Brit Shalom ( Hebrew : ברית שלום , lit. "covenant of peace"; Arabic : تحالف السلام , Tahalof Essalam ; also Jewish–Palestinian Peace Alliance ) was a group of Jewish Zionist intellectuals in Mandatory Palestine , founded in 1925.
5-430: Brit Shalom may be: Brit Shalom (political organization) , a now defunct group that wanted peaceful coexistence between Arabs and Jews and renounced Zionism Brit shalom (naming ceremony) , an alternative ritual to traditional brit milah Brit Tzedek v'Shalom , an American Jewish political organisation Congregation Brit Shalom , former name of Temple Covenant of Peace,
10-535: A Reform synagogue in Easton, Pennsylvania Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Brit Shalom . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Brit_Shalom&oldid=1226126322 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
15-404: A strange land only by conquest, but it has never occurred that a nation will freely agree that another nation should come and demand full equality of rights and national autonomy at its side. The uniqueness of this case prevents its being, in my opinion, dealt with in conventional political-legal terms. It requires special contemplation and study. Brith Shalom should be the forum in which the problem
20-854: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Brit Shalom (political organization) Brit Shalom sought peaceful coexistence between Arabs and Jews in Israel. Its goal was the creation of a centre for Jewish cultural life in Israel, echoing the earlier ideas of Ahad Ha'am . At the time, Brit Shalom supported the establishment of a bi-national state where Jews and Arabs would have equal rights. Brit Shalom supporters and founders included economist and sociologist Arthur Ruppin , philosopher Martin Buber , Hugo Bergmann , historian Hans Kohn , Gershom Scholem , Henrietta Szold and Israel Jacob Kligler . Albert Einstein also voiced support. Judah Leon Magnes , one of
25-586: The authors of the program, never joined the organization. A letter from Arthur Ruppin to Hans Kohn in May 1930 states: In the foundations of Brith Shalom one of the determining factors was that the Zionist aim has no equal example in history. The aim is to bring the Jews as second nation into a country which already is settled as a nation - and fulfill this through peaceful means. History has seen such penetration by one nation into
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