Unpromising Land

£75.00

Unpromising Land

Jewish Migration to Palestine in the Early Twentieth Century

Middle Eastern history History Migration, immigration and emigration Social groups: religious groups and communities

Author: Gur Alroey

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Collection: Stanford Studies in Jewish History and Culture

Language: English

Published by: Stanford University Press

Published on: 11th June 2014

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 2 Mb

ISBN: 9780804790871


Jewish Migration in Modern Times

The Jewish migration at the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth centuries was one of the dramatic events that changed the Jewish people in modern times. Millions of Jews sought to escape the distressful conditions of their lives in Eastern Europe and find a better future for themselves and their families overseas. The vast majority of the Jewish migrants went to the United States, and others, in smaller numbers, reached Argentina, Canada, Australia, and South Africa.

Immigration to Palestine

From the beginning of the twentieth century until the First World War, about 35,000 Jews reached Palestine. Because of this difference in scale and because of the place the land of Israel possesses in Jewish thought, historians and social scientists have tended to apply different criteria to immigration, stressing the uniqueness of Jewish immigration to Palestine and the importance of the Zionist ideology as a central factor in that immigration. This book questions this assumption, and presents a more complex picture both of the causes of immigration to Palestine and of the mass of immigrants who reached the port of Jaffa in the years 1904–1914.

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