in his position concerning the ]: Jabotinsky asserted that "''Each one of the ethnic communities will be recognized as autonomous and equal in the eyes of the law''."<ref name="liberal.org.il" /> | |||
He died in the ]. A request by ] that he be buried in Israel was refused by Israeli Prime Minister ], who wrote in a letter dated ], ] to Judge Joseph Lamm of the Tel Aviv District Court, vice-president of B'Nai Brith in Israel, that: "Israel does not need dead Jews, but living Jews, and I see no blessing in multiplying graves in Israel." <ref>Hecht, Ben. ''Perfidy''. Milah Press, first published 1961, this edition 1999, p. 257. ISBN 0964688638</ref> | |||
In 1909, he fiercely criticized leading members of the Russian Jewish community for participating in ceremonies marking the centennial of the Russian writer ]. In light of Gogol's antisemitic views, Jabotinsky claimed it was unseemly for Russian Jews to take part in these ceremonies, as it showed they had no Jewish self-respect.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}} | |||
In 1964, ] permitted the reburial of Jabotinsky and his wife in ] at Mount Herzl Cemetery. | |||
===Representative of the ZO in the Ottoman Empire, 1908–1914=== | |||
==His legacy== | |||
In 1909, Sultan ] was deposed. The year before that, following the ], the Berlin Executive office of the ] (ZO), sent Jabotinsky to the ] capital ] where he became editor-in-chief of a new pro-] daily newspaper '']'' (meaning ]) which was founded and financed by Zionist officials like ZO president ] and his representative in Constantinople Victor Jacobson. The journalists writing for that paper included the famous ] and Russian-Jewish revolutionary ], who lived in Constantinople from 1910 until 1914. The ''Jeune Turc'' was prohibited in 1915 by the pro-German ]. Richard Lichtheim, who was to become Jabotinsky's representative in Germany in 1925, stayed in Constantinople as ZO representative and managed to keep the "]" (Jewish population of ]) out of trouble during the war years by constant diplomatic interventions with German, Turkish, and also American authorities, whose humanitarian support was crucial for the survival of the Jewish settlement project in Palestine during the war years.<ref>For references, see Richard Lichtheims autobiographical books in Hebrew and German (see the ])</ref> | |||
:''See: ]'' | |||
{{sect-stub}} | |||
Zeev Jabotinsky's legacy is carried on today by Israel's ] (Freedom) Party, the World Herut Movement, ] (young adult activist movement) and ] (youth movement). Jabotinsky is also viewed by all Jews as being a symbol and founding father of ]. | |||
==World War I military career== | |||
== Works == | |||
] of the ] between 1916 and 1917]] | |||
=== Books === | |||
] | |||
* ''Turkey and the War''. London, T.F. Unwin, Ltd. | |||
During World War I, he had the idea of establishing a Jewish Legion to fight alongside the British against the ] who then controlled ]. In 1915, together with ], a one-armed veteran of the ], he created the ], which consisted of several hundred Jewish men, mainly Russians who had been exiled from Palestine by the ] and had settled in ]. The unit served with distinction in the ]. When the Zion Mule Corps was disbanded, Jabotinsky traveled to London, where he continued his efforts to establish Jewish units to fight in Palestine as part of the ]. Although Jabotinsky did not serve with the Zion Mule Corps, Trumpeldor, Jabotinsky and 120 Zion Mule Corps members did serve in Platoon 16 of the ] of the ]. In 1917, the government agreed to establish three Jewish battalions, initiating the ].<ref>D. Flisiak, Działalność syjonistów-rewizjonistów w Polsce w latach 1944/1945- 1950, Lublin 2020, s. 21-22</ref> | |||
* ''Sampson the Nazarite''. London: M. Secker, | |||
* ''The War and The Jew''. New York, ] | |||
* ''The Story of the Jewish Legion''. New York, B. Ackerman, incorporated | |||
* ''The Battle for Jerusalem. Vladimir Jabotinsky, John Henry Patterson, ], Pierre Van Paassen explain why a Jewish army is indispensiple for the survival of a Jewish nation and preservation of world civilization.'' American Friends of a Jewish Palestine, New York, The Friends, | |||
As an honorary lieutenant in the 38th ], Jabotinsky saw action in Palestine in 1918.{{sfnp|Schechtman|1956|pp=268–271}} His battalion was one of the first to enter Transjordan.{{sfnp|Schechtman|1956|pp=268–271}} | |||
=== Articles and poems === | |||
*, 1923 | |||
* | |||
* | |||
*, 1911 | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* | |||
*A selection of Jabotinsky's writings: | |||
He was demobilised in September 1919,<ref>{{London Gazette| issue=31619 |page=13126 |date=24 October 1919}}</ref> soon after he complained to ] about the British Army's attitude towards Zionism and the reduction of the Jewish Legion to just one battalion.{{sfnp|Schechtman|1956|pp=279–282}} His appeals to the British government failed to reverse the decision, but in December 1919<ref>{{Cite web |date=12 December 1919 |title=SIXTH SUPPLEMENT TO The London Gazette Of TUESDAY, the 9th of DECEMBER, 1919, issue 31684 |url=https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/31684/supplement/15455/data.pdf |access-date=25 April 2023 |website=LONDON GAZETTE |page=15455}}</ref> he was appointed a Member of the ] (MBE) for his service.{{sfnp|Schechtman|1956|pp=283–284}} | |||
==Notes== | |||
<references/> | |||
==Renewed activism and militancy== | |||
==References== | |||
===Jewish self-defense and 1920 Palestine riots=== | |||
* ''Lone Wolf: a Biography of Vladimir (Ze'ev) Jabotinsky''. by Shmuel Katz; New York: Barricade Books, (Katz was a disciple of Jabotinsky. This book, which is still in print, provides an excellent overview of Jabotinsky's life and legacy.) | |||
After Ze'ev Jabotinsky was discharged from the British Army in September 1919, he openly trained Jews in warfare and the use of small arms. On 6 April 1920, during the ] the British searched the offices and apartments of the Zionist leadership for arms, including the home of ], and in a building used by Jabotinsky's defense forces they found three rifles, two pistols, and 250 rounds of ammunition.<ref>D. Flisiak, Działalność syjonistów-rewizjonistów w Polsce w latach 1944/1945- 1950, Lublin 2020, s. 23-24.</ref> | |||
* ''The Vladimir Jabotinsky Story''. by Joseph B Schechtman; New York , T. Yoseloff | |||
* ''Jabotinsky and the Revisionist Movement, 1925-1948''. by Yaacov Shavit. London, England; Totawa, N.J.:F. Cass, | |||
] | |||
==Further reading== | |||
Nineteen men were arrested. The next day Jabotinsky protested to the police that he was their commander and therefore solely responsible, so they should be released. Instead, he, too, was arrested, and the nineteen were sentenced to three years in prison with Jabotinsky being given a 15-year prison term for possession of weapons, until a July 1920 general pardon was granted to both Jews and Arabs convicted in the rioting.<ref>Golan, Zev ''Free Jerusalem'', pp. 28–31</ref> | |||
* | |||
* official website from the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs | |||
A committee of inquiry placed responsibility for the riots on the ], alleging that they provoked the Arabs. The court blamed "]" claiming that it "flowed in Zionism's inner heart", and ironically identified the fiercely anti-socialist Jabotinsky with the socialist-aligned ] ('Zionist Workers') party, which it called 'a definite Bolshevist institution.'<ref name="Segev">{{Cite book |last=Segev |first=Tom |url=https://archive.org/details/onepalestinecomp00sege/page/141/mode/1up |title=One Palestine, complete: Jews and Arabs under the Mandate |publisher=Metropolitan Books, an imprint of ] |others=Translated from the Hebrew ימי הכלניות by ] |year=2000 |isbn=0-8050-4848-0 |pages=141 |author-link=Tom Segev |access-date=19 December 2023 |url-access=registration |via=]}}</ref> | |||
* by ] published in ] march 23 2005. | |||
*, by Gad Nahshon, Jewish Post. 2004 | |||
* at Betar UK | |||
===Founder of the Revisionist movement=== | |||
] Conference (likely in Paris, in the second half of the 1920s)]] | |||
In 1920, Jabotinsky was elected to the first ] in Palestine. The following year he was elected to the executive council of the ]. He was also a founder of the newly registered ] and served as its director of propaganda.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.kh-uia.org.il/us/history.html |title=Keren Hayesod |access-date=10 December 2009 |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928041617/http://www.kh-uia.org.il/us/history.html |archive-date=28 September 2007}}</ref> Jabotinsky left the mainstream Zionist movement in 1923 due to differences of opinion between him and its chairman, ], establishing a new ] party called ] and its ] ] ].<ref>{{cite journal |last=Puchalski |first=P. |title=Review: Jabotinsky's Children: Polish Jews and the Rise of Right-Wing Zionism |journal=The Polish Review |volume=63 |issue=3 |date=2018 |pages=88–91 |publisher=University of Illinois Press |doi=10.5406/polishreview.63.3.0088 |jstor=10.5406/polishreview.63.3.0088 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5406/polishreview.63.3.0088| issn=0032-2970 }}</ref> | |||
His new party demanded that the mainstream Zionist movement recognize as its stated objective the establishment of a Jewish state on both banks of the ]. His main goal was to establish, with the help of the British Empire, a modern Jewish state in which equality of rights for its Arab minority were upheld. He maintained, however, that this could only be achieved through force, and condemned the "vegetarians" and "peace mongers" in mainstream Zionism who believed that this could be achieved peacefully.<ref>{{Cite web |title="The Iron Wall" |url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/quot-the-iron-wall-quot |access-date=2024-06-09 |website=www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org}}</ref> | |||
== Quotes == | |||
{{wikiquote}} | |||
* "Our habit of constantly and zealously answering to any rabble has already done us a lot of harm and will do much more. ... We do not have to apologize for anything. We are a people as all other peoples; we do not have any intentions to be better than the rest. As one of the first conditions for equality we demand the right to have our own villains, exactly as other people have them. ... We do not have to account to anybody, we are not to sit for anybody's examination and nobody is old enough to call on us to answer. We came before them and will leave after them. We are what we are, we are good for ourselves, we will not change, nor do we want to." (From ''Instead of Excessive Apology'', 1911) | |||
