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The
Zionist Century - Concepts - Hityashvut
Zionism and hityashvut: new ideologies of settlement
It was the pioneers of the First Aliyah
who built on the cornerstones laid by the founders of Petach
Tikva and Gai Oni, developing a philosophy of hityashvut which would
subsequently be expanded as one of the most central pillars of Zionism.
Despite the fact that none of these settlers themselves came from an agricultural
background, they developed an ideological approach to the Land which comprised
a number of different aspects. For them, returning to the Land entailed
the creation of a base to serve others after themselves.
Redeeming the Land
· They saw themselves as the vanguard of a Jewish people returning
to the Land, thus overturning the aforementioned passive concept whereby
the decision for the People to come back was perceived as being in the
Divine realm. The names that the newcomers gave their settlements, names
like Rishon LeTzion (the first to
Zion), Rosh Pinah (cornerstone)
and Yesud HaMaalah (the beginning of
the going-up), clearly illustrated their conception of their role.
· Moreover, the people of the First Aliyah saw themselves as
continuing the biblical and post-biblical tradition of Jewish farming
as reflected in the biblical and Rabbinic literature. In addition, as
a primarily religious group, they saw that it would be possible to fulfil
the various halachot (Jewish laws) that were connected with the farming
of the Land but which had fallen into neglect over time.
· Finally, since in the lands of the Galut, it was usually forbidden
for Jews to own or even to farm land, they believed that in the Land of
Israel, the Jewish Land as they saw it, Jews had to be free to do those
things that had been forbidden them in the countries which they did not
control. To that extent, farming the soil was an expression of being a
free People in charge of their own fate in their own Land, a value that
they felt strongly.
All these ideas, (with the exception of the halachic idea which would
be irrelevant to the majority of future settlers most of whom would be
secular), would be continued and developed by subsequent waves of settlers.
From these early roots the idea of hityashvut would solidify into one
of the most sacred of all Zionist values.
Difficult Beginnings
It is worth indicating at this point some specific associations which
tied in with the idea of hityashvut from the earliest stage of Zionist
settlement. Hityashvut was interpreted by Zionism as specifically referring
to the act of settlement on the land, rural settlement, which, moreover,
subsumed the idea of working the land on which one was settled. As such
it was distinct from another sacred value, Aliyah,
which refered to coming and settling down in the Land of Israel, and encapsulated
ideas such as self-labour and self-sufficiency. It is interesting to note
that the earliest ideas of Zionism were intimately linked to the idea
of physical settlement on the land - just as the earliest ideas of Judaism
are tied in, as previously mentioned, with a physical relationship with
the Land of Israel. This was despite the fact that the earliest settlers
knew next to nothing in practical terms about farming the land. It may
also have contributed to the ideological nature of the concept of hityashvut
which often dwarfed the practical importance of any specific act of settlement,
and added a romantic halo to the idea of the return to the land.
It is perhaps significant to mention that by no means all the olim of
the first Aliyah settled on the land. Many, perhaps the majority, gravitated
to the towns. The same pattern would hold true for subsequent waves of
Aliyah. However it is symptomatic that the ultimate image of the oleh
would long be the rural pioneer, working the land with his or her own
hands.
The first wave of Aliyah, which took place over the last two decades
of the nineteenth century created a new map of settlements. By the end
of this Aliyah, some two dozen settlements had been added. Most were in
the coastal plain (Petach Tikvah, RishonLeZion,
Rechovot, Hadera
etc.) or in the north (Rosh Pinah,
Yesud HaMaalah, Metulla
etc.) The word that was used to describe these farm villages which were
based on the principle of small private farms was MOSHAVA.
In theory, each farm was supposed to be (or become) self-sufficient.
In reality however, right from the earliest days of the moshavot, the
farmers found themselves driven deeply into debt. Unable to pull themselves
out of debt by their own efforts alone, they were ultimately forced to
depend on the philanthropic efforts of Baron
Edmund de Rothschild of Paris who was prepared to pour vast sums of
money into the settlements in order to subsidise the farmers and prevent
the settlements' collapse. Help, however, came at a price, and a very
high one for many of the settlers. Rothschild insisted on putting his
own representatives into any settlement that requested his help and these
people had the authority to make the decisions on almost every significant
aspect of the life of the settlements, not just at the agricultural and
economic levels. Many of them ruled with a harsh and humiliating attitude
towards the settlers, and as a result the attitudes of many of the farmers
began to change.
Inevitably, they started to feel that the project was no longer entirely
theirs, and the intense determination that had characterised all of the
settlements in the early days - to work the land solely by their own hands
in order to create the basis for the new Jewish community that would grow
up in the country - weakened and, in many cases, disappeared. Many of
the settlements decided to use hired Arab labour and many of the farmers
became supervisors of others' labour rather than users of their own. As
the 19th century drew to a close, the settlements came towards financial
independence, but much of the character that had marked the moshavot in
their early days had changed. For many of the subsequent settlers, the
settlements of the first Aliyah were disappointing, lacking as they did
at least one of what were increasingly being seen as the integral marks
of authentic hityashvut.
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