Date:
Location:
Jews in Modern Europe Study Group
Simon Erlanger
Professor of Judaic Studies and Theology, University of Luzern
In this talk Professor Erlanger will discuss the 1946 22nd Zionist Congress in Basel, the first after the holocaust and the last such gathering before the establishment of the state of Israel.
About
In his memoirs "Trial and Error" Chaim Weitzmann describes the eery scene, when the delegates of the Zionist movement met for the first time since 1939:
"It was a dreadful experience to stand before that assembly and to run one’s eye along row after row of delegates, finding among them hardly one of the friendly faces which had adorned past Congresses. Polish Jewry was missing; Central and Southeast European Jewry was missing; German Jewry was missing. The two main groups represented were the Palestinians and the Americans; between them sat the representatives of the fragments of European Jewry, together with some small delegations from England, the Dominions, and South America. The American group, led by Dr. Abba Hillel Silver, was from the outset the strongest, not so much because of enlarged numbers, or by virtue of the inherent strength of the delegates, but because of the weakness of the rest."
Sponsors
- Jews in Modern Europe Study Group
- William Landau Lecture and Publication Fund, Center for Jewish Studies, Harvard University