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In
February, Mark
Sykes (1879-1919), adviser on Middle Eastern affairs to Britain's
Prime Minister Lloyd
George opens negotiations with the Zionist leaders that are
to lead to the Balfour Declaration. The British want to protect
their interests in the Suez Canal area by placing the whole Palestine
under their control.
In
April, the Turkish military authorities order
the remaining Jews of Jaffa out of the city as they prepare for
the British military offensive. The 9.000 Jews flee north, where
they suffer from disease and starvation.
In
July, the original draft of the Balfour Declaration
includes three elements: (1) the reconstruction of Palestine as
a whole as the Jewish national home; (2) unrestricted Jewish immigration
rights; (3) internal Jewish autonomy. The text is later modified
as a result of the opposition to Zionism of some British Jews
led by Edwin
Montagu (1879-1924), who is a member of the cabinet.
In
August, the British announce the formation of
a regiment
of Jewish volunteers to fight in the war. Composed primarily
of Jews from Britain and former members of the Zion Mule Corps,
it is designated the 38th Battalion of the Royal Fusiliers. The
battalion will be transferred to Palestine in June 1918, where
it will be joined by the 39th Battalion of Royal Fusiliers.
In
October, Turkish authorities uncover the NILI
espionage group led by Aaron
Aaronsohn.
October
31: The British
offensive in southern Palestine begins. The British capture
Beer Sheva in a diversionary move.
November
2: The British Government issues the Balfour
Declaration.
December
9: The British take
control of Jerusalem. Two days later, General Allenby enters
Jerusalem in a ceremonial victory march. |
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Jews
of the Ukraine are greatly affected by civil war in Russia. Various
armies fight in the area: the Ukrainian army under Simon
Petlyura (1879-1926); the Red Army; the counterrevolutionary
White Army; and independent units commanded by local leaders.
All engage in pogroms against the Jews.
Sarah
Schnirer (1883-1938), a seamstress, recognizing the neglect of
religious education for girls, organizes a school in Cracow. A
network, known as Beth
Jacob Schools, develops. By 1938, in Poland alone there will
be 230 schools with 27,000 students.
Benny
Leonard (Benjamin Leiner, 1896-1943), born in New York's Lower
East Side, wins the World Lightweight Boxing Championship, a title
he retains until his retirement in 1925.
The
Jewish
Museum in Berlin is founded. It will be confiscated by the
Nazis in November 1938.
The
Yiddish State Theater and Habimah, a Hebrew theater, are established
in Moscow.
Amadeo
Modigliani (1884-1920), Italian painter and sculptor holds
his only major one-man show in Paris. It is a failure. It is only
after his death that the greatness of his work will be recognized.
Modigliani is a member of the Circle
of Montparnasse with fellow Jews Chaim
Soutine (1893-1943) and Jacques
Lipchitz (1891-1973), but his Jewishness never appears directly
in his work.
HaShomer
HaTzair, a Zionist youth movement, is founded in Vienna. |
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March:
A Zionist
Commission appointed by the British government, headed by
Chaim
Weizmann, reaches Palestine. It serves as an advisory body
to the British Military government on all matters relating to
Jews.
Moshe
Shertok is
appointed secretary of the Department for Land and Arab Affairs,
und Yehoshua
Hankin.
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January
2: A meeting attended by 42 delegates from British-held
territory in the Yishuv takes place in the office of the Zionist
Organization in Jaffa. A representative body - the Provisional
Committee - is elected.
May:
The British permit the formation of a battalion of Jewish volunteers
from Palestine. Formed into the 40th Battalion of Royal Fusiliers,
it is trained and kept in reserve in Egypt. It will be sent to
Palestine to join the 38th and 39th battalions in December, after
the armistice with Turkey is signed.
Pinhas
Rutenberg, David
Ben Gurion and Yitzhak
Ben Zvi are among American Jewish volunteers who are formed
into the 39th Battalion of Royal Fusiliers.
June
4: Chaim
Weizmann meets Emir
Faisal, son of Sharif Hussein of Mecca, the leader of Arab
nationalism, at Aqaba. Feisal pledges support of the Zionist aims
in Palestine on condition that Arab nationalist aims are met in
Syria and Iraq. Feisal fails to achieve support from the Allies
on his aims. He considers himself released from his pledges to
Weizmann.
July
24: 13 foundation stones of the Hebrew
University are laid on Mount Scopus in Jerusalem. Chaim
Weizmann initiated the establishment of the university which
will open in April 1925.
December,
18-22: The Provisional Committee meets in Jaffa. It elects
Chaim
Weizmann and Nachum
Sokolow as delegates of the Jewish community of Palestine
to the Peace
Conference in Versailles.
The
photographer Ya'akov Ben Dov shoots the first Hebrew film, "Liberated
Judea". |
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Otto
Bauer (1881-1938), Austrian Socialist leader, succeeds Victor
Adler as Socialist party leader and foreign minister of Austria.
He will remain leader of the Austrian Socialists until forced
to flee the country in 1934 when the Austrian Republic collapses.
Hirsch
(Zvi) Perez Chajes (1876-1927) is appointed Chief Rabbi of Vienna.
A leading Zionist, in 1921 he will be elected chairman of the
Zionist Actions Committee, serving until 1925.
Yossele
Rosenblatt, famed European cantor who had settled in the U.S.
in 1912, rejects the Chicago Opera Association's offer of a large
fee to perform as Eleazar in Fromental Halevy's opera "La
Juive". Rosenblatt advises that it would be inappropriate
for a synagogue cantor to act in opera.
Irving
Berlin writes and stars in the all-soldier revue "Yip,
Yip, Yaphank", which features the famous army song "Oh,
How I Hate to Get Up in the Morning."