His philosophy contrasted with that of the socialist-oriented ], in that it focused its economic and social policy on the ideals of the Jewish middle class in Europe. His ideal for a Jewish state was a form of ] based loosely on the British imperial model.<ref>'England is becoming continental! Not long ago the prestige of the English ruler of the "colored" colonies stood very high. Hindus, Arabs, Malays were conscious of his superiority and obeyed, not unprotestingly, yet completely. The whole scheme of training of the future rulers was built on the principle "carry yourself so that the inferior will feel your unobtainable superiority in every motion".’ Jabotinsky, cited by ], ''The Iron Wall'' London, ch.7, 1984</ref> His support base was mostly located in Poland, and his activities focused on attaining British support to help with the development of the ]. Another area of major support for Jabotinsky was ], where his speeches in Russian made an impression on the largely Russian-speaking Latvian Jewish community.<ref>D. Flisiak, Działalność syjonistów-rewizjonistów w Polsce w latach 1944/1945- 1950, Lublin 2020, s. 24-26.</ref> | |||
* "Eliminate the ], or the Diaspora will surely eliminate you." (From "Tisha B'av 1937") | |||
Jabotinsky was both a ] and a ]. He rejected authoritarian notions of state authority and its imposition on individual liberty; he said that "Every man is a king." He championed the notion of a ] and believed the new Jewish state would protect the rights and interests of minorities. As an ], he supported a free market with minimal government intervention, but also believed that the "'elementary necessities' of the average person...: food, shelter, clothing, the opportunity to educate his children, and medical aid in case of illness" should be supplied by the state.<ref name="idi">{{Cite book |last1=Kremnitzer |first1=Mordechai |url=https://en.idi.org.il/media/6745/jabotinsky-idi-2013.pdf |title=Ze'ev Jabotinsky on Democracy, Equality, and Individual Rights |last2=Fuchs |first2=Amir |publisher=] |year=2013 |publication-place=Jerusalem |pages=12 |access-date=19 December 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230128061014/https://en.idi.org.il/media/6745/jabotinsky-idi-2013.pdf |archive-date=28 January 2023 |url-status=live |via=en.idi.org.il}}</ref> | |||
In 1930, while he was visiting ], he was informed by the ] that he would not be allowed to return to Palestine.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.h-net.msu.edu/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=20846869665381 |title=H-Net Reviews |date=July 1997 |publisher=H-net.msu.edu |access-date=22 September 2010}}</ref> | |||
=== The Revisionists, Fascism and Mussolini === | |||
Italy and Mussolini<ref name="kaplan156">Kaplan, 2005, p. 156.</ref> were a source of ideological, historical and cultural inspiration for the ] of the 1920s and 1930s.<ref name="Kaplan, 2005, p. 149">Kaplan, 2005, p. 149.</ref> From the early 1930s onwards Jabotinsky believed that the ] could no longer be trusted to advance the ] cause and that Italy, as a growing power capable of challenging Britain for dominance in the region, was a natural ally.<ref>Kaplan, 2005, p. 150.</ref> | |||
Jabotinsky set up the ], a Zionist naval training school established in ], ] in 1934 with the agreement of ].<ref name="kaplan156">Kaplan, 2005, p. 156.</ref> | |||
=== 1930s evacuation plan === | |||
] leaders in ]. Bottom left ] (probably 1939).]] | |||
During the 1930s, Jabotinsky was deeply concerned with the situation of the ]. In 1936, Jabotinsky prepared the so-called "evacuation plan", which called for the evacuation of 1.5 million Jews from ], the ], ], ] and ] to ] over the span of the next ten years. The plan was first proposed on 8 September 1936 in the conservative Polish newspaper Czas, the day after Jabotinsky organized a conference where more details of the plan were laid out; the emigration would take 10 years and would include 750,000 Jews from Poland, with 75,000 between age of 20–39 leaving the country each year. Jabotinsky stated that his goal was to reduce Jewish population in the countries involved, to levels that would make them disinterested in its further reduction.<ref>{{cite book |title=No Way Out: The Politics of Polish Jewry 1935-1939 |author=Emanuel Melzer |page=136 |publisher=Hebrew Union College Press |year=1976}}</ref> | |||
The same year he toured ], meeting with the Polish Foreign Minister, Colonel ]; the ], Admiral ]; and Prime Minister ] of ] to discuss the evacuation plan. The plan gained the approval of all three governments but caused considerable controversy within the ], on the grounds that it played into the hands of antisemites. In particular, the fact that the 'evacuation plan' had the approval of the Polish government was taken by many Polish Jews as indicating Jabotinsky had gained the endorsement of what they considered to be the wrong people. | |||
The evacuation of ], ] and ] was to take place over a ten-year period. However, the British government vetoed it, and the ]'s chairman, ], dismissed it.<ref name="auto">{{Cite web|url=http://www.thetower.org/article/jabotinskys-lost-moment-june-1940/|title=Jabotinsky's Lost Moment: June, 1940|website=The Tower}}</ref> Chaim Weizmann suggested that Jabotinsky was willing to accept ] as one destination for limited emigration for Jews, due to political issues involved with settlement in Palestine, and dispatches from Warsaw by British ambassador Hugh Kennard, corroborate Weizmann's account.<ref>{{cite book |title=In the Shadow of Zion: Promised Lands Before Israel |author=Adam Rovner |page=133}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=A Marriage of Convenience: The New Zionist Organization and the Polish Government 1936-1939 |author=Laurence Weinbaum |series=East European Monographs |year=1993 |page=180}}</ref> Two years later, in 1938, Jabotinsky allegedly stated in a speech that ] were "living on the edge of the volcano" and warned that the situation in Poland could drastically worsen sometime in the near future. "Catastrophe is approaching. ... I see a terrible picture ... the volcano that will soon spew out its flames of extermination," he said.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.jpost.com/Opinion/MIDDLE-ISRAEL-No-place-for-a-Jew-552833 |title=MIDDLE ISRAEL: No place for a Jew |date=28 April 2018 |author=Amotz Asa-El |work=The Jerusalem Post}}</ref> Jabotinsky went on to warn Jews in Europe that they should leave for Palestine as soon as possible.<ref name="auto"/> There is much discussion about whether or not Jabotinsky actually predicted the Holocaust. In his writings and public appearances, he warned against the dangers of an outbreak of violence against the Jewish population of Central and Eastern Europe. However, as late as August 1939, he was certain that war would be averted.<ref>{{cite book|first=Laurence |last=Weinbaum|title=Jabotinsky and Jedwabne|publisher=Midstream |date=April 2004 |url= http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Jabotinsky+and+Jedwabne.-a0116037880}}</ref> The ] ridiculed Jabotinsky and his warnings calling him a "Purim General."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://zionism-israel.com/hdoc/bund_jabo.htm|title=Jewish Bund Manifesto against Vladimir Jabotinsky|website=zionism-israel.com}}</ref> | |||
A study published in 2023 by Goldstein and Huri concluded that Jabotinsky never made the 1938 speech attributed to him.<ref name=GoldsteinHuri>{{cite journal | author = Amir Goldstein and Efi Huri | title = The "fires of destruction," Warsaw, August 1938? On the posthumous invention of Jabotinsky's well-known annihilation prophecy | journal = Holocaust Studies | year = 2023 | volume = 30 | issue = 2 | pages = 326–345 | doi = 10.1080/17504902.2023.2249291| s2cid = 261439826 }}</ref> Although Jabotinsky gave a speech on that day, the text was different.<ref name=GoldsteinHuri/> The earliest mention of the alleged prophetic content that Goldstein and Huri could locate was published in 1958 by the same associate of Jabotinsky who had published the original text in 1938, possibly to bolster the campaign to relocate Jabotinsky's remains to Israel.<ref name=GoldsteinHuri/> | |||
On the anniversary of ] (August 1938), Jabotinsky said: | |||
<blockquote>It is already three years that I am calling upon you, Polish Jewry, who are the crown of world Jewry. I continue to warn you incessantly that a catastrophe is coming closer. I became grey and old in these years. My heart bleeds, that you, dear brothers and sisters, do not see the volcano which will soon begin to spit its all-consuming lava. I see that you are not seeing this because you are immersed and sunk in your daily worries. Today, however, I demand from you trust. You were convinced already that my prognoses have already proven to be right. If you think differently, then drive me out of your midst! However, if you do believe me, then listen to me in this 12th hour:In the name of God! Let anyone of you save himself as long as there is still time. And time there is very little…and what else I would like to say to you in this day of Tisha B’Av: whoever of you will escape from the catastrophe, he or she will live to see the exalted moment of a great Jewish wedding: the rebirth and the rise of a Jewish state. I don’t know if I will be privileged to see it; my son will! I believe in this as I am sure that tomorrow morning the sun will rise.<ref></ref></blockquote> | |||
===1939 plan for a revolt against the British=== | |||
In 1939, Britain enacted the ], in which Jewish immigration to Palestine under the British Mandate was to be restricted to 75,000 for the next five years, after which further Jewish immigration would depend on Arab consent. In addition, land sales to Jews were to be restricted, and Palestine would be cultivated for independence as a binational state. | |||
Jabotinsky reacted by proposing a plan for an armed Jewish revolt in Palestine. He sent the plan to the ] High Command in six coded letters. Jabotinsky proposed that he and other "illegals" would arrive by boat in the heart of Palestine – preferably ] – in October 1939. The Irgun would ensure that they successfully landed and escaped, by whatever means necessary. They would then occupy key centers of British power in Palestine, chief among them Government House in Jerusalem, raise the Jewish national flag, and fend off the British for at least 24 hours whatever the cost. Zionist leaders in Western Europe and the United States would then declare an independent Jewish state and would function as a provisional government-in-exile. Although Irgun commanders were impressed by the plan, they were concerned over the heavy losses they would doubtless incur in carrying it out. ] proposed simultaneously landing 40,000 armed young immigrants in Palestine to help launch the uprising. The Polish government supported his plan, and it began training Irgun members and supplying them arms. Irgun submitted the plan for the approval of its commander ], who was imprisoned by the British. However, the beginning of ] in September 1939 quickly put an end to these plans.<ref>Penkower, Monty Noam: ''Decision on Palestine Deferred: America, Britain and Wartime Diplomacy, 1939-1945''</ref><ref>Golan, Zev: ''Free Jerusalem'' pp. 153, 168</ref> | |||
