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* In ] it was found that there was consensus that the sentence "Zionists wanted to create a Jewish state in Palestine with as much land, as many Jews, and as few Palestinian Arabs as possible" is compliant with NPOV and should remain in the lead.
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__TOC__ __TOC__


==Length==


This article is massively overlength, more than double the size identified at ]. I propose, as a first step towards resolving this problem, reinstating . ] (]) 04:41, 13 January 2025 (UTC)


:*'''Oppose wholesale specific diff, support some cuts'''. In my view it removes some things that are valuable while retaining things that aren't. However I do agree with some of the removals, such as the clause, "{{tq|a term denoting the force needed to prevent Palestinian resistance against colonization}}", the Morris quote, the Herzl quote about antisemitism, the quotes in the section about Gandhi, the lengthy part about South Africa, and the lengthy quotes in the section about Chomsky and Finkelstein, the Sternhell and Busbridge parts. That should all be cut in my view. I'd leave the stuff about the declaration of independence and the framework of the Israeli government since I think that's fairly critical to Zionism, and I'd leave the stuff about the revival of Hebrew. ''']'''<span style="border:2px solid #073642;background:rgb(255,156,0);background:linear-gradient(90deg, rgba(255,156,0,1) 0%, rgba(147,0,255,1) 45%, rgba(4,123,134,1) 87%);">]</span> 05:04, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
{{edit semi-protected|answered=yes}}

== Merger with History of Zionism ==

zionism sa movement which is fluid and changes over time. I stronly advise you to merge this article with the History fo Zionism. At present the article is not very useful.] (]) 13:32, 13 May 2013 (UTC)

== Lead ==

I have removed recent edition of pappe to the lead though Pappe view might notable currently without attribution and proper context of other views it ] violation.--] (])/] 06:29, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
:I previously reverted the content on the basis that the material appears to be RS and this shouldn't be edit warred over. However, viewed as content, the text in question does seem to be rather rhetorically-charged, and its presence in the lede smells NPOV. ] (]) 07:06, 16 December 2012 (UTC)

:<s>In fact, Pappe is already mentioned twice in the ].--] (]) 07:08, 16 December 2012 (UTC)</s>
::The content certainly shouldn't be in the lead but it should have been moved to the "proper place" and attributed rather than deleted. I assume someone will do that at some point without violating ]. If not, I will do it. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 4px 1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - ''']'''</small> 07:21, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
:::The article already has "Ilan Pappe argued that Zionism results in ethnic cleansing." ... does it really need more?
::::The material that was removed says "Zionism emerged in the late 19th century in central and eastern Europe as a national revival movement and soon after this most leaders of the movement associated this with the colonization of ]. According to Zionist thinking Palestine was occupied by ''strangers''." It isn't about ethnic cleansing. It's about the history of Zionism. The first sentence is a broad statement about it's history and might even be suitable for the lead or somewhere else. It's not controversial. Of course Zionism became about the colonization of Palestine. Settlements were often called colonies without anyone being concerned about the word at that time. The second sentence is about the attitude of (some) Zionists towards the locals, which I also don't think is controversial, although it could do with further details as statements like "Zionists thought X" are always going to be an oversimplification. I can't think of any reason, aside from wanting to rewrite history, to exclude this material. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 4px 1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - ''']'''</small> 10:10, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
::::Also, MelissaLond is almost certainly a sockpuppet of ]. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 4px 1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - ''']'''</small> 10:14, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
:::::Isn't Pappe regarded as an extreme anti-Zionist commentator (so my wife tells me; I know little of this topic)? - his views certainly seem pungently expressed and so smell to me like the kind of things which need to be treated consensually and carefully given the controversial nature of this topic. Transposing extreme commentators' views into the article (from whatever "side") wouldn't strike me as a good way forward ... ] (]) 10:20, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
::::::Well, he's less extreme in his views than many editors in the topic area in my experience. :) He's not a commentator, he's an academic. See ]. He's been discussed at RSN several times. See ] for example. Unfortunately the discussions are always disrupted by nationalists and sockpuppets as is almost everything in the topic area. I really don't see a problem with this material. The first sentence could have been written by any historian. The second probably needs attribution to Pappe and expansion from other sources to give a broadly overview. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 4px 1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - ''']'''</small> 10:43, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
:::::::Ah, so this is one of '''those''' articles is it? ;-) Got a few of those on my watchlist ...
:::::::(After again talking to my wife) I'm not sure that Pappe's wording is so neutral as to be used without care. For example he says "colonization"; but wouldn't people "from the other side" say that was a loaded/odd word, and ask what was the new place was a colony '''of'''? So perhaps one way forward here would be ask: what information is the article missing that you want to include? Is there a way to include it with more temperate wording? ] (]) 10:52, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
::::::::I don't see these words as particularly problematic. Being concerned about the word colonization is just revisionism in my view. Zionists like ] used it quite happily. See for example (]). That's what it was, colonization of "]" for some, not colonialism by a nation state. It's a simple fact that Zionism became about the colonization of Palestine to establish a Jewish homeland. And regarding Palestinians as "strangers", again, not controversial, that is still the case for some, see "Some ministers have blatantly described Palestinians as 'strangers to this land" in Robert I. Rotberg's