This message comes from Progressive and its Name Your Price tool. Say how much you want to pay for car insurance and they'll show coverage options within your budget. Visit Progressive.com. Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and Affiliates. Price and coverage match limited by state law. On August 29th, 1897, a meeting of around 200 people was held in a room in a city on the Rhine River. The room was a kind of a public meeting room.
In a small city in Switzerland, Basel, Switzerland. Basel, Switzerland, where, like most days in late August, the weather was perfect. It was about 70 degrees Fahrenheit. People had come from all over the world for this meeting. Including America, including from North Africa, but mainly they were from Eastern Europe. The meeting was about a controversial concept, Zionism.
or the idea that Jewish people should have a nation in their ancestral homeland, in the biblical land of Zion. And at that time, many Jewish people in Europe didn't want to have anything to do with this idea. Initially, the meeting was to be held in Munich, Germany, a much bigger metropolis. But the Jewish community of Munich refused. They didn't want to have anything to do with those Zionists.
There were all kinds of rabbis who were opposed to Zionism at the time. Either they were Orthodox and they thought that Zionism was a blasphemy and that Jews should not return to Eretz Israel, the land of Israel, before the Messiah comes. Or they were Reform rabbis who said, "We're not a nation. We're entirely German. We're entirely, you know, French. We're entirely whatever."
Basel had a small Jewish community and a kosher restaurant, which would help observant Orthodox Jews in town for the gathering feel at home. So on the morning of August 29th, after opening remarks, the meeting's organizer stepped up to the podium, a Jewish Austro-Hungarian man named Theodor Herzl. The room goes crazy. There's 15 minutes of applause. Women faint.
Men kiss his hand. It's absolute pandemonium. After the applause died down, Herzl, wearing formal attire, a suit, top hat, and white gloves, and sporting a thick beard, stood up in front of the few hundred people in the room and gave a speech. We want to lay the foundation stone for the home that is destined to be a safe haven for the Jewish people.
And then for the next two and a half days, there's speeches, there's debates, and out of it emerges this organization called the Zionist Organization. The meeting was called the Zionist Congress. It was the first of its kind. They come up with a program of what they want, which is a publicly recognized home for the Jews in Palestine.
A homeland for Jewish people in Palestine, a land where hundreds of thousands of Arabs already lived. Herzl and everybody, I think, who participated in this movement, they regarded it as a liberation movement. It was there to liberate the Jews from the threat of anti-Semitism in Europe. Herzl...
wrote something quite prophetic in his diary after the first Zionist Congress. He said, At Basel, I founded the Jewish state. If I said this out loud today, I would be greeted by universal laughter. Everybody will laugh at me. That was 1897. In five years, perhaps, and certainly in 50 years, everyone will perceive it. People will take me seriously.
So if you think 50 years from 1897 was 1947, the State of Israel was founded in 1948. Since October 7th, the term Zionism has been everywhere in the news. It's been used to support Israel in what it calls its war against Hamas, a refrain to remind everyone why Israel exists and why it must be protected.
Others have used Zionism to describe what they view as Israel's collective punishment of civilians in Gaza and its appropriation of Palestinian territories, what they often call settler colonialism. Zionism has been defined and redefined again and again.
These definitions are often built on competing historical interpretations. So, unsurprisingly, we received many requests from you, our audience, to explore the origins of Zionism. So, that's exactly what we're going to do. I'm Randa Abdelfattah. And I'm Ramtin Arablui. On this episode of ThruLine from NPR...
We're going to go back to the late 19th century to meet the people who organized the modern Zionist movement. Hello there. My name is Maud Amelia Chibnall-Volper. I'm from Columbia, Missouri, and you're listening to ThruLine from NPR.
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Visit Lisa.com to learn more. That's L-E-E-S-A dot com. Part 1. You Couldn't Change Your Blood. This is the song Hatikvah, or The Hope. It is now the national anthem of Israel. This version is from The Illegals, a film about Holocaust survivors traveling by boat to Palestine after World War II.
The lyrics are, as long as the Jewish spirit is yearning deep in the heart, with eyes turned towards the east, looking towards Zion, then our hope, the 2,000-year-old hope, will not be lost, to be a free people in our land, the land of Zion and Jerusalem.
