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7.
PARTIES, ORGANIZATIONS AND INSTITUTIONS
Tempestuous Times
At the end of the 19th
century, when a wave of rebellion against the Czarist regime spread through
Russia, the revolutionary spirit came to Drohitchin too. SS [socialist party]
and Bund [Jewish Yiddishists] groups were established; their members referred
to each other as 'brother' and 'sister,' and agitated against Czarism.
[Photo:] A large demonstration in Drohitchin in honor of the Balfour
Declaration, May 14, 1919.
At the same time, the ideas of
the Lovers of Zion movement [
Hovevei Zion
] spread to Drohitchin, and later on Herzl's political Zionism came on the
scene among the Jewish community. A Zionist movement was started in Drohitchin,
and Jewish young people would go door-to-door to sell shekels for the Zionist
Congress, stamps for the Jewish National Fund and shares in the Palestine Bank
Company. These causes also had their own charity plates in the synagogues on
the eve of Yom Kippur.
The Balfour Declaration Excitement and Disappointment
Real Zionist activity first started in 1918. Afterwards, the German occupation
authorities was dismantled, and people heard about the Balfour Declaration,
which people thought meant that the British were giving Palestine to the Jews.
Drohitchin Jews were seized with messianic fervor, and everyone, young and old,
were overtaken by enthusiasm for the Land of Israel. Then, after having lived
through such a difficult and long war with so much suffering and affliction,
people thought they were hearing the footsteps of the Messiah. Large
demonstrations were held in honor of the Balfour Declaration, and a young man
rode through town on a white horse, symbolizing "messiah on his white
donkey." The only thing on everyone's mind was Palestine. Everybody's
thoughts and discussions were about going to their own country in Palestine as
quickly as possible.
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