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Judah Alkalai

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Judah ben Solomon Hai Alkalai

(born 1798, Sarajevo, Bosnia, Ottoman Empire — died 1878, Jerusalem) Sephardic rabbi. Raised in Jerusalem, he became rabbi at Semlin, Croatia. He argued that a physical return to Israel (Palestine), rather than a symbolic return through repentance and practice, was necessary for the salvation of the Jewish people, a view that put him at odds with Jewish orthodoxy. He saw the anti-Semitic Damascus Affair of 1840 as part of a divine plan to reawaken Jews to the reality of their condition in exile. Unsuccessful in gaining support for Jewish immigration to Palestine, he himself settled in the Holy Land in 1871. His writings helped pave the way for Zionism.

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Encyclopedia of Judaism: Judah Ben Solomon Ḥai Alkalai
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(1798-1872) Sephardi rabbi and forerunner of Zionism. Alkalai was born in Sarajevo and studied in a Jerusalem yeshivah. Having imbibed the revolutionary atmosphere current in the Balkans in the struggle against Turkish rule, Alkalai began to see the Return to Zion as a national act aimed at hastening redemption through human effort rather than messianic miracle. In arguing for the creation of Jewish colonies in the Land of Israel he turned to traditional sources, taking the talmudic teshuvah ("repentance"), the prerequisite for redemption, in the literal sense of "return" to the Land of Israel (i.e. shivah). In this he was vehemently opposed by the rabbis of his day.

The Damascus blood libel of 1840 convinced him that for their physical safety alone the Jews must build a national home in their own land, and thereafter he worked tirelessly to further this goal, traveling throughout Europe in search of political and financial support and turning out a steady stream of books and pamphlets. Wherever he went he established settlement societies, hoping to be able to purchase the Land of Israel from its Ottoman rulers. All these schemes failed, as did a society founded in Jerusalem in 1871 owing to Orthodox opposition. Herzl's grandfather was an admirer of his and Alkalai's granddaughter attended the First Zionist Congress in 1897, remembering how her grandmother had sold her jewelry to enable him to publish his Zionist books.


Mideast & N. Africa Encyclopedia: Judah ben Solomon Hai Alkalai
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1798 - 1878

Precursor of modern Zionism.

Judah ben Solomon Hai Alkalai, a Sephardic rabbi who was born in Sarajevo and studied in Jerusalem, served as a rabbi in the Balkans and was influenced by Serbian Nationalism and the Damascus Affair (1840). Also, well-versed in the kabbalah, Alkalai believed that the era of messianic redemption was at hand. He asserted that redemption must be preceded by the return of the Jews to the land of Israel. In his books Darkhei No'am (1839) and Shalom Yerushalayim (1840), he called upon Jews to prepare for the coming redemption and to donate money to those already residing in the Land of Israel. In Minhat Yehudah (1843), he advocated the formation of an Assembly of Jewish Notables to represent the Jewish people in their appeals to other nations to permit their return to their homeland. Alkalai wrote numerous pamphlets and articles and, in 1851 to 1852, toured several countries to spread his ideas. In 1871, he visited Palestine and founded a settlement society there, which was unsuccessful. In 1874, he settled in Palestine.

Bibliography

Hertzberg, Arthur, ed. The Zionist Idea: A Historical Analysis and Reader. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society, 1997.

— MARTIN MALIN

Wikipedia: Judah Alkalai
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Judah ben Solomon Chai Alkalai (1798 – October 1878) was a Sephardic rabbi in Zemun and one of pioneers of modern Zionism.

Alkalai studied in Jerusalem under different rabbis and came under the influence of the Kabbalah. In 1825 he became Rabbi of Semlin.[1]

He became noted through his advocacy in favor of the restoration of the Jews to Palestine. By reason of some of his projects, he may justly be regarded as one of the precursors of the modern Zionists such as Theodor Herzl.

Herzl's paternal grandfather Simon Loeb Herzl, reportedly attended the Alkalai's synagogue Semlin and the two frequently visited. Grandfather Simon Loeb Herzl "had his hands on" one of the first copies of Alkalai's 1857 work prescribing the "return of the Jews to the Holy Land and renewed glory of Jerusalem." Contemporary scholars conclude that Herzl's own implementation of modem Zionism was undoubtedly influenced by that relationship.[2] Herzl’s grandparents' graves in Semlin can still be visited.[3]

His work, Goral la-Adonai (A Lot for the Lord), published at Vienna, in 1857, is a treatise on the restoration of the Jews, and suggests methods for the betterment of conditions in Palestine.

After a somewhat able homiletical discussion of the Messianic problem, in which he shows considerable knowledge of the traditional writers, Alkalai suggests the formation of a joint-stock company, such as a steamship or railroad trust, whose endeavor it should be to induce the sultan to cede Palestine to the Jews as a tributary country, on a plan similar to that on which the Danube principalities were governed.

To this suggestion are appended the commendations of numerous Jewish scholars of various schools of thought. The problem of the restoration of Palestine was also discussed by Alkalai in Shema' Yisrael (Hear, O Israel), 1861 or 1862, and in Harbinger of Good Tidings (compare Jewish Chronicle, 1857, p. 1198, where his name is spelled Alkali).

In his Shalom Yerushalayim (The Peace of Jerusalem), 1840, he replies to those who attacked his book, Darhei No'am (The Pleasant Paths), which treated of the duty of tithes. Another work, Minchat Yehudah (The Offering of Judah), Vienna, 1843, is a panegyric on Montefiore and Crémieux, who had rescued the Jews of Damascus from a blood libel accusation.

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Encyclopedia of Judaism. The New Encyclopedia of Judaism. Copyright © 1989, 2002 by G.G. The Jerusalem Publishing House, Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more
Mideast & N. Africa Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa. Copyright © 2004 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Judah Alkalai" Read more