In the 1969 Knesset elections it ran as the "List for the Land of Israel", but failed to cross the electoral threshold.
Adherents of Socialist Zionism or Labor Zionism, a major ideological and political current in the history of Zionism and Israel
Australian Labor Party | Labor | Zionism | Labor Party | Labor Day | United States Department of Labor | American Federation of Labor | labor | Knights of Labor | Religious Zionism | Slave Labor Graphics | Socialist Labor Party of America | Revisionist Zionism | National Labor Relations Board | Chicago Federation of Labor | Bureau of Labor Statistics | Labor Zionism | Ministry of Labor | Labor unions in the United States | Labor relations | Jewish Labor Committee | United States Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions | National Labor Relations Act | Mizrachi (religious Zionism) | Labor Party (Mexico) | Labor Day (United States) | Industry, Trade and Labor Ministry | Fan labor | Christian Zionism | Brookwood Labor College |
He briefly began studies in Vienna (where he also wrote his first significant short story, "Der Groisser Menshenfreint" ("The Great Philanthropist"), but soon returned to Warsaw, where he established a strong reputation as a writer and as an advocate of Labor Zionism, before moving to Berlin, Germany in 1896 and to New York City in 1899.
They traditionally fall into three camps, the first two being the largest: Labor Zionism (social democrat), Revisionist Zionism (conservative) and Religious Zionism.