On 12 May 1940, Jabotinsky offered ] the support of a 130,000 strong Jewish volunteer corps to fight the Nazis; he also proposed Weizmann and ] the creation of a united front for policy and relief.<ref>, Dusty Sklar for Jewish Currents, 4 June 2018, re-accessed 9 July 2021.</ref> | |||
==Literary career== | |||
In 1898, Jabotinsky was sent to Rome as a correspondent for ''Odessky Listok,'' writing columns under the pen name "V. Egal, "Vl. Egal" "V.E." for more than a year. His first application for a job at ''Odesskiya Novosti'' was turned down, but after the editor, J.M. Heifetz, saw his writing for ''Odessky Listok,'' he hired him. At that point, Jabotinsky changed his pen name to ''Altalena,'' which he confesses was a mistake. He thought the Italian word meant "elevator," but explained to the editor that the real meaning, "swing," suited him well, since he was "'by no means stable or constant', but rather rocking and balancing."{{sfnp|Schechtman|1956|pp=}} | |||
In 1914, Jabotinsky published the first ] translation of ]'s poems '']'' and '']''.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zkLK7khFnYkC&dq=jabotinsky+translation+the+raven&pg=PR16|title=A New Sound in Hebrew Poetry: Poetics, Politics, Accent|first=Miryam|last=Segal|date=2 January 2010|publisher=Indiana University Press|isbn=9780253003584 |via=Google Books}}</ref> | |||
From 1923, Jabotinsky was editor of the revived Jewish weekly ''Rassvet'' (Dawn), published first in Berlin, then in Paris. Besides his journalistic work, he published novels under his previous pseudonym Altalena; his historical novel '']'' (Samson the ], 1927), set in Biblical times, describes Jabotinsky's ideal of an active, daring, warrior form of Jewish life. His novel ''Pyatero'' (''The Five'', written 1935, published 1936 in Paris) has been described as "a work that probably has the truest claim to being the great Odessa novel. ... It contains poetic descriptions of early-twentieth-century Odessa, with nostalgia-tinged portraits of its streets and smells, its characters and passions."<ref name="King-156">{{cite book |last=King |first=Charles |url=https://archive.org/details/odessageniusdeat0000king/mode/2up |title=Odessa: Genius and Death in a City of Dreams |publisher=W. W. Norton & Company |year=2011 |isbn=978-0-393-07084-2 |location=New York and London |page=156 |author-link=Charles King (professor of international affairs) |via=]}}</ref> Although it was little noticed at the time, it has received renewed appreciation for its literary qualities at the start of the twenty-first century, being reprinted in Russia and Ukraine and in 2005 translated into English (the first translation into a Western language).<ref name=King-156/> | |||
==Family== | |||
] | |||
While in Odessa, Jabotinsky married Joanna (or Ania) Galperina in October 1907.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> They had one child, ] (1910-1969), who later became a member of the ]-affiliated ] Eri Jabotinsky briefly served in the 1st Knesset of Israel; he died on 6 June 1969<ref>{{cite web |title=Ari Jabotinsky |url=https://www.knesset.gov.il/mk/eng/mk_eng.asp?mk_individual_id_t=402 |website=www.knesset.gov.il |access-date=2 August 2020}}</ref> age 58 -one year younger than his father had been when he died at the age of 59. | |||
==Death and burial== | |||
{{Multiple image | |||
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| caption1 = Obituary of Jabotinsky, 4 August 1940 in '']'' | |||
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Jabotinsky died of a ] shortly before midnight on 3 August 1940, while he was visiting a Jewish self-defense camp run by ] in ].<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1940/08/05/archives/jabotinsky-dead-led-new-zionists-head-of-revisionist-group-was.html |title=Jabotinsky Dead |date=1940-08-05 |work=The New York Times |access-date=2019-08-10 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://jpress.org.il/Olive/APA/NLI_heb/SharedView.Article.aspx?href=CGS/1940/08/08&id=Ar03001&sk=00B09D8C |title=JABOTINSKY, ZIONIST HEAD, DIES |website=jpress.org.il |access-date=2019-08-10}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://pdfs.jta.org/1940/1940-08-05_101.pdf?_ga=2.216862480.708356678.1565366294-827577177.1565124625|title=Vladimir Jabotinsky Dies of Heart Attack at 59; Was Visiting Youth Camp|website=jta.org}}</ref> | |||
Jabotinsky was buried in ] in ],<ref>{{cite news |title=Jabotinsky Rites Today - Veterans' Organizations to Take Part in Services for Zionist |newspaper=The New York Times |date=6 August 1940 |page=20 |url=http://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1940/08/06/113101334.html?pageNumber=20 |access-date=23 September 2016}}</ref> in accordance with a clause of his will. Ben-Gurion refused to allow Jabotinsky to be reburied in Israel.<ref>, Ushi Derman for "Museum of the Jewish People", 7 March 2019, re-accessed 9 July 2021.</ref> By order of Israeli Prime Minister ] and in accordance with a second clause of his will, the remains of Jabotinsky and his wife were reburied at ] in Jerusalem in 1964.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Spiegel |first1=Irving |title=Israelis to Honor Patriot's Memory - Bodies of Jabotinsky and His Wife Going Back Home |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1964/07/03/israelis-to-honor-patriots-memory.html |access-date=23 September 2016 |newspaper=The New York Times |date=3 July 1964 |page=25}}</ref> A monument to Jabotinsky was erected at his original burial site in New York.<ref>{{cite news|title=Jabotinsky Memorial Unveiled |url=http://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1941/07/28/119446920.html?pageNumber=28 |access-date=13 May 2016 |newspaper=] |date=28 July 1941 |page=28}}</ref> | |||
==Views and opinions== | |||
{{Conservatism in Israel}} | |||
According to Israeli historian ], documents show that Jabotinsky favored the idea of the transfer of Arab populations out of the proposed state if required for its establishment.<ref name="morris">{{cite news |last=Morris |first=Benny |author-link=Benny Morris |date=13 January 2004 |title=For the record |newspaper=] |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2004/jan/14/israel |access-date=15 June 2013}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Morris |first=Benny |url=http://larryjhs.fastmail.fm.user.fm/The%20Birth%20of%20the%20Palestinian%20Refugee%20Problem%20Revisited.pdf |title=The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited |publisher=] |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-521-81120-0 |page=45 |author-link=Benny Morris |access-date=19 December 2023 |via=larryjhs.fastmail.fm.user.fm/}}</ref> Jabotinsky's other writings state, "we do not want to eject even one Arab from either the left or the right bank of the ]. We want them to prosper both economically and culturally. We envision the regime of Jewish Palestine ]'] as follows: most of the population will be Jewish, but equal rights for all Arab citizens will not only be guaranteed, they will also be fulfilled."<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Kremnitzer |first1=Mordechai |url=https://en.idi.org.il/media/6745/jabotinsky-idi-2013.pdf |title=Ze'ev Jabotinsky on Democracy, Equality, and Individual Rights |last2=Fuchs |first2=Amir |publisher=] |year=2013 |location=Jerusalem |pages=8 |access-date=19 December 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230128061014/https://en.idi.org.il/media/6745/jabotinsky-idi-2013.pdf |archive-date=28 January 2023 |via=en.idi.org.il}}</ref> In 1927, he reacted angrily to a published report that he had called for the expulsion of Arabs from Palestine. In a letter to the Zionist newspaper ''Haolam,'' he wrote: "I never said that, or anything that could be interpreted in this sense. My position is, on the contrary, that no one will expel from the Land of Israel its Arab inhabitants, either all or a portion of them -- this is, first of all, immoral, and secondly, impossible."<ref>"Mikhtav el Ha-Maarechet" (Letter to the editor), Haolam, 7 Jan. 1927</ref> Jabotinsky was convinced that there was no way for the Jews to regain any part of Palestine without opposition from the Arabs. In 1934, he wrote a draft constitution for the Jewish state which declared that Arabs would be on an equal footing with their Jewish counterparts "throughout all sectors of the country's public life." The two communities would share the state's duties, both military and civil service, and enjoy its prerogatives. Jabotinsky proposed that ] and ] should enjoy equal status, and that "in every cabinet where the prime minister is a Jew, the vice-premiership shall be offered to an Arab and vice versa."<ref name=karsh>{{cite journal |url=http://www.meforum.org/article/711 |title=Benny Morris's Reign of Error, Revisited: The Post-Zionist Critique |journal=Middle East Quarterly |volume=XII |date=Spring 2005 |pages=31–42 |last=Karsh |first=Efraim |author-link=Efraim Karsh |access-date=15 June 2013}}</ref> | |||
Jabotinsky viewed Zionism as a complete cultural departure from the Jewish way of life in Europe and saw the new "Hebrew" as a radical redefinition of the Jewish culture and values at the time. In 1905 he wrote:<blockquote>To imagine what a true Hebrew is, to picture his image in our minds, we have no example from which to draw. Instead, we must use the method of ''ipcha mistavra'' (Aramaic for deriving something from its opposite): We take as our starting point the ''Yid'' (used here as pejorative for Jew) of today, and try to imagine in our minds his exact opposite. Let us erase from that picture all the personality traits that are so typical of a ''Yid,'' and let us insert into it all the desirable traits whose absence is so typical in him. Because the ''Yid'' is ugly, sickly, and lacks handsomeness (הדרת פנים) we shall endow the ideal image of the Hebrew with masculine beauty, stature, massive shoulders, vigorous movements, bright colors, and shades of color. The ''Yid'' is frightened and downtrodden; the Hebrew ought to be proud and independent. The ''Yid'' is disgusting to all; the Hebrew should charm all. The ''Yid'' has accepted submission; the Hebrew ought to know how to command. The ''Yid'' likes to hide with bated breath from the eyes of strangers; the Hebrew, with brazenness and greatness, should march ahead to the entire world, look them straight and deep in their eyes and hoist them his banner: “I am a Hebrew!”<ref>{{Cite book|last=Jabotinsky|first=Valdimir|title=Dr. Herzl|year=1905}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=From Herzl to Rabin|url=https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/first/r/rubinstein-herzl.html|access-date=2022-01-12|website=archive.nytimes.com}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