For the last 2,000 years, there was an idea among Jews to return to what they called the Land of Israel. A religious idea. The notion behind it was that you had to wait until the Messiah comes. And in the Messianic time, Jews will be brought back to Israel. Around 3,000 years ago, a Jewish kingdom existed in what is now Israel and the Palestinian territories.
It was conquered by a neighboring empire in 586 BCE. As a result, a large number of Jews were displaced and held captive. But then came the Persians who conquered the land. Cyrus, the Persian king, freed the Jews from bondage. He also helped their effort to rebuild the temple in Jerusalem. Then a few hundred years later, the Roman Empire conquered the region and destroyed the temple in Jerusalem.
This time, most Jews went into exile in many parts of the Middle East, North Africa, Central Asia, and Europe. A small Jewish population remained. A dream of returning to Israel lived on in the prayers and beliefs of some Jews living in exile. For much of Jewish history, this has remained merely a dream. But... In the 19th century... The 1800s... That started to change. There were secular...
people who later would be called Zionists, who transformed this religious idea into the idea of a secular state. This is Michael Brenner. I am a professor at American University in Washington, D.C., and at the University of Munich in Germany. He's also the author of a book called In Search of Israel, The History of an Idea.
Michael says that in Europe in the 1800s, a time where the idea of modern nation-states was becoming more popular, some Jews began coalescing around the idea that there was no reason to wait for a Messiah, that Jews could form their own state in their holy land now by moving back there in large numbers. Let me distinguish between two major ideas of Zionism. One is a Zionism...
born out of despair, the reaction, the response to anti-Semitism. And another one is Zionism born out, let's call it enthusiasm, meaning we want to revive Jewish culture. We want to revive the Hebrew language. We want to create something new on the basis, on the foundation of a religious idea, but transform it into a secular idea. ♪
Despair. Enthusiasm. These terms can also be used to characterize the contradictory situation for European Jews in the 19th century. The 1800s are a time when we see the integration of Jews into many European societies. So Jews become citizens of Germany, of France, of Europe.
Italy, of other places. There is a Jewish middle class or even upper middle class like there never had been before. Jews attending university. Jews are increasingly prosperous in business and in the professions. More and more Jews are going into law and medicine and some of them into academia.
It's a time where Jews can live in fancy neighborhoods and they can buy nice houses and send their kids to good schools. There's a lot of Jewish mobility and integration. This is Derek Penslar. I am a professor of Jewish history at Harvard University. He's also the director of Harvard's Center for Jewish Studies. And my most recent book, which was published last year, is titled Zionism, an Emotional State.
Derrick says that despite the integration of Jews into Western European culture, the 19th century also saw a sharp rise in anti-Semitism. So you can have a German Jew in their very German home with German furniture, eating German food, going down to eat breakfast and opening up the newspaper, the German newspaper, and reading all about what the anti-Semites have been saying in Parliament about how terrible the Jews are.
Anti-Jewish hatred had long been a feature of Christian Europe. There are complex reasons for this, but one obvious factor was that many Christians believed that Jews were responsible for killing Jesus Christ. This meant that many rulers would scapegoat their Jewish subjects to distract from their own failings. There was a repeating pattern of religious violence against Jews all over Europe.
but in the 19th century. There is the rise of a new anti-Semitism, which is no longer based on religion, but it's based on the idea of race. The Jews were defined as
a different race and that it does not matter how much they try to assimilate. This is Anita Shapira, retired professor of Jewish history at Tel Aviv University. She says pseudoscientific theories about race prevalent at the time categorized Jews not just as a religious or ethnic minority, but into a completely different race, separate on the genetic level from other Europeans.
And as a result, they cannot become part and admitted as equal by the societies in which they live. Until the mid-19th century, if you really wanted to escape anti-Semitism, the usual way out was to convert to Christianity. But with this new idea of a race-based anti-Semitism...
It didn't matter if Jews converted to Christianity. They would remain Jews. So there was no way out anymore of that kind of anti-Semitism. Because in their ideas, you couldn't change your blood. And this is the moving force that made Herzl into what he became.
