Originally posted by davefoc
Drooper, I am not exactly how to take this statement. especially with respect to the first goal that I listed. This was exactly what Zionism was about. Throughtout the writings of the time people list how many Jews have immigrated to and emmigrated from Eretz Israel. Always with the idea that more is better. This was the holy cause of Zionism. If the organization had any goal it was this.
Yes, the goal of Zionism was to establish a homeland for the Jewish people, their method was to encourage Jewish immigration.
Originally posted by davefoc
If you disagree with me that it was a more important goal to Zionists than the fair treatment of the indigenous population perhaps you could make a case for that.
What I disagree with is the implication that these goals were mutually exclusive, or that where they were, the priorities should have been any different.
Any movement is going to make its goals a priority. If they don't, it's not a serious movement and it will fail. Can you imagine criticizing the right-to-life crowd for not giving
"fair treatment" to pregnant teens, where
"fair treatment" is defined by the teen who wants an abortion? No, because this
"un-fair treatment" is definitive of the movement.
Originally posted by davefoc
Especially if you coluld find some writings of a prominent Zionist or any Zionist for that matter that would suggest that well being of the indigenous population or the feelings of the indigenous population about the immigration should be taken into account when the Zionists were going all over the world recruting Jews to come to Israel.
In the early part of the twentieth century, it was a
given for certain populations that they might not be welcome in places they chose to move too, or that they might not be welcome in many things they wanted to do. If you had the misfortune of being born to one of these minority populations, your choices were to respect the feelings of whomever and accept a lower status in life due to who you are, or to pursue your goals despite the feelings of those who think you should "keep in your place".
How do you expect the Zionists to pay more attention to the feelings of the indigenous Arabs when, as Jews, they wern't welcome anywhere?
Originally posted by davefoc
I also think there is considerable evidence to support the idea that a primary goal of Zionism was isolation from the indigenous population. I think the pressure to get Jews to hire only Jews, the purchase of land for Jewish only settlements, the adoption of a language that only Jews would speak and just the general fact that Zionists at least to my knowledge never had anything in mind other than Jews living in their villages and Arabs living in theirs seem like pretty strong evidence in support of this notion.
The pressure to get Jews to hire Jews wasn't for isolation, it was to provide economic suppot for Jewish immigrants.
There was nothing stopping Arabs from learning Hebrew, nor anything stopping Jews from learning Arabic. Today Israel has three national languages, Hebrew, Arabic and English. At the time, adopting Hebrew as a common language made perfect sense, as the majority of immigrants from all over the world already has a familiarity with the language. Also, one of the goals of Zionism was the revitalization of Jewish culture, and bringing Hebrew out of the synagogue and into common useage was an important part of that.
If the Jewish immigrants had moved into Arab towns, then they really would have been guilty of displacing the natives. Instead, they built new towns. I believe this is in part a cultural relic from pre-Zionist days. Different peoples lived in different areas. Like in Iraq, where the Kurds live in their own areas.