His views were adopted by some Zionist publications, including '']'', a monthly in Tunisia.<ref>{{cite news|author=Emmanuel Debono|title=L'importation du conflit israélo-palestinien en question|access-date=27 August 2022|work=Le Monde|date=7 August 2014|url=https://www.lemonde.fr/blog/antiracisme/2014/08/07/limportation-du-conflit-israelo-palestinien-en-question/|language=fr}}</ref> | |||
==Awards and recognition== | |||
]. The building is also known as "]" and is named after Ze'ev Jabotinsky. It used to be the center of the ] Party and is now the central institute of the ] Party.]] | |||
] | |||
*In Israel, 57 streets, parks and squares are named after Jabotinsky, more than for any other person in Jewish or Israeli history, making him the most-commemorated historical figure in Israel.<ref>, Ynetnews, 28 November 2007</ref> In 2022 the ] Street in ]'s capital of ] was renamed to the ] version of Jabotinsky's name {{ill|Volodymyr Zhabotinsky Street|uk|Вулиця Володимира Жаботинського}}.<ref>{{in lang|uk}} , ] (27 October 2022)</ref> | |||
*The ] is awarded for outstanding achievements in the sphere of literature and research. | |||
* The Jabotinsky Institute, in Tel Aviv, is a repository of documents and research relating to the history of Betar, the Revisionist movement, the Irgun, and Herut.<ref>Ze'ev Tsahor, , ''Haaretz'', 15 August 2003</ref> It is identified with Likud.<ref>Or Kashti, , ''Haaretz'', 25 November 2012</ref> | |||
* A bronze bust of Jabotinsky by ] was presented to the ] in Tel Aviv in 2008 and remains on display.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://begincenterdiary.blogspot.co.uk/2008/05/center-bulletin-vol-4-no-30.html |title=Center Bulletin, Vol. 4, Issue 30, May 7, 2008|access-date=3 March 2017 |work=Menachim Begin Heritage Center website|date=7 May 2008}}</ref> | |||
* A mural of a young Jabotinsky was unveiled in his birthplace of ] on the house where he was born in April 2021.<ref name=OdJa708084/> It was unveiled by mayor of Odesa ] and Israeli ambassador to Ukraine ].<ref name=OdJa708084>, ] (11 July 2022)</ref> | |||
* ] ({{langx|he|יום ז'בוטינסקי}}) is an Israeli national holiday celebrated annually on the twenty ninth of the ] month of ], to commemorate the life and vision of Zionist leader Ze'ev Jabotinsky.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://knesset.gov.il/vip/jabotinsky/eng/law_eng.html|title=Knesset Creates Jabotinsky Day}}</ref> | |||
==Legacy== | |||
], ] and ] awarded to Jabotinsky]] | |||
In his study of the formative leaders of the Zionist movement and the State of Israel, Zeev Tzahor describes Jabotinsky as "a dazzling intellectual, an exceptional writer and a brilliant statesman...A charming man fluent in many languages, sensitive to cultural nuances, and profoundly knowledgeable in a broad array of subjects." However, despite this profusion of talents, he never became leader of the Zionist movement.<ref>, ]</ref> | |||
==Published works== | |||
* ''Turkey and the War'', ], T.F. Unwin, Ltd. | |||
* '']'', London, M. Secker, | |||
* ''The Jewish War Front'', London, T.F. Unwin, Ltd. | |||
* ''The War and The Jew'', New York, ] | |||
* ''The Story of the Jewish Legion'', New York, B. Ackerman, Inc. | |||
* ''The Battle for Jerusalem. Vladimir Jabotinsky, ], ], ] explains why a Jewish army is indispensable for the survival of a Jewish nation and preservation of world civilization,'' American Friends of a Jewish Palestine, New York, The Friends, | |||
* ''A Pocket Edition of Several Stories, Mostly Reactionary'', ] Reproduced by Jabotinsky Institute in Israel, . Reprint. Originally published: Paris, | |||
* ''The Five'', A Novel of Jewish Life in Turn-of-the-Century Odessa,'' Paris, | |||
*Jabotinsky translated ]'s "]" into Hebrew and Russian, and parts of ]'s '']'' into modern Hebrew verse. | |||
*"]" (also known as "Two Banks has the Jordan"), a poem by Jabotinsky that became the slogan and one of the most famous songs of ] | |||
* Vladimir Jabotinsky's ''Story of My Life'', Brian Horowitz & Leonid Katsis, eds., Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2015. | |||
==See also== | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==References== | |||
===Notes=== | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
=== Citations === | |||
{{Reflist|refs= | |||
<ref name="bio-dic">Владимир Евгеньевич Жаботинский. Russian Writers, 1800-1917. Biographical Dictionary, vol. 2, p. 250 // Русские писатели. 1800—1917. Биографический словарь. Т. 2: Г – К. — М.: Большая российская энциклопедия, 1992 {{in lang|ru}}</ref> | |||
}} | |||
=== Sources === | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Halkin |first1=Hillel |url=https://archive.org/details/jabotinskylife0000halk/mode/2up |title=Jabotinsky: A Life |date=2014 |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven |author-link=Hillel Halkin |isbn=978-0-300-13662-3}} | |||
*Kaplan, Eran (2005). '']''. University of Wisconsin Press. {{ISBN|0-299-20380-8}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Schechtman |first=Joseph |year=1956 |title=Rebel and Statesman: the Vladimir Jabotinsky Story |place=New York |author-link=Joseph Schechtman |publisher=Thomas Yoseloff |url=https://archive.org/details/rebelandstatesma006978mbp}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
{{refbegin}} | |||
*Flisiak Dominik, Działalność syjonistów-rewizjonistów w Polsce w latach 1944/1945- 1950, Lublin 2020 | |||
*{{citation|ref=none|last1=Katz|first1=Shmuel|title=Lone Wolf: A Biography of Vladimir (Zeʼev) Jabotinsky |date=1996|publisher=Barricade Books|location=New York|isbn=9781569800423 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FZpJuwEACAAJ |author-link=Shmuel Katz (politician)}} | |||
* {{cite book|ref=none|title=Rebel and Statesman: The Vladimir Jabotinsky Story|first=Joseph B. |last=Schechtman |place=New York |publisher=T. Yoseloff |date=1956–1961 |url=https://archive.org/details/rebelandstatesma006978mbp}} | |||
* {{cite book|ref=none|title=Zev Jabotinsky: Militant Fighter for Jews & Israel|author=Jewish Defense Organization booklet}} | |||
* {{cite book|ref=none|title=Jabotinsky and the Revisionist Movement, 1925–1948|first=Yaacov|last=Shavit |place=London, England|publisher=Totawa, N.J., F. Cass|date=1988}} | |||
* {{cite book|ref=none|title=Zionism in the Age of the Dictators|first=Lenni|last=Brenner|publisher=Lawrence Hill & Co; Rev Ed|date=1983}} | |||
* {{cite book|ref=none|title=Vladimir Jabotinsky|author=Michael Stanislawski|date=2005|publisher=Cornell University Press |isbn=978-0-8014-8903-7 |author-link=Michael Stanislawski|url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/fivenovelofjew00jabo}} | |||
* {{cite journal|ref=none|title=The secret of the vision, logic and deeds|journal=The Life of Ze'ev Jabotinsky|first=Rabbi Ze'ev|last=Sultanowitz|place=Jerusalem|date=2011}} | |||
* {{cite web|ref=none|url=http://www.kotar.co.il/KotarApp/Viewer.aspx?nBookID=92587410|title=Vladimir Jabotinsky: The Man and His Struggles|first=Joseph|last=Nedava|place=Tel Aviv|date=1986}} | |||
* {{cite book|ref=none|last=Halkin |first=Hillel |author-link=Hillel Halkin |title=Jabotinsky: A Life |date=2014 |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven |isbn=9780300210019 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2iN8AwAAQBAJ}} | |||
* {{cite magazine|ref=none|last=Halkin |first=Hillel |date=June 2014 |title=Who was Jabotinsky? |url=https://mosaicmagazine.com/observation/2014/06/who-was-jabotinsky/ |magazine=Mosaic magazine}} | |||
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==External links== | |||
{{Commons category|Zeev Jabotinsky}} | |||
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* {{Internet Archive author |sname=Ze’ev Jabotinsky}} | |||
* {{Librivox author |id=9918}} | |||
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* {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070816181206/http://www.csuohio.edu/tagar/tisha.htm |date=16 August 2007 |title=Tisha B'Av, 1937 }} | |||
* {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080102223444/http://www.csuohio.edu/tagar/boris.htm |date=2 January 2008 |title=Instead of Excessive Apology }}, 1911 | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090131001049/http://www.betar.co.uk/ideology.php |date=31 January 2009 }} | |||
* , 1923 | |||
* A selection of Jabotinsky's writings: | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* in ] website {{in lang|en}} | |||
* {{in lang|he}} | |||
* {{in lang|en}} | |||
* , (, ] | |||
* Knesset website {{in lang|en}} | |||
* Yediot Aharonot, 23 March 2005 | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051123132730/http://www.betar.co.uk/betaris/zeev.php |date=23 November 2005 }} Betar UK | |||
* , ] | |||
* – Jabotinsky's economical view. | |||
* {{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7_tkGZDgZQQ |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211212/7_tkGZDgZQQ| archive-date=2021-12-12 |url-status=live|title=Ze'ev Jabotinsky: A story of a Leader|publisher=Keren Hayesod|date=24 September 2012|access-date=31 August 2019}}{{cbignore}} | |||
*{{cite web|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L3GyMEYeuKA |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211212/L3GyMEYeuKA| archive-date=2021-12-12 |url-status=live|title=Yisrael Medad, Deputy Editor, English Anthology Volumes of Jabotinsky's Writings|publisher=ILTV Israel Daily|date=25 December 2018|access-date=31 August 2019}}{{cbignore}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 01:33, 26 December 2024
Russian Revisionist Zionist leader (1880–1940)
Ze'ev Jabotinsky Владимир Жаботинский זאב זשאַבאָטינסקיMBE | |
---|---|
Jabotinsky in 1926 | |
Born | Vladimir Yevgenyevich Zhabotinsky (1880-10-17)17 October 1880 Odessa, Russian Empire |
Died | 3 August 1940(1940-08-03) (aged 59) Hunter, New York, U.S. |
Resting place |
31°46′26″N 35°10′50″E / 31.77389°N 35.18056°E / 31.77389; 35.18056 |
Citizenship | Russian Empire |
Alma mater | Sapienza University |
Occupations |
|
Years active | 1898–1940 |
Known for | Betar movement |
Political party | Hatzohar |
Spouse |
Hanna Markovna Halpern
(m. 1907–1940) |
Children | Eri Jabotinsky |
Awards | Member of the Order of the British Empire (1919) |
Military career | |
Allegiance | United Kingdom |
Service | British Army • Territorial Army |
Years of service | 1915–1919 |
Rank | Lieutenant |
Unit | 20th Battalion, London Regiment Jewish Legion |
Battles / wars | World War I |
Ze'ev Jabotinsky MBE (born Vladimir Yevgenyevich Zhabotinsky; 17 October 1880 – 3 August 1940) was a Russian-born author, poet, orator, soldier, and founder of the Revisionist Zionist movement and the Jewish Self-Defense Organization in Odessa.
