Jewish political movements refer to the organized efforts of Jews to build their own political parties or otherwise represent their interest in politics outside of the Jewish community.
•
In the aftermath of the 1905 pogroms in Russia, the historian Simon Dubnow founded the Folkspartei (Yiddishe Folkspartay) which had some intellectual audience in Russia, then, in independent Poland and Lithuania in the 1920–1930s where it was represented as well in the Parliaments (Sejm, Seimas) as in numerous municipal councils (incl. Warsaw) till in the late 1930s.
Jewish | political science | political party | Political Science | political | Political corruption | Capital (political) | Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference | Jewish history | Jewish Theological Seminary of America | American Jewish Committee | political parties | Jewish Theological Seminary | Jewish philosophy | American Political Science Association | Political science | Whig (British political party) | political economy | Jewish National Fund | American Jewish Congress | political corruption | political correctness | Political campaign | World Jewish Congress | Jewish messianism | Jewish emancipation | Political party | Political Agent | National Council of Jewish Women | Jewish Museum (New York) |