November
11: World
War I ends in Europe. Over 1, 172,000 Jewish soldiers served
in the Allied and Central Power forces in World War I, including
czarist Russia, 450,000; Austria-Hungary, 275,000; the U.S. 250,000;
Germany 90,000; Great Britain 50,000; France 35,000. Over 15,000
American Jewish soldiers and 10,623 German Jewish soldiers were
killed. The ratio of the German Jewish dead to the ratio of the
Jewish population far exceeds the total German ratio of the war
dead.
The Allies mobilized 42,189,000 soldiers, and 4,489,000 were killed.
The Central Powers mobilized 22,850,000 and 3,132,000 were killed.
Over 6,642,000 civilians died in the war.
December
15: 400 delegates of the American Jewish Congress meet
in Philadelphia and decide to send a delegation to the Paris
Peace Conference to secure the rights of Jews in Europe and
to cooperate with the World Zionist Organization for recognition
of claims of Jewish people in Palestine under the Balfour
Declaration.
Fritz
Haber is awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. |
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Chaim
Weizmann meets Louis
Marshall, head of the American Jewish Delegation to the Peace
Conference. |
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January
4: Chaim
Weizmann and Emir
Faisal meet again and sign an agreement.
The Jews are guaranteed free immigration and settlement on the
land of Palestine. Arab tenant farmers will be safeguarded on
their land and assisted in their economic development. Britain
will arbitrate disputes. The agreement is conditioned on the Arabs
obtaining independence in Syria.
In
February, Chaim
Weizmann heads the Zionist delegation at the Paris
Peace Conference in Versailles, where he urges an international
ratification of the Balfour
Declaration.
In
March, Emir
Faisal writes to the American Jewish delegation in Paris that
the Zionist proposals submitted at the conference were moderate
and proper.
April
19: The Hebrew Scouts Movement is founded.
May
1-5: The rabbis of Palestine hold a first conference.
Rabbi Avraham
Yitzhak HaCohen Kook is asked to serve as chief rabbi.
June:
The first commission of inquiry arrives in Palestine - the King-Crane
Commission - to assess the situation in the region and recommend
future steps
June
18: The publication of "Haaretz",
a Hebrew daily newspaper, begins in Jerusalem. It will move to
Tel Aviv in 1923. It is independent and liberal in orientation.
Its literary supplement features the best Hebrew writers and scholars
both from Palestine and the Diaspora.
June
25-26: The first national conference of the Religious
Zionist Organization, Mizrachi,
is held.
In
July, Arab nationalists pass a resolution against
the creation of a Jewish commonwealth in the southern part of
Syria, known as Palestine.
By midyear, Emir
Faisal having failed to obtain Arab independence and Zionist
assistance in his dispute with the French in Syria, terminates
public meetings with Zionists. He becomes disillusioned with his
Zionist connection and warns the Zionists to moderate their claims
in Palestine and agree to consider Palestine as part of Greater
Syria.
Louis
D. Brandeis and Chaim
Weizmann meet for the first time in London.
September
10-11: The Provisional Committee chooses October 26 as
election day for the Elected Assembly. The religious and ultra-Orthodox
oppose the elections, mainly on account of women's right to vote.
October
6: Menachem
Ussishkin immigrates to Palestine and is appointed head of
the Zionist Commission to Palestine.
Yosef
Trumpeldor returns to Palestine to prepare the immigration
of the members of the "Hehalutz" movement in Russia
which he heads.
December:
The situation in the north worsens. The Muslim Arabs oppose French
rule and rebel.
December
18: The Ruslan
arrives at Jaffa from Odessa with 671 returning residents and
new immigrants. The event marks the beginning of the Third
Aliyah. |
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In
January, a pogrom occurs in Zhitomir in which
180 Jews are killed. In March, when Simon
Petlyura captures the city from the Red Army, a pogrom results
in the death of 317 Jews.
1,700 Jews are massacred in the Ukrainian town of Proskurov. A
pogrom in Felshtin kills an additional 600 Jews.
In
the Ukrainian town of Trostyanets over 400 Jews are killed.
The White Army conducts a pogrom in Fastov, killing over 1,500
Jews. In summer, pogroms in 40 communities kill about 6,000 Jews.
During the year, 685 pogroms and 249 lesser riots occur against
Jews of the Ukraine.
Rosa
Luxemburg (1871-1919) and Karl
Liebknecht, revolutionaries and leaders of the German Communist
party are killed in Berlin while in government custody.
Gustav
Landauer (1870-1919), minister of culture and education in Bavaria
is murdered by counterrevolutionary soldiers.
The
Soviet authorities commence the destruction of Russian Zionism.
All Jewish religious communities are dissolved, their property
is confiscated, and most synagogues are closed.
The
Jewish delegation at the Paris
Peace Conference submits two memoranda, one on the civil and
cultural rights of Jews in various countries and the other on
the historic claim of the Jewish people to Palestine.
U.S. President Woodrow
Wilson meets with the American Jewish Congress delegation
in Paris and advises: "I am persuaded that the Allied Nations
with the fullest concurrence of our own Government and people
are agreed that in Palestine there shall be laid the foundation
of a Jewish commonwealth."
George
Gershwin (1898-1937), U.S. composer, writes his first song,
"Swanee", made famous by Al
Jolson.
Franz
Rosenzweig (1886-1929), German philosopher and theologian,
completes "Stern der Erlösung" - "Star of
Redemption".
A
Jewish Museum is founded in Vilna by the Society of Lovers of
Jewish Antiquities.
The
Archives of the World Zionist Organization are established in
Berlin. In 1933 they will be moved to Jerusalem and become the
Central
Zionist Archives. |