With Joseph Trumpeldor, he co-founded the Jewish Legion of the British Army in World War I. Later he established several Jewish organizations, including the paramilitary group Betar in Latvia, the youth movement Hatzohar and the militant organization Irgun in Mandatory Palestine.
Early life
Vladimir Yevgenyevich (Yevnovich) Zhabotinsky was born in Odessa, Kherson Governorate (modern Ukraine) into an assimilated Jewish family. His father, Yevno (Yevgeniy Grigoryevich) Zhabotinsky, hailed from Nikopol, Yekaterinoslav Governorate. He was a member of the Russian Society of Sailing and Trade and was primarily involved in wheat trading. His mother, Chava (Eva Markovna) Zach (1835–1926), came from Berdychiv, Kiev Governorate. Jabotinsky's older brother Myron died when Vladimir was six months old, and his father died when he was six years old. His sister, Tereza (Tamara Yevgenyevna) Zhabotinskaya-Kopp, founded a private school for girls in Odessa. In 1885, the family moved to Germany due to his father's illness, returning a year later after his father's death.
Raised in a middle-class Jewish home, Jabotinsky was educated in Russian schools. Although he studied Hebrew as a child, he wrote in his autobiography that his upbringing was divorced from Jewish faith and tradition. His mother ran a stationery store in Odessa. Jabotinsky dropped out of school at the age of 17 with a guarantee of a job as a correspondent for a local Odessan newspaper, the Odesskiy Listok, and was sent to Bern and Rome as a correspondent. He also worked for the Odesskie Novosti after his return from Italy. Jabotinsky was a childhood friend of Russian journalist and poet Korney Chukovsky.
Studies in Rome and return to Odessa
From the autumn of 1898 onward, Jabotinsky was registered for three years as a law student at the Sapienza University of Rome, but hardly attended any classes and did not graduate, leading a bohemian lifestyle instead. In addition to Russian, Yiddish and Hebrew, he learned to speak fluent Italian.
After returning as a news reporter to Odessa, he was arrested in April 1902 for writing feuilletons in an anti-establishment tone, as well as contributing to a radical Italian journal. He was held isolated in a prison cell in the city for two months, where he communicated with other inmates through shouting and passing written notes.
In October 1907 Jabotinsky married Joanna (or Ania) Galperina.
Early activism and militancy
Zionist activism in Russia
Prior to the Kishinev pogrom of 1903, Jabotinsky joined the Zionist movement, where he soon gained a reputation as a powerful speaker and an influential leader. With more pogroms looming on the horizon, he established the Jewish Self-Defense Organization, a Jewish militant group, to safeguard Jewish communities throughout Russia. He became a source of great controversy in the Russian Jewish community as a result of these actions.
Around this time, he began learning modern Hebrew, and took a Hebrew name: Vladimir became Ze'ev ("wolf"). During the pogroms, he organized self-defence units in Jewish communities across Russia and fought for the civil rights of the Jewish population as a whole. His slogan was, "Better to have a gun and not need it than to need it and not have it!" Another slogan was, "Jewish youth, learn to shoot!"
In 1903, he was elected as a Russian delegate to the Sixth Zionist Congress in Basel, Switzerland. After Theodor Herzl's death in 1904, he became the leader of the right-wing Zionists. That year he moved to Saint Petersburg and became one of the co-editors for the Russophone magazine Yevreiskaya Zhyzn (Jewish Life), which after 1907 became the official publishing body of the Zionist movement in Russia. In the pages of the newspaper, Jabotinsky wrote fierce polemics against supporters of assimilation and the Bund.
In 1905, he was one of the co-founders of the "Union for Rights Equality of Jewish People in Russia". The following year, he was one of the chief speakers at the 3rd All-Russian Conference of Zionists in Helsinki, Finland, which called upon the Jews of Europe to engage in Gegenwartsarbeit (work in the present) and to join together to demand autonomy for ethnic minorities in Russia. This liberal approach was later apparent in his position concerning the Arab citizens of the future Jewish State: Jabotinsky asserted that "Each one of the ethnic communities will be recognized as autonomous and equal in the eyes of the law."
In 1909, he fiercely criticized leading members of the Russian Jewish community for participating in ceremonies marking the centennial of the Russian writer Nikolai Gogol. In light of Gogol's antisemitic views, Jabotinsky claimed it was unseemly for Russian Jews to take part in these ceremonies, as it showed they had no Jewish self-respect.
Representative of the ZO in the Ottoman Empire, 1908–1914
In 1909, Sultan Abdulhamid II was deposed. The year before that, following the Young Turk Revolution, the Berlin Executive office of the Zionist Organization (ZO), sent Jabotinsky to the Ottoman capital Constantinople where he became editor-in-chief of a new pro-Young-Turkish daily newspaper Le Jeune Turc (meaning Young Turk) which was founded and financed by Zionist officials like ZO president David Wolffsohn and his representative in Constantinople Victor Jacobson. The journalists writing for that paper included the famous German Social democrat and Russian-Jewish revolutionary Alexander Parvus, who lived in Constantinople from 1910 until 1914. The Jeune Turc was prohibited in 1915 by the pro-German Turkish military junta. Richard Lichtheim, who was to become Jabotinsky's representative in Germany in 1925, stayed in Constantinople as ZO representative and managed to keep the "Yishuv" (Jewish population of Palestine) out of trouble during the war years by constant diplomatic interventions with German, Turkish, and also American authorities, whose humanitarian support was crucial for the survival of the Jewish settlement project in Palestine during the war years.
World War I military career
During World War I, he had the idea of establishing a Jewish Legion to fight alongside the British against the Ottomans who then controlled Palestine. In 1915, together with Joseph Trumpeldor, a one-armed veteran of the Russo-Japanese War, he created the Zion Mule Corps, which consisted of several hundred Jewish men, mainly Russians who had been exiled from Palestine by the Ottoman Empire and had settled in Egypt. The unit served with distinction in the Battle of Gallipoli. When the Zion Mule Corps was disbanded, Jabotinsky traveled to London, where he continued his efforts to establish Jewish units to fight in Palestine as part of the British Army. Although Jabotinsky did not serve with the Zion Mule Corps, Trumpeldor, Jabotinsky and 120 Zion Mule Corps members did serve in Platoon 16 of the 20th Battalion of the London Regiment. In 1917, the government agreed to establish three Jewish battalions, initiating the Jewish Legion.
As an honorary lieutenant in the 38th Royal Fusiliers, Jabotinsky saw action in Palestine in 1918. His battalion was one of the first to enter Transjordan.
He was demobilised in September 1919, soon after he complained to Field Marshal Allenby about the British Army's attitude towards Zionism and the reduction of the Jewish Legion to just one battalion. His appeals to the British government failed to reverse the decision, but in December 1919 he was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) for his service.
Renewed activism and militancy
Jewish self-defense and 1920 Palestine riots
After Ze'ev Jabotinsky was discharged from the British Army in September 1919, he openly trained Jews in warfare and the use of small arms. On 6 April 1920, during the 1920 Palestine riots the British searched the offices and apartments of the Zionist leadership for arms, including the home of Chaim Weizmann, and in a building used by Jabotinsky's defense forces they found three rifles, two pistols, and 250 rounds of ammunition.
Nineteen men were arrested. The next day Jabotinsky protested to the police that he was their commander and therefore solely responsible, so they should be released. Instead, he, too, was arrested, and the nineteen were sentenced to three years in prison with Jabotinsky being given a 15-year prison term for possession of weapons, until a July 1920 general pardon was granted to both Jews and Arabs convicted in the rioting.
A committee of inquiry placed responsibility for the riots on the Zionist Commission, alleging that they provoked the Arabs. The court blamed "Bolshevism" claiming that it "flowed in Zionism's inner heart", and ironically identified the fiercely anti-socialist Jabotinsky with the socialist-aligned Poalei Zion ('Zionist Workers') party, which it called 'a definite Bolshevist institution.'
Founder of the Revisionist movement
In 1920, Jabotinsky was elected to the first Assembly of Representatives in Palestine. The following year he was elected to the executive council of the Zionist Organization. He was also a founder of the newly registered Keren haYesod and served as its director of propaganda. Jabotinsky left the mainstream Zionist movement in 1923 due to differences of opinion between him and its chairman, Chaim Weizmann, establishing a new revisionist party called Alliance of Revisionists-Zionists and its Zionist youth paramilitary organization Betar.
His new party demanded that the mainstream Zionist movement recognize as its stated objective the establishment of a Jewish state on both banks of the Jordan River. His main goal was to establish, with the help of the British Empire, a modern Jewish state in which equality of rights for its Arab minority were upheld. He maintained, however, that this could only be achieved through force, and condemned the "vegetarians" and "peace mongers" in mainstream Zionism who believed that this could be achieved peacefully.
