Photo: Students and reporters from Lithuania at the 17th World Zionist Congress, Berlin, 1931
The LJC webpage is publishing a series of articles by Dr. Eglė Bendikaitė called “Zionist Priorities in the Struggle for Lite (1916-1918)” dedicated to marking the 100th anniversary of union of Zionist organizations in Lithuania. The first part was published here February 15 here.
The World Zionist Organization was established at the August, 1897, meeting of the First World Zionist Congress in Basel. Lithuanian Zionism disappeared as a subject of inquiry along with the Lithuanian Jewish community slaughtered in the Holocaust. Following Lithuanian independence more scholarly attention is being paid to the movement.
The word Zionism comes from Mount Zion, where the original Temple was built in Jerusalem. Early in Jewish history it came to serve as a synonym for Jerusalem and the Land of Israel. As a symbol of the desire to return to the Promised Land, it was an element of Jewish prayers for centuries. It was only towards the end of the 19th century it acquired a political meaning and began to stand for a social movement whose goal was to create a political home for the Jewish people in their historical homeland, in other words, to reestablish a Jewish state.
Lithuanian Zionists, aligned largely to the positions of Zionist leaders in Berlin, the Hague and Copenhagen, deliberated the prospects of Lithuania, or Lite, and Jewish existence in it, while seeking allies to make their ethnic and political goals real. At the same time, a handful of people controlled the political strategy of Lithuanian Zionists whose personal interests and priorities were often the overriding factor in decision making.
Part II in the series “Zionist Priorities in the Struggle for Lite (1916-1918)”:
Egle Bendikaite - The Zionist Priorities in the Struggle for Lite, 1916–1918 (Part 02)