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Pages in category "Jewish communists" The following 78 pages are in this category, out of 78 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Yakov Agarunov;
This is a list of notable Jewish American activists. ... Martin Abern (1898–1949), communist youth movement leader [2] Bernard Ades (1903–1986), civil rights ...
Jewish communists (1 C, 77 P) B. Bundists (2 C, 69 P) J. Jewish Socialist Workers Party politicians (3 P) L. Labor Zionists (9 C, 28 P) O. Orthodox Jewish socialists ...
Jewish Communism can refer to: Hebrew Communists, a short-lived political party in Mandate Palestine and Israel; Jewish Bolshevism, a conspiracy theory that regards communism as a Jewish plot; Jewish left, Jews with left-wing political views; Żydokomuna, a Polish version of the Jewish Bolshevism conspiracy theory
The Communist regime in the USSR pursued what could be characterised as ambivalent policies towards Jews and Jewish culture, at times supporting their development as a national culture (e. g., sponsoring significant Yiddish language scholarship and creating an autonomous Jewish territory in Birobidzhan), at times pursuing antisemitic purges ...
Jewish labor in U.S.A.; an industrial, political and cultural history of the Jewish labor movement. Vol. II 1914–1952. New York, Trade Union Sponsoring Committee 1953; The Jew and communism; the story of early Communist victories and ultimate defeats in the Jewish community, U.S.A., 1919-1941. New York, Trade Union Sponsoring Committee 1959
Self-identified communists hold a variety of views, including libertarian communism (anarcho-communism and council communism), Marxist communism (left communism, libertarian Marxism, Maoism, Leninism, Marxism–Leninism, and Trotskyism), non-Marxist communism, and religious communism (Christian communism, Islamic communism and Jewish communism).
Theodore Rothstein, Russian-British communist [17] Pinhas Rutenberg, Zionist, Social revolutionary [17] Israel and Manya Shochat, founders of the Hashomer movement; Moisei Uritsky, communist revolutionary [22] Volin (Vsevolod Eikhenbaum), leading Russian Anarchist. Senior member of Nestor Makhno's movement (1918–1921)