His philosophy contrasted with that of the socialist-oriented Labor Zionists, in that it focused its economic and social policy on the ideals of the Jewish middle class in Europe. His ideal for a Jewish state was a form of nation state based loosely on the British imperial model. His support base was mostly located in Poland, and his activities focused on attaining British support to help with the development of the Yishuv. Another area of major support for Jabotinsky was Latvia, where his speeches in Russian made an impression on the largely Russian-speaking Latvian Jewish community.
Jabotinsky was both a nationalist and a liberal democrat. He rejected authoritarian notions of state authority and its imposition on individual liberty; he said that "Every man is a king." He championed the notion of a free press and believed the new Jewish state would protect the rights and interests of minorities. As an economic liberal, he supported a free market with minimal government intervention, but also believed that the "'elementary necessities' of the average person...: food, shelter, clothing, the opportunity to educate his children, and medical aid in case of illness" should be supplied by the state.
In 1930, while he was visiting South Africa, he was informed by the British Colonial Office that he would not be allowed to return to Palestine.
The Revisionists, Fascism and Mussolini
Italy and Mussolini were a source of ideological, historical and cultural inspiration for the Zionist Revisionists of the 1920s and 1930s. From the early 1930s onwards Jabotinsky believed that the United Kingdom could no longer be trusted to advance the Zionist cause and that Italy, as a growing power capable of challenging Britain for dominance in the region, was a natural ally.
Jabotinsky set up the Betar Naval Academy, a Zionist naval training school established in Civitavecchia, Italy in 1934 with the agreement of Benito Mussolini.
1930s evacuation plan
During the 1930s, Jabotinsky was deeply concerned with the situation of the Jewish community in Eastern Europe. In 1936, Jabotinsky prepared the so-called "evacuation plan", which called for the evacuation of 1.5 million Jews from Poland, the Baltic States, Nazi Germany, Hungary and Romania to Palestine over the span of the next ten years. The plan was first proposed on 8 September 1936 in the conservative Polish newspaper Czas, the day after Jabotinsky organized a conference where more details of the plan were laid out; the emigration would take 10 years and would include 750,000 Jews from Poland, with 75,000 between age of 20–39 leaving the country each year. Jabotinsky stated that his goal was to reduce Jewish population in the countries involved, to levels that would make them disinterested in its further reduction.
The same year he toured Eastern Europe, meeting with the Polish Foreign Minister, Colonel Józef Beck; the Regent of Hungary, Admiral Miklós Horthy; and Prime Minister Gheorghe Tătărescu of Romania to discuss the evacuation plan. The plan gained the approval of all three governments but caused considerable controversy within the Jewish community of Poland, on the grounds that it played into the hands of antisemites. In particular, the fact that the 'evacuation plan' had the approval of the Polish government was taken by many Polish Jews as indicating Jabotinsky had gained the endorsement of what they considered to be the wrong people.
The evacuation of Jewish communities in Poland, Hungary and Romania was to take place over a ten-year period. However, the British government vetoed it, and the Zionist Organization's chairman, Chaim Weizmann, dismissed it. Chaim Weizmann suggested that Jabotinsky was willing to accept Madagascar as one destination for limited emigration for Jews, due to political issues involved with settlement in Palestine, and dispatches from Warsaw by British ambassador Hugh Kennard, corroborate Weizmann's account. Two years later, in 1938, Jabotinsky allegedly stated in a speech that Polish Jews were "living on the edge of the volcano" and warned that the situation in Poland could drastically worsen sometime in the near future. "Catastrophe is approaching. ... I see a terrible picture ... the volcano that will soon spew out its flames of extermination," he said. Jabotinsky went on to warn Jews in Europe that they should leave for Palestine as soon as possible. There is much discussion about whether or not Jabotinsky actually predicted the Holocaust. In his writings and public appearances, he warned against the dangers of an outbreak of violence against the Jewish population of Central and Eastern Europe. However, as late as August 1939, he was certain that war would be averted. The General Jewish Labour Bund ridiculed Jabotinsky and his warnings calling him a "Purim General."
A study published in 2023 by Goldstein and Huri concluded that Jabotinsky never made the 1938 speech attributed to him. Although Jabotinsky gave a speech on that day, the text was different. The earliest mention of the alleged prophetic content that Goldstein and Huri could locate was published in 1958 by the same associate of Jabotinsky who had published the original text in 1938, possibly to bolster the campaign to relocate Jabotinsky's remains to Israel.
On the anniversary of Tisha B'Av (August 1938), Jabotinsky said:
It is already three years that I am calling upon you, Polish Jewry, who are the crown of world Jewry. I continue to warn you incessantly that a catastrophe is coming closer. I became grey and old in these years. My heart bleeds, that you, dear brothers and sisters, do not see the volcano which will soon begin to spit its all-consuming lava. I see that you are not seeing this because you are immersed and sunk in your daily worries. Today, however, I demand from you trust. You were convinced already that my prognoses have already proven to be right. If you think differently, then drive me out of your midst! However, if you do believe me, then listen to me in this 12th hour:In the name of God! Let anyone of you save himself as long as there is still time. And time there is very little…and what else I would like to say to you in this day of Tisha B’Av: whoever of you will escape from the catastrophe, he or she will live to see the exalted moment of a great Jewish wedding: the rebirth and the rise of a Jewish state. I don’t know if I will be privileged to see it; my son will! I believe in this as I am sure that tomorrow morning the sun will rise.
1939 plan for a revolt against the British
In 1939, Britain enacted the MacDonald White Paper, in which Jewish immigration to Palestine under the British Mandate was to be restricted to 75,000 for the next five years, after which further Jewish immigration would depend on Arab consent. In addition, land sales to Jews were to be restricted, and Palestine would be cultivated for independence as a binational state.
Jabotinsky reacted by proposing a plan for an armed Jewish revolt in Palestine. He sent the plan to the Irgun High Command in six coded letters. Jabotinsky proposed that he and other "illegals" would arrive by boat in the heart of Palestine – preferably Tel Aviv – in October 1939. The Irgun would ensure that they successfully landed and escaped, by whatever means necessary. They would then occupy key centers of British power in Palestine, chief among them Government House in Jerusalem, raise the Jewish national flag, and fend off the British for at least 24 hours whatever the cost. Zionist leaders in Western Europe and the United States would then declare an independent Jewish state and would function as a provisional government-in-exile. Although Irgun commanders were impressed by the plan, they were concerned over the heavy losses they would doubtless incur in carrying it out. Avraham Stern proposed simultaneously landing 40,000 armed young immigrants in Palestine to help launch the uprising. The Polish government supported his plan, and it began training Irgun members and supplying them arms. Irgun submitted the plan for the approval of its commander David Raziel, who was imprisoned by the British. However, the beginning of World War II in September 1939 quickly put an end to these plans.
On 12 May 1940, Jabotinsky offered Winston Churchill the support of a 130,000 strong Jewish volunteer corps to fight the Nazis; he also proposed Weizmann and David Ben-Gurion the creation of a united front for policy and relief.
Literary career
In 1898, Jabotinsky was sent to Rome as a correspondent for Odessky Listok, writing columns under the pen name "V. Egal, "Vl. Egal" "V.E." for more than a year. His first application for a job at Odesskiya Novosti was turned down, but after the editor, J.M. Heifetz, saw his writing for Odessky Listok, he hired him. At that point, Jabotinsky changed his pen name to Altalena, which he confesses was a mistake. He thought the Italian word meant "elevator," but explained to the editor that the real meaning, "swing," suited him well, since he was "'by no means stable or constant', but rather rocking and balancing."
In 1914, Jabotinsky published the first Hebrew translation of Edgar Allan Poe's poems The Raven and Annabel Lee.
From 1923, Jabotinsky was editor of the revived Jewish weekly Rassvet (Dawn), published first in Berlin, then in Paris. Besides his journalistic work, he published novels under his previous pseudonym Altalena; his historical novel Samson Nazorei (Samson the Nazirite, 1927), set in Biblical times, describes Jabotinsky's ideal of an active, daring, warrior form of Jewish life. His novel Pyatero (The Five, written 1935, published 1936 in Paris) has been described as "a work that probably has the truest claim to being the great Odessa novel. ... It contains poetic descriptions of early-twentieth-century Odessa, with nostalgia-tinged portraits of its streets and smells, its characters and passions." Although it was little noticed at the time, it has received renewed appreciation for its literary qualities at the start of the twenty-first century, being reprinted in Russia and Ukraine and in 2005 translated into English (the first translation into a Western language).
Family
While in Odessa, Jabotinsky married Joanna (or Ania) Galperina in October 1907. They had one child, Eri Jabotinsky (1910-1969), who later became a member of the Irgun-affiliated Bergson Group. Eri Jabotinsky briefly served in the 1st Knesset of Israel; he died on 6 June 1969 age 58 -one year younger than his father had been when he died at the age of 59.
Death and burial
Obituary of Jabotinsky, 4 August 1940 in HaMashkifGrave of Jabotinsky, Mount Herzl, JerusalemJabotinsky died of a heart attack shortly before midnight on 3 August 1940, while he was visiting a Jewish self-defense camp run by Betar in Hunter, New York.
Jabotinsky was buried in New Montefiore Cemetery in Farmingdale, New York, in accordance with a clause of his will. Ben-Gurion refused to allow Jabotinsky to be reburied in Israel. By order of Israeli Prime Minister Levi Eshkol and in accordance with a second clause of his will, the remains of Jabotinsky and his wife were reburied at Mount Herzl Cemetery in Jerusalem in 1964. A monument to Jabotinsky was erected at his original burial site in New York.
