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  1. Nachman Syrkin (* 11. Februar jul. / 23. Februar 1868 greg. in Mahiljou, Russisches Reich; † 6. September 1924 in New York) war Begründer und Führer des sozialistischen Zionismus (als solcher Erfinder des kollektiven Siedlungsbaus) sowie Publizist und Autor in hebräischer, jiddischer, russischer, deutscher und englischer Sprache. Inhaltsverzeichnis

  2. Nachman Syrkin (or Nahman Syrkin or Nahum Syrkin; Russian: Нахман Сыркин; 11 February 1868 – 6 September 1924) was a political theorist, founder of Labor Zionism and a prolific writer in the Hebrew, Yiddish, Russian, German and English languages.

    • Nahman Syrkin, Nahum Syrkin
    • Marie Syrkin
    • Bassya Syrkin (née Osnos)
  3. Nachman Syrkin (1868-1924) Fuehrer des sozialistischen Zionismus. Nachman Syrkin wurde in Weissrussland geboren, und erhielt seine erste juedische Erziehung durch Privatlehrer. Als die Familie 1884 nach Minsk uebersiedelte, besuchte Syrkin das russische Gymnasium. Er trat der Chovevei Zion bei und hielt Kontakte zu russischen revolutionaeren ...

  4. Nachman Syrkin: On the populist and prophetic strands in socialist Zionism, 1882–1907; Jonathan Frankel; Book: Prophecy and Politics; Online publication: 28 October 2009; Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511572494.011

  5. A leader of the Socialist Zionists at the First Zionist Congress, Syrkin was also an early sponsor of the concept of the Jewish National Fund, and submitted a resolution to this effect at the Second Zionist Congress (1898). Syrkin was banished from Germany in 1904, spent some time in Paris and, after the 1905 revolution, went to Russia where he ...

  6. Nachman Syrkin. SYRKIN, NACHMAN (1868–1924), first ideologist and leader of Socialist Zionism. Born in Mogilev, Belorussia, Syrkin received a thorough Jewish education by private tutors, and when he moved with his family to Minsk (1884), he completed his studies at a Russian high school.

  7. by Nachman Syrkin (1898) Texts Concerning Zionism: Table of Contents |"The Jewish State"|"The Iron Wall" [Excerpts] The proclamation of human rights emancipated the Jews, with striking suddenness, from their medieval servitude and granted them civil and political equality with scarcely any exertion on their part.