In 1894, a Jewish army captain in France named Alfred Dreyfus was arrested and charged with treason. It became the trial of the century. He was innocent. He'd been framed. It was major news all over Europe, and it had a deep personal impact on a seasoned journalist covering the trial for a Viennese newspaper. And he's witness of the so-called Dreyfus affair.
That journalist was Theodor Herzl. What Herzl notices in Paris is it's not about the person, Officer Dreyfus. The people go on the street and shout against the Jew Dreyfus and then the Jews.
And he realizes if even in Paris, in France, the country where the ideas of liberty and fraternity and egalitarianism started, if even there Jews are victims of anti-Semitism, then we'll be safe in no other, in no place in the world. Dreyfus was wrongly convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment at a penal colony.
This shocked Herzl. He kind of went into a tailspin. And started pouring himself into researching and writing to figure out. How do we solve the problem of anti-Semitism? And he comes up with the idea, which is that there has to be a Jewish state. The Jews have dreamt this kingly dream all through the long nights of their history. Next year in Jerusalem is our old phrase. It is now a question of showing that the dream can be converted into a living reality.
Jews need to have the option to leave wherever they're persecuted into a homeland where they can be free. No one can deny the gravity of the situation of the Jews. Wherever they live in perceptible numbers, they are more or less persecuted. So after months of writing... In 1896, he publishes a pamphlet called The Jewish State. Der Judenstaat in German, which means literally the state of the Jews, but usually translated as the Jewish state.
And that's the beginning of the Zionist movement as we know it. But none of this was inevitable for Theodor Herzl. Up until that point, his life was a prime example of Jewish integration into European society.
Theodor Herzl embodied the Jewish dream, as it were. Theodor Herzl was born in 1816, Budapest. His father had become a prosperous businessman. Herzl had a nice life. He went to university in Vienna. He studied law. He joined a fraternity.
middle-class guy in Vienna who partied and he dated. He had actually a Christmas tree in his home. So he was what we would usually call the typical assimilated Jew. He finished university. He went to work as a government attorney. But eventually switched careers and became a journalist, playwright, and author.
His plays were produced in Vienna at the best theaters in the city. He was actually having a pretty good life. He wanted to be nothing more than a German writer and journalist. I have to point out the irony here, which is that
Herzl really had a veneration for Western European culture. He wanted to be a part of it. But ultimately, it's the European culture that kind of turns its back on him and other Jews. There's a sad irony there, isn't there? Absolutely. He writes at some point in his diary, if I could choose what I'd be, I would love to be a Prussian aristocrat.
And of course, as often is the case, people who are rejected, who are rejected as what they think they actually are, they react very sensitively. And he did. He thought...
Why do people not recognize that I am just an Austrian and I write in German? But he realized it doesn't work. I will always be seen as a Jew. And that's what I would call a Zionism out of despair. He became a Zionist not because he wanted to learn Hebrew and revive Jewish culture and go back to the land of Israel.
His Zionism was a Zionism of no other possibility of surviving as a Jew. Herzl began sending his pamphlet, The Jewish State, to all his friends and colleagues. But the reaction was pretty cold.
Most Jews from his own surrounding in Vienna and German Jews and French Jews whom he sent it to, they weren't very enthusiastic because they thought anti-Semitism would go away and he thought, no, it's here to stay. Coming up, Herzl shakes off the rejection and finds fellow Jews who believe in his vision in a place he'd never been, the Russian Empire.
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In 1897, Theodor Herzl began sending out invites to the Zionist Congress in Basel, Switzerland. He sent them everywhere. But at this point, his ideas were still pretty fringe. Zionism was a minority movement. This is Derek Penslar. He teaches Jewish history at Harvard. Most Jews in the world were not Zionists. Derek says that for many Jews in countries like the United States or England or France—
the idea of picking up and moving to the Middle East would have seemed extreme. We're Americans, we're Germans, we're British. We are not members of a Jewish nationality, and we have no desire to go and live in the land of Israel. But there was a group that was ready to hear the clarion call of Zionism. So the people who really...
This is Michael Brenner, professor at American University. At that time, Russia was ruled over by a czar, or emperor, and it had returned to a state of almost medieval feudalism.