Views and opinions
According to Israeli historian Benny Morris, documents show that Jabotinsky favored the idea of the transfer of Arab populations out of the proposed state if required for its establishment. Jabotinsky's other writings state, "we do not want to eject even one Arab from either the left or the right bank of the Jordan River. We want them to prosper both economically and culturally. We envision the regime of Jewish Palestine as follows: most of the population will be Jewish, but equal rights for all Arab citizens will not only be guaranteed, they will also be fulfilled." In 1927, he reacted angrily to a published report that he had called for the expulsion of Arabs from Palestine. In a letter to the Zionist newspaper Haolam, he wrote: "I never said that, or anything that could be interpreted in this sense. My position is, on the contrary, that no one will expel from the Land of Israel its Arab inhabitants, either all or a portion of them -- this is, first of all, immoral, and secondly, impossible." Jabotinsky was convinced that there was no way for the Jews to regain any part of Palestine without opposition from the Arabs. In 1934, he wrote a draft constitution for the Jewish state which declared that Arabs would be on an equal footing with their Jewish counterparts "throughout all sectors of the country's public life." The two communities would share the state's duties, both military and civil service, and enjoy its prerogatives. Jabotinsky proposed that Hebrew and Arabic should enjoy equal status, and that "in every cabinet where the prime minister is a Jew, the vice-premiership shall be offered to an Arab and vice versa."
Jabotinsky viewed Zionism as a complete cultural departure from the Jewish way of life in Europe and saw the new "Hebrew" as a radical redefinition of the Jewish culture and values at the time. In 1905 he wrote:
To imagine what a true Hebrew is, to picture his image in our minds, we have no example from which to draw. Instead, we must use the method of ipcha mistavra (Aramaic for deriving something from its opposite): We take as our starting point the Yid (used here as pejorative for Jew) of today, and try to imagine in our minds his exact opposite. Let us erase from that picture all the personality traits that are so typical of a Yid, and let us insert into it all the desirable traits whose absence is so typical in him. Because the Yid is ugly, sickly, and lacks handsomeness (הדרת פנים) we shall endow the ideal image of the Hebrew with masculine beauty, stature, massive shoulders, vigorous movements, bright colors, and shades of color. The Yid is frightened and downtrodden; the Hebrew ought to be proud and independent. The Yid is disgusting to all; the Hebrew should charm all. The Yid has accepted submission; the Hebrew ought to know how to command. The Yid likes to hide with bated breath from the eyes of strangers; the Hebrew, with brazenness and greatness, should march ahead to the entire world, look them straight and deep in their eyes and hoist them his banner: “I am a Hebrew!”
His views were adopted by some Zionist publications, including Cahiers du Bétar, a monthly in Tunisia.
Awards and recognition
- In Israel, 57 streets, parks and squares are named after Jabotinsky, more than for any other person in Jewish or Israeli history, making him the most-commemorated historical figure in Israel. In 2022 the Murom Street in Ukraine's capital of Kyiv was renamed to the Ukrainian version of Jabotinsky's name Volodymyr Zhabotinsky Street [uk].
- The Jabotinsky Medal is awarded for outstanding achievements in the sphere of literature and research.
- The Jabotinsky Institute, in Tel Aviv, is a repository of documents and research relating to the history of Betar, the Revisionist movement, the Irgun, and Herut. It is identified with Likud.
- A bronze bust of Jabotinsky by Johan Oldert was presented to the Metzudat Ze'ev in Tel Aviv in 2008 and remains on display.
- A mural of a young Jabotinsky was unveiled in his birthplace of Odesa on the house where he was born in April 2021. It was unveiled by mayor of Odesa Hennadii Trukhanov and Israeli ambassador to Ukraine Joel Lion.
- Jabotinsky Day (Hebrew: יום ז'בוטינסקי) is an Israeli national holiday celebrated annually on the twenty ninth of the Hebrew month of Tammuz, to commemorate the life and vision of Zionist leader Ze'ev Jabotinsky.
Legacy
In his study of the formative leaders of the Zionist movement and the State of Israel, Zeev Tzahor describes Jabotinsky as "a dazzling intellectual, an exceptional writer and a brilliant statesman...A charming man fluent in many languages, sensitive to cultural nuances, and profoundly knowledgeable in a broad array of subjects." However, despite this profusion of talents, he never became leader of the Zionist movement.
Published works
- Turkey and the War, London, T.F. Unwin, Ltd.
- Samson the Nazarite, London, M. Secker,
- The Jewish War Front, London, T.F. Unwin, Ltd.
- The War and The Jew, New York, The Dial Press
- The Story of the Jewish Legion, New York, B. Ackerman, Inc.
- The Battle for Jerusalem. Vladimir Jabotinsky, John Henry Patterson, Josiah Wedgwood, Pierre van Paassen explains why a Jewish army is indispensable for the survival of a Jewish nation and preservation of world civilization, American Friends of a Jewish Palestine, New York, The Friends,
- A Pocket Edition of Several Stories, Mostly Reactionary, Tel-Aviv: Reproduced by Jabotinsky Institute in Israel, . Reprint. Originally published: Paris,
- The Five, A Novel of Jewish Life in Turn-of-the-Century Odessa, Paris,
- Jabotinsky translated Edgar Allan Poe's "The Raven" into Hebrew and Russian, and parts of Dante's Divine Comedy into modern Hebrew verse.
- "The East Bank of the Jordan" (also known as "Two Banks has the Jordan"), a poem by Jabotinsky that became the slogan and one of the most famous songs of Betar
- Vladimir Jabotinsky's Story of My Life, Brian Horowitz & Leonid Katsis, eds., Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2015.
See also
References
Notes
- /ˌ(d)ʒæbəˈtɪnskiˌˌ(d)ʒɑːbə-/ ZHA(H)B-ə-TIN-skee-,-JA(H)B-.
- Hebrew: זְאֵב זַ׳בּוֹטִינְסְקִי, romanized: Ze'ev Zhabotinski; Yiddish: וואלף זשאַבאָטינסקי, romanized: Wolf Zhabotinski
- Russian: Влади́мир Евге́ньевич Жаботи́нский.
Citations
- ^ Владимир Евгеньевич Жаботинский. Russian Writers, 1800-1917. Biographical Dictionary, vol. 2, p. 250 // Русские писатели. 1800—1917. Биографический словарь. Т. 2: Г – К. — М.: Большая российская энциклопедия, 1992 (in Russian)
- ^ Torossian, Ronn (19 May 2014). "Jabotinsky: A Life, by Hillel Halkin - Read and Wonder". Israel National News.
- "Ze'ev Jabotinsky". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 11 August 2019.
- Most of the books say that Jabotinsky died on 4 August, because they wrongly convert the date from the Hebrew calendar. See details below.
- "Vladimir Jabotinsky: A Zionist Activist on the Rise, 1905–1906". Studia Judaica. 39: 105. 2017. doi:10.4467/24500100STJ.17.005.7731.
- Gitelman, Zvi Y.; Kosmin, Barry Alexander; Kovács, András (1 January 2003). New Jewish Identities: Contemporary Europe and Beyond. Central European University Press. p. 147. ISBN 978-963-9241-62-6.
- Marmur, Michael; Ellenson, David (22 May 2020). American Jewish Thought Since 1934: Writings on Identity, Engagement, and Belief. Brandeis University Press. p. 154. ISBN 978-1-68458-014-9.
- Alfandary, Rony (22 July 2021). Postmemory, Psychoanalysis and Holocaust Ghosts: The Salonica Cohen Family and Trauma Across Generations. Routledge. p. 158. ISBN 978-1-000-41184-3.
- Englander, David (1994). A Documentary History of Jewish Immigrants in Britain, 1840-1920. Leicester University Press. p. 322. ISBN 978-0-7185-1517-1.
- Klinger, Jerry (October 2010). "The Struggle for the Jewish Legion and The Birth of the IDF". Jewish Magazine. Retrieved 5 December 2010.
- Nataliya and Yuri Kruglyak (27 July 1939). "Archival documents on Zhabotinsky" (in Russian). Odessitclub.org. Archived from the original on 29 September 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
- "Heroes - Trailblazers of the Jewish People". Beit Hatfutsot. Archived from the original on 17 November 2019. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
- Halkin 2014, pp. 16–17.
- Halkin 2014, pp. 28–29.
- Jabotinsky, Vladimir (5 December 2015). Vladimir Jabotinsky's Story of My Life. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 9780814341391 – via Google Books.
- Halkin 2014, pp. 20.
- Schechtman (1956), pp. 49, 60.
- Halkin 2014, p. 33.
- ^ Жаботинский З. Повесть моих дней. — Библиотека-Алия, 1985
- Kishinev 1903: The Birth of a Century, quoting from the memoirs of Simon Dubnow: "It was the night of April 7, 1903. Because of Russian Easter, the newspapers had not been issued for the previous two days so we remained without any news from the rest of the world. That night the Jewish audience assembled in the Beseda Club, to listen to the talk of a young Zionist, the Odessa 'wunderkind' V. Jabotinsky The young agitator had great success with his audience. In a particularly moving manner, he drew on Pinsker's parable of the Jew as a shadow wandering through space and developed it further. As for my own impression, this one-sided treatment of our historical problem depressed me: Did he not scarcely stop short of inducing fear in our unstable Jewish youth of their own national shadow?… During the break, while pacing up and down in the neighboring room, I noticed sudden unrest in the audience: the news spread that fugitives had arrived in Odessa from nearby Kishinev and had reported a bloody pogrom in progress there."
- ^ "Jabotinsky Ze'ev. Liberal and Zionist Leader. Brief Biography". Liberal.org.il. Archived from the original on 20 June 2009. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
- For references, see Richard Lichtheims autobiographical books in Hebrew and German (see the Hebrew Misplaced Pages entry of Richard Lichtheim)
- D. Flisiak, Działalność syjonistów-rewizjonistów w Polsce w latach 1944/1945- 1950, Lublin 2020, s. 21-22
- ^ Schechtman (1956), pp. 268–271.
- "No. 31619". The London Gazette. 24 October 1919. p. 13126.
- Schechtman (1956), pp. 279–282.
- "SIXTH SUPPLEMENT TO The London Gazette Of TUESDAY, the 9th of DECEMBER, 1919, issue 31684" (PDF). LONDON GAZETTE. 12 December 1919. p. 15455. Retrieved 25 April 2023.
- Schechtman (1956), pp. 283–284.
- D. Flisiak, Działalność syjonistów-rewizjonistów w Polsce w latach 1944/1945- 1950, Lublin 2020, s. 23-24.
