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  2. Nathan Birnbaum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nathan_Birnbaum

    Birnbaum was born in Vienna into an Eastern European Jewish family with roots in Austrian Galicia and Hungary. [3] His father, Menachem Mendel Birnbaum, a merchant, hailed from Ropshitz, Galicia (now Poland), and his mother, Miriam Birnbaum (née Seelenfreund), who was born in Carpathian Rus (now Ukraine), of a family with illustrious rabbinic lineage, had moved as a child to Tarnow, Galicia ...

  3. Golus nationalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golus_nationalism

    Nathan Birnbaum in the 1910s, the main thinker and activist behind Diaspora Nationalism.. Golus nationalism (Yiddish: גלות נאַציאָנאַליזם Golus natsionalizm after golus, Hebrew: לאומיות גולוס, romanized: Gālūṯ leumiyút), or diaspora nationalism, is a national movement of the Jewish people that argues for furthering Jewish national and cultural life in centers ...

  4. Kadimah (student association) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kadimah_(student_association)

    The national Jewish and Zionist Kadimah was founded by Nathan Birnbaum together with Moses Schnirer, Ruben Bierer and Peretz Smolenskin in Vienna on 25 October 1882.. Well-known members of Kadimah include Sigmund Freud, Isidor Schalit and Fritz Löhner-Beda.

  5. A brief history of the Israel-Palestinian conflict - AOL

    www.aol.com/brief-history-israel-palestinian...

    Austrian writer Nathan Birnbaum coined the term “Zionism” in 1885 as Jews, particularly from eastern Europe, continued to arrive in Palestine. ... The Hebrew University and Histadrut, a labour ...

  6. Yiddishist movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yiddishist_movement

    The Odyssey of Nathan Birnbaum; Karoma Publ., Ann Arbor 1987, ISBN 0-89720-082-9. Joshua A. Fishman: The Tshernovits Conference Revisited: The ‘First World Conference for Yiddish’ 85 Years Later, in: The Earliest Stage of Language Planning, Berlin, 1993 S. 321–331. Gitelman, Zvi. “The Divergent Fates of Yiddish and Hebrew.”

  7. Kadima - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kadima

    The title Kadima may have had a symbolic connotation for many Israelis who associated it with the Hebrew battle cry, meaning 'forward march,' but it was common in Israeli political rhetoric. It had been used by early Zionist leader Nathan Birnbaum, and was the motto of the Jewish Legion of World War I formed by Ze'ev Jabotinsky and Joseph ...

  8. Racial conceptions of Jewish identity in Zionism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racial_conceptions_of...

    In the early years of the Zionist movement, notable proponents of the idea of a Jewish nation-race included Max Nordau, Herzl's co-founder of the original Zionist Organization, Nathan Birnbaum, one of the founders of Central European Zionism, Arthur Ruppin, and Ze'ev Jabotinsky, the founder of Revisionist Zionism, [52] [53] Nordau, a theorist ...

  9. Types of Zionism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_Zionism

    Nathan Birnbaum, a Jew from Vienna, was the original father of Political Zionism, yet ever since he defected away from his own movement Theodor Herzl has become known as the face of modern Zionism. In 1890, Birnbaum coined the term "Zionism" and the phrase "Political Zionism" two years later.