Attended by 204 participants from 17 countries, the 1st
The Zionist Organization
was the most important and active body of international Zionism
prior to 1948, uniting ideologically divergent and geographically dispersed activists in the cause of establishing a Jewish nationalist presence in Palestine. The Zionist Organization was the umbrella for all the crucial bodies that provided funding and land to early Zionist colonists, the most crucial being the
The first
- The appropriate promotion of colonizing Palestine with Jewish agriculturalists, artisans and tradesmen.
- The organization and gathering of all Jews through suitable local and general institutions according to the laws of the various countries.
- The promotion of Jewish national feeling and consciousness.
- Preparatory steps for the attainment of such Government consent as is necessary in order to achieve the aim of Zionism.
Membership in the Zionist Organization was open to any individual or group that accepted the Basel Program and paid dues called the “Zionist shekel.” The organization’s full constitution was formulated at the third Zionist Congress in 1899. The constitution defined its operational structure, which consisted of a seven-member Smaller Actions Committee (whose chairman was also the president of the Zionist Congress) and thirty-seven-member Larger Actions Committee, composed of the leaders of various organizations in different countries. (This last body was expanded at subsequent Zionist Congresses.) Theodor Herzl was elected the Zionist Organization’s first president, serving in this role until his death in 1904.
The key practical problems facing the Zionist movement at the turn of the century were the lack of funding and access to land that were required to settle Jewish colonists in Palestine and the lack of official sanction from the state whose sovereignty extended over Palestine, namely the Ottoman Empire
. In order to solve these problems, the Zionist Organization established several key subsidiary bodies. The second Zionist Congress of 1898 established the Jewish Colonial Trust to raise funds for the Zionist project and to serve as the Zionist Organization’s financial instrument. It was incorporated in London
in 1899 and in 1902 it established its Palestinian subsidiary, the Anglo-Palestine Bank
, opening its first branch in
To secure Jewish ownership of land, the Zionist Organization established the JNF at the fifth Zionist Congress in 1901. The JNF collected donations internationally to fund land purchases in Palestine. The JNF received its first parcel of land as a gift from a Russian Zionist landowner in 1903, and in the following years made its first purchases. In 1909, it played a key role in the establishment of Tel Aviv . By the end of the Mandate, JNF purchases amounted to relatively little (less than 4 percent) of the total lands of Palestine, but more than half of the lands held by Jews in Palestine. Through the JNF, the Zionist Organization played a crucial role in the settlement of Jewish immigrants in Palestine, providing land upon which Jewish colonists could live and work even if they did not have the resources (and few did) to purchase these lands or rent them on the open market. The JNF played another significant role after 1948, when it was allowed to purchase “absentees’ property”—lands ethnically cleansed of their Palestinian owners—from the state. In 1953, the JNF was reorganized as an Israeli company. In 1960, it was given a significant influence (nominating ten of twenty-two directors) in the newly-established Israel Land Administration , a government body tasked with managing all lands designated as state- or JNF-owned.
Having thus established the key institutions through which Zionists around the world could lend their support to building a Jewish national home in Palestine, the Zionist Organization set about turning this support into facts on the ground. In 1908, the Palestine Office opened in Jaffa as the operational branch of the Zionist Organization. Headed by Arthur Ruppin , the office presumed to represent Jewish immigrants to Palestine in dealing with the Ottoman state and coordinated land purchases with the JNF. With the outbreak of World War I and the signing of the Balfour Declaration , the Zionist Organization was able to solve the last of its key concerns: receiving state sanction for its colonizing efforts. In 1918, Chaim Weizmann —the influential president of the British Zionist Federation and later president of the Zionist Organization—formed The Zionist Commission , which was to study conditions in Palestine and report back to the British government, and set about restructuring the Palestine Office into departments (agriculture, settlement, education, land, finance, immigration, and statistics) that would allow it to build its parastate infrastructure on the ground in Palestine under British sponsorship. In 1921, the Zionist Commission was rebranded the Palestine Zionist Executive, and the British designated it the Jewish Agency described in the Mandate’s text.
Even after the Jewish Agency was expanded in 1929 to include non-Zionist Jewish representatives, the Executive of the Jewish Agency was nearly identical to that of the Zionist Organization. Thus, until the foundation of Israel in 1948, the Jewish Agency effectively operated as a Zionist parastate in Palestine in coordination with the Zionist Organization, which embodied the Zionist movement in its international scope. After 1948, the Zionist Organization continued through its institutions to support the immigration and settlement of Jews in Israel and, after 1967, the occupied