- Golan, Zev Free Jerusalem, pp. 28–31
- Segev, Tom (2000). One Palestine, complete: Jews and Arabs under the Mandate. Translated from the Hebrew ימי הכלניות by Haim Watzman. Metropolitan Books, an imprint of Henry Holt and Company. p. 141. ISBN 0-8050-4848-0. Retrieved 19 December 2023 – via Internet Archive.
- "Keren Hayesod". Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 10 December 2009.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - Puchalski, P. (2018). "Review: Jabotinsky's Children: Polish Jews and the Rise of Right-Wing Zionism". The Polish Review. 63 (3). University of Illinois Press: 88–91. doi:10.5406/polishreview.63.3.0088. ISSN 0032-2970. JSTOR 10.5406/polishreview.63.3.0088.
- ""The Iron Wall"". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 9 June 2024.
- 'England is becoming continental! Not long ago the prestige of the English ruler of the "colored" colonies stood very high. Hindus, Arabs, Malays were conscious of his superiority and obeyed, not unprotestingly, yet completely. The whole scheme of training of the future rulers was built on the principle "carry yourself so that the inferior will feel your unobtainable superiority in every motion".’ Jabotinsky, cited by Lenni Brenner, The Iron Wall London, ch.7, 1984
- D. Flisiak, Działalność syjonistów-rewizjonistów w Polsce w latach 1944/1945- 1950, Lublin 2020, s. 24-26.
- Kremnitzer, Mordechai; Fuchs, Amir (2013). Ze'ev Jabotinsky on Democracy, Equality, and Individual Rights (PDF). Jerusalem: Israel Democracy Institute. p. 12. Archived (PDF) from the original on 28 January 2023. Retrieved 19 December 2023 – via en.idi.org.il.
- "H-Net Reviews". H-net.msu.edu. July 1997. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
- ^ Kaplan, 2005, p. 156.
- Kaplan, 2005, p. 149.
- Kaplan, 2005, p. 150.
- Emanuel Melzer (1976). No Way Out: The Politics of Polish Jewry 1935-1939. Hebrew Union College Press. p. 136.
- ^ "Jabotinsky's Lost Moment: June, 1940". The Tower.
- Adam Rovner. In the Shadow of Zion: Promised Lands Before Israel. p. 133.
- Laurence Weinbaum (1993). A Marriage of Convenience: The New Zionist Organization and the Polish Government 1936-1939. East European Monographs. p. 180.
- Amotz Asa-El (28 April 2018). "MIDDLE ISRAEL: No place for a Jew". The Jerusalem Post.
- Weinbaum, Laurence (April 2004). Jabotinsky and Jedwabne. Midstream.
- "Jewish Bund Manifesto against Vladimir Jabotinsky". zionism-israel.com.
- ^ Amir Goldstein and Efi Huri (2023). "The "fires of destruction," Warsaw, August 1938? On the posthumous invention of Jabotinsky's well-known annihilation prophecy". Holocaust Studies. 30 (2): 326–345. doi:10.1080/17504902.2023.2249291. S2CID 261439826.
- jabotinsky-warning-to-warsaw-jews-tisha-bav-1938
- Penkower, Monty Noam: Decision on Palestine Deferred: America, Britain and Wartime Diplomacy, 1939-1945
- Golan, Zev: Free Jerusalem pp. 153, 168
- The American Jewish Army that Never Was, Dusty Sklar for Jewish Currents, 4 June 2018, re-accessed 9 July 2021.
- Schechtman (1956), pp. 58.
- Segal, Miryam (2 January 2010). A New Sound in Hebrew Poetry: Poetics, Politics, Accent. Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253003584 – via Google Books.
- ^ King, Charles (2011). Odessa: Genius and Death in a City of Dreams. New York and London: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 156. ISBN 978-0-393-07084-2 – via Internet Archive.
- "Ari Jabotinsky". www.knesset.gov.il. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
- "Jabotinsky Dead". The New York Times. 5 August 1940. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- "JABOTINSKY, ZIONIST HEAD, DIES". jpress.org.il. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
- "Vladimir Jabotinsky Dies of Heart Attack at 59; Was Visiting Youth Camp" (PDF). jta.org.
- "Jabotinsky Rites Today - Veterans' Organizations to Take Part in Services for Zionist". The New York Times. 6 August 1940. p. 20. Retrieved 23 September 2016.
- Ben-Gurion's Battle Against Bringing Jabotinsky's Bones to Israel, Ushi Derman for "Museum of the Jewish People", 7 March 2019, re-accessed 9 July 2021.
- Spiegel, Irving (3 July 1964). "Israelis to Honor Patriot's Memory - Bodies of Jabotinsky and His Wife Going Back Home". The New York Times. p. 25. Retrieved 23 September 2016.
- "Jabotinsky Memorial Unveiled". The New York Times. 28 July 1941. p. 28. Retrieved 13 May 2016.
- Morris, Benny (13 January 2004). "For the record". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 June 2013.
- Morris, Benny (2004). The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited (PDF). Cambridge University Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-521-81120-0. Retrieved 19 December 2023 – via larryjhs.fastmail.fm.user.fm/.
- Kremnitzer, Mordechai; Fuchs, Amir (2013). Ze'ev Jabotinsky on Democracy, Equality, and Individual Rights (PDF). Jerusalem: Israel Democracy Institute. p. 8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 January 2023. Retrieved 19 December 2023 – via en.idi.org.il.
- "Mikhtav el Ha-Maarechet" (Letter to the editor), Haolam, 7 Jan. 1927
- Karsh, Efraim (Spring 2005). "Benny Morris's Reign of Error, Revisited: The Post-Zionist Critique". Middle East Quarterly. XII: 31–42. Retrieved 15 June 2013.
- Jabotinsky, Valdimir (1905). Dr. Herzl.
- "From Herzl to Rabin". archive.nytimes.com. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
- Emmanuel Debono (7 August 2014). "L'importation du conflit israélo-palestinien en question". Le Monde (in French). Retrieved 27 August 2022.
- "Jabotinsky most popular street name in Israel", Ynetnews, 28 November 2007
- (in Ukrainian) "About the renaming of Muromska street in the Shevchenkiv district of Kyiv", Kyiv City Council (27 October 2022)
- Ze'ev Tsahor, "Rise of a right-wing phoenix", Haaretz, 15 August 2003
- Or Kashti, "In Israel, not all religious funding was created equal", Haaretz, 25 November 2012
- "Center Bulletin, Vol. 4, Issue 30, May 7, 2008". Menachim Begin Heritage Center website. 7 May 2008. Retrieved 3 March 2017.
- ^ Art meets History – Murals in Kiev, Jerusalem Post (11 July 2022)
- "Knesset Creates Jabotinsky Day".
- In and Out of the Political 'Box', Haaretz
Sources
- Halkin, Hillel (2014). Jabotinsky: A Life. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-13662-3.
- Kaplan, Eran (2005). The Jewish Radical Right: Revisionist Zionism and Its Ideological Legacy. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0-299-20380-8
- Schechtman, Joseph (1956). Rebel and Statesman: the Vladimir Jabotinsky Story. New York: Thomas Yoseloff.
Further reading
- Flisiak Dominik, Działalność syjonistów-rewizjonistów w Polsce w latach 1944/1945- 1950, Lublin 2020
- Katz, Shmuel (1996), Lone Wolf: A Biography of Vladimir (Zeʼev) Jabotinsky, New York: Barricade Books, ISBN 9781569800423
- Schechtman, Joseph B. (1956–1961). Rebel and Statesman: The Vladimir Jabotinsky Story. New York: T. Yoseloff.
- Jewish Defense Organization booklet. Zev Jabotinsky: Militant Fighter for Jews & Israel.
- Shavit, Yaacov (1988). Jabotinsky and the Revisionist Movement, 1925–1948. London, England: Totawa, N.J., F. Cass.
- Brenner, Lenni (1983). Zionism in the Age of the Dictators. Lawrence Hill & Co; Rev Ed.
- Michael Stanislawski (2005). Vladimir Jabotinsky. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-8903-7.
- Sultanowitz, Rabbi Ze'ev (2011). "The secret of the vision, logic and deeds". The Life of Ze'ev Jabotinsky. Jerusalem.
- Nedava, Joseph (1986). "Vladimir Jabotinsky: The Man and His Struggles". Tel Aviv.
- Halkin, Hillel (2014). Jabotinsky: A Life. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300210019.
- Halkin, Hillel (June 2014). "Who was Jabotinsky?". Mosaic magazine.
External links
- Works by or about Ze'ev Jabotinsky at the Internet Archive
- Works by Ze'ev Jabotinsky at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Zionism and the Land of Israel
- Tisha B'Av, 1937 at the Wayback Machine (archived 16 August 2007)
- Instead of Excessive Apology at the Wayback Machine (archived 2 January 2008), 1911
- The Ideology of Betar Archived 31 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine
- "The Ethics of the Iron Wall", 1923
- A selection of Jabotinsky's writings: The World of Jabotinsky
- The Iron Wall (1923)
- The Ethics of the Iron Wall (1923)
- Memorial pages for Jabotinsky in Knesset website (in English)
- The Jabotinsky Institute (in Hebrew)
- The Jabotinsky Institute (in English)
- Jewish Defense Organization runs Camp Jabotinsky, (Zionist Leaders: Ze'ev Jabotinsky, Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs
- Ze'ev Jabotinsky's biography Knesset website (in English)
- Law honoring Zionist forefather passed Yediot Aharonot, 23 March 2005
- Jabotinsky's biography Archived 23 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine Betar UK
- Fighting Hitler with cartoons, Haaretz
- THE JUBILEE: THE BIBLICAL PLAN FOR EXPANDED OWNERSHIP – Jabotinsky's economical view.
- "Ze'ev Jabotinsky: A story of a Leader". Keren Hayesod. 24 September 2012. Archived from the original on 12 December 2021. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
- "Yisrael Medad, Deputy Editor, English Anthology Volumes of Jabotinsky's Writings". ILTV Israel Daily. 25 December 2018. Archived from the original on 12 December 2021. Retrieved 31 August 2019.
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