Life was hard for most people there, and especially for Jews who faced all manner of discrimination. That's where most of the Jews in Europe lived, and they were confined legally to a section of western and southern Russia known as the Pale of Settlement. Which led also to a lot of economic problems.
Most of them were desperately poor. They had limited choices of occupations. It was really hard for them to get ahead economically. And then beginning in the 1880s, they began to suffer from overt persecution as well. In 1881, Russia's Tsar was assassinated by a group of attackers in St. Petersburg. Almost immediately, rumors were spread that the assassinations were planned and carried out by Jewish people.
Jews as a universal solvent. Whatever it is you think is being destroyed in society, it's the Jews' fault. Soon after the Tsar's assassination, violent anti-Jewish riots broke out in the Russian Empire. Stores being ransacked, property destroyed, and then, as things get worse and worse, people getting killed.
rapes, people getting beaten up and murdered. These violent riots came to be known as pogroms. These pogroms often happened around Easter because people think about the death of Christ and then they think about the old religious accusations that Jews are responsible for the death of Jesus. And they continued for decades to come. They're quite deadly and they spread fear among Jews throughout the Russian Empire.
And that spawned a massive wave of migration out of the Russian Empire. It was these disaffected and oppressed Jews from the Russian Empire that made up the core of Theodor Herzl's supporters. More of them attended that first Zionist Congress than from any other country. But this wasn't exactly what Theodor Herzl, a man who viewed himself as a Western European intellectual and elite, wanted.
Herzl kind of jokingly stated that he really wanted to have the wealthy Western European Jews, but they didn't come. He said, I have only an army of beggars behind me from Eastern Europe. I am in command of only boys, beggars, and prigs. Some of them exploit me. Others are already jealous and disloyal.
Truth is, they weren't really beggars. They were middle class, many were lawyers, but they weren't the wealthy Rothschilds and people he would have loved to have in his Congress. The Rothschilds were a rich Jewish banking family from Germany. He went to the Rothschilds, he went to the Baron Hearsh,
All these people were willing to donate money, but they did not believe in the idea of Zionism. He also seems like he has internalized Western European or European attitudes around race. Even though he may recognize that it's hurting Jews, he did seem to have a kind of, I sense, elitism.
He felt himself very much a Western European person, German civilization, German culture. And there was no doubt some way of looking down, condescending, paternalizing view on East European Jews. And some of the leading East European Zionists took issue with that and took issue also with his whole view how to transplant Jews
At the time of the first Zionist Congress, Palestine was controlled by the Ottoman Empire. Muslim Arabs, as well as Christian Arabs, made up around 90% of the population.
Jews were an ethnic minority. Zionists did realize very well that there were people living there. Maybe they thought the country was sparsely populated, but they knew there were people living there. There's a myth that the Zionists were not aware of the Palestinian Arab population. They were very aware of it. The question is, what do you do with that information?
Herzl himself only went to Palestine once for 10 days. He knew very well there were people living there. Herzl wrote very little about the Arabs. He wrote some things about, oh, I've seen some neglected houses in Arab fashion. You know, he just kind of dismissed them. He had a condescending view to Arabs who lived in Palestine. Herzl wrote in his pamphlet, The Jewish State,
We should there form a portion of a rampart of Europe against Asia, an outpost of civilization as opposed to barbarism. In his diary in 1895, this is how Theodor Herzl described his plans for dealing with the indigenous poor people already living in the future Jewish homeland, wherever it would be. We must expropriate gently the private property of the state assigned to us. The property owners will come over to our side.
Both the process of expropriation and the removal of the poor must be carried out discreetly and circumspectly. Let the owners of the immovable property believe that they are cheating us, selling us things for more than they are worth. But we are not going to sell them anything back. A year after his visit to Jerusalem, Herzl received a letter from a former mayor of the city, a Palestinian Arab dignitary named Yusuf Zia al-Khalidi.
wrote to him and said, I really respect how the Jews have suffered and how they are connected to the land of Israel, but you should know that there's an Arab population there and they're not going to receive your ideas at all favorably. Excellency, let me tell you first of all that the feelings of friendship which you express for the Jewish people inspire in me the deepest appreciations.
Herzl wrote back and said, don't worry about it. The Jews have no belligerent power behind them. Neither are they themselves of a warlike nature. Therefore, there's absolutely nothing to fear from their immigration. No Arab will be dislodged. You will benefit from us. We will bring you our Western technology. You will have happier, better lives. No one can doubt that the well-being of the entire country would be the happy result. In his view, out of a European perspective,
almost patronizing view, where how could they reject a movement that brings civilization, that brings electricity, that brings new modern forms of agriculture, that will develop this country. So, Herzl could not imagine and did not imagine that they would be rejected.
After that first Zionist Congress in Basel in 1897, Herzl continued to make Zionism his life's work. He organized more meetings of the Zionist organization, published writings, and went around Europe and the Middle East trying to make connections with world leaders. Well, according to all accounts, Herzl was a very charismatic person. Even his look, he had this long beard and
It looked almost like one of those old depictions of like Assyrian kings. He was a very charismatic speaker and he was a meticulous organizer. Basically, he organized every single detail of the first Congress and of all the other Congresses he lived to see. He was always in a train going somewhere. There's a phrase in Yiddish, he was always tumling. He was always...
on the move, on the make, trying to make something work. He was a man of great energy and great vision, and he was willing to essentially stake his life on trying to attain that vision. The difference between a genius and a madman is very delicate. I am sure that there were Jews that were certain that
Herzl was a madman, while there were others that adored him. By the turn of the 20th century, Herzl had been on the road for years advocating for the creation of a Jewish state. In 1901, he traveled to Constantinople, the city now called Istanbul, the capital of the Ottoman Empire, the ruler of Palestine. Herzl tried to get the Ottoman Emperor to grant Jews permission.
to settle in large numbers in Palestine. Herzl made an attractive offer to the emperor: "If you let Jews settle in Palestine, then we will raise money and help you pay off your empire's debts." The emperor, Abdul Hamid, said, "No, we're not going to allow that." I cannot sell even a foot of land, for it does not belong to me but to my people. My people have won this empire by fighting for it with their blood and have fertilized it with their blood.
We will again cover it with our blood before we allow it to be wrested away from us. The emperor didn't just decline Herzl's offer. He had implemented a policy to restrict Jewish migration to Palestine because he was wary of welcoming a large religious minority into the empire. So Herzl got kind of desperate, and he started thinking, where else can we settle, at least in the short term? He met with leaders of the British Empire and was able to get an offer.
Britain would allow Jews to settle in East Africa, one of the territories the empire controlled. And he pitched this to the Zionist Congress saying, well, I've got some good news. The British government's offering us land, and no, we won't be in this land forever, and it's not a substitute for Eretz Israel, for the land of Israel. But isn't it great that we've gotten recognized by the British and Jews can escape persecution and they can live here? But the Zionist Congress hated this idea.
They felt betrayed because he was willing to accept a territory other than Palestine. The land of Israel was a land where there was always a Jewish community.
which was always present in the thoughts of Jews, which was always present in their prayers. So at the end, he raised his hand before the Congress and he swore with the words of the prayer, if I forget this Jerusalem, let my right arm dry out. All of this took a toll on his health.
He had had fainting spells, palpitations, premonitions of doom for a few years, ever since he was about 40. In 1904, the stress and years on the road caught up to him. That year, Theodor Herzl died suddenly of heart failure. At the age of 44, he was a very young man. In the years before he died, Theodor Herzl spent much of his spare time working on a novel.
It was called The Old New Land. The story takes place 20 years into Herzl's future, where... The Jews have obtained something. It's not a state. He never talks about borders. It has no army. It's a kind of a community of Jews who live with each other and with the Middle East in peace and harmony. And one of the major characters of the book is a Palestinian.
So he envisions a, what he calls the new society of people who are completely equal. The book painted a utopian picture of a future Palestine. It was published in 1902, just a few years before Herzl's death. It was not a hit. Very few people actually read it. But a few years after the book was published, the city of Tel Aviv was founded by Jewish settlers in Palestine.
Tel Aviv was the Hebrew translation of Theodor Herzl's novel Old New Land. Coming up, when Hitler rises to power, Zionism becomes a means for survival for European Jews. Hi, this is Jamie McReynolds from Blacksburg, Virginia, and you're listening to ThruLine on NPR.
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There is a famous
Commonly known as the Khazari. The book was written in the 12th century. It's a work of historical fiction in which a central Eurasian king who wants his people to accept monotheistic religion calls three scholars, a Muslim, a Christian, and a Jewish rabbi to his court in order to decide which religion he will accept.
And the rabbi told him, "We Jews, we never use power. We are a peaceful people." And the king replied, "You say that because you are weak, when you are powerful, you will change your opinion and you will use power as any other people.
After Theodor Herzl's death at the start of the 20th century, the Zionist movement continued its work. Many Jews did move to Palestine, purchasing land and starting communities. But their numbers were relatively small. Then, in 1917, a huge opportunity emerged for the Zionists. The British army captured Jerusalem from the Ottoman Empire.
That same year, British Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour issued a statement called the Balfour Declaration.
World War I would soon be over. His Majesty's government view with favor the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people and will use their best endeavors to facilitate the achievement of this object. In the coming years, Britain would take control of Palestine, lift Ottoman restrictions on Jewish migration there, and support the creation of a Jewish national home.
It's important to note that the British had also promised Arabs a state in exchange for their support during World War I. But advocates for Zionism had lobbied the British government, and it paid off. In the following decade or so, Jewish migration from Europe, especially Russia and Poland, continued. Many of these migrants settled in agricultural communities.
And then, in the 1930s, everything changed. 1933, Hitler comes to power in Germany. And anti-Semitic laws are issued in Poland and in Hungary. And there are more and more Jews who want to leave. They're just looking for a place to go. And there are very few countries that are willing to take them. And now...
It becomes harder. The United States pretty much shuts down its immigration system to anybody from Eastern or Southern Europe after 1924. This policy came from a combination of growing isolationism in the U.S. and a fear of communism, which was associated with Jews. So as Nazism is rising… Jews can't get in. So North America's off the table. What can you do?
Many of these Jewish refugees fleeing the Nazi regime ended up going to Palestine, now run by the British. So Palestine is not a place that these refugees go to necessarily because they're idealists. They're just looking for a place to survive. And this dramatically increased the Jewish population there. At the beginning of the 1930s,
The Jewish population in Palestine was about 170,000 people. Between 1932 and 1936, it doubled at least, and even more than that. These were the years of the critical building mass of Jews in Palestine.
Once World War II began, it became even more difficult for Jews to flee Europe, partly because of the lack of countries willing to accept Jewish refugees, and partly because of the chaos of war. And Jews get trapped, and they're killed by the millions. The Holocaust was a genocide perpetrated by Germany's Nazi regime against Jews and other minorities.
Six million Jewish people were killed and hundreds of thousands more were displaced. The Holocaust really changed the whole equation. In a way, it helped Israel to come to existence because that was the final piece that convinced the rest of the world that Jews didn't have a place to go. Anita Shapira experienced this firsthand
Her parents were killed by Nazis. After the war, she was adopted by other Holocaust survivors. I was about six years old when they adopted me. A year later, in 1947, Anita and her new family moved to Palestine. So why did they choose Palestine? First of all, because of family connections.
but also for the simple feeling that after what they were through, they wanted to live among Jews because this was supposed to be a country where they would feel both safe and among their own.
But as Jewish people became nearly a third of the population in Palestine, already existing tensions with Arab Palestinians grew to a fever pitch. The Arab states thought, why should we pay the price for what the Europeans do to the Jews? Meanwhile, militancy became more and more prominent among the Zionists in Palestine.
They had a quasi-governmental structure and a military wing called the Haganah. The Jewish city of Tel Aviv had grown to 200,000 residents. The Jews wanted, like other people, respect and they wanted safety. And both things came only with power. And power meant force.
military force. The question of the willingness to use power was a major question in Jewish ideology and in Zionist ideology. From the very first Congress in 1897, there were different views from Zionists about how they should create a home in Palestine. There were some pacifists who believed Jews and Arabs could cooperate.
But there was also radical members of the Zionist organization who advocated the forceful displacement of Palestinians. They thought... The Jews, if they want to have land, they have to use power. This was the turning point between the old Jew and the new Jew. The new Jew, as one of the pioneers described him, had...
a hoe in his hand and a gun in his other hand. A hoe in his one hand and a gun in the other. Farmers and warriors. For the so-called new Jew, wielding power felt essential after the Holocaust. We have to remember that this was created
For example, a paramilitary organization called the Irgun carried out attacks against British and Palestinian targets, including the King David Hotel attack in Jerusalem that killed 91 people in 1946.
By 1947, there was near constant fighting between Jews and Arab Palestinians. Frustrated and unable to get a handle on the situation, the British announced they would relinquish their control over Palestine. They handed off responsibility to the United Nations. The UN member nations voted to partition Palestine into two states, one Jewish and one Arab. Jews were granted 55% of the land.
The Palestinians and other Middle Eastern states, including Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and Iraq, rejected this offer. The Zionists reluctantly accepted it, with many right-wing extremists arguing they should have all of the land. On May 14, 1948, David Ben-Gurion, Israel's first prime minister, declared Israel a state. The feeling was...
And the day after that, the neighboring Arab states attacked Israel.
In Israel, what came next is remembered as the War of Independence. Palestinians remember it as the Nakba, or catastrophe. During the war, Israel's territory grew significantly. 750,000 Palestinians fled or were driven from their homes by Israeli forces. These Palestinians have never been allowed to return to those homes. And Palestinians still lack a universally recognized state.
Israel was now the Jewish homeland in Palestine.
And in the wake of the 1948 war, hundreds of thousands of Jews from all over the Middle East and North Africa migrated to Israel, escaping newly stoked anti-Semitism in their nations. Israel's population nearly doubled as a result. Theodor Herzl's vision had come to pass, but it had not happened as he imagined in his novel, The Old New Land.
It happened through war, a war that cost many Jewish and Palestinian lives, a war that in some ways continues to this day, and a war that today, for many, has redefined the word Zionism.
Zionism remains the clarion call for a Jewish homeland and safety, but it is also used by Israel's settler movement to justify expansion and occupation into internationally recognized Palestinian lands, an idea that feels like it's stuck between extremes. So the name of your book is Zionism and Emotional State. What would you say the state
or the emotional state of Zionism is today? Anguish. And it didn't start that way. It certainly started with fear.
But there was also a kind of optimistic love, that is, love of the Jewish people, love of the land of Israel, and a very strong optimism that Jews could move there and they could develop their state, and that, as in Herzl's novel, eventually the Arab world would accept and recognize this state, and it would become part of the community of nations of the Middle East.
Many of the ideas that Herzl described when he wrote his vision, his utopian novel Old New Land, seem very far away today. And maybe they were far away back then too. But I think we should never give up hope. Israelis and Palestinians have no other choice. They are not disappearing. They're not going anywhere.
They both want to have and they both deserve to have their sovereignty, their statehood and control their own affairs and at the same time respect each other and respect that the other exists and that is not easy, especially after October 7th. "Anquish" is an emotion that suggests a very profound state of unsettlement, of instability,
And it's just short of despair. And that's where I think the feelings of so many Jews in the world are, is anguish, not quite despair, but unfortunately getting a little close. That's it for this week's show. I'm Randa Abdel-Fattah. I'm Ramteen Arablui. And you've been listening to ThruLine from NPR.
This episode was produced by me. And me and...
Fact-checking for this episode was done by Kevin Vocal. The episode was mixed by Josh Newell. Thank you to Johannes Dergi, Reese Walter, James Heider, Tony Cabin, Larry Kaplow, Jerry Holmes, Edith Chapin, and Colin Campbell. And special thank you to J.C. Howard, Shaheer Khan, and Anya Steinberg for their voiceover work.
Music for this episode was composed by Ramtin and his band, Drop Electric, which includes...
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There's nothing more inspiring than a blast of Olympic glory. And we've been keeping up with the games in Paris, including wins for sprinter Noah Lyles, swimmer Katie Ledecky, and of course, gymnast Simone Biles. It is hard to overstate how cool it is to see somebody who is like a historic great do their thing. We're checking in with the Olympics and talking about why we love them. Listen to the Pop Culture Happy Hour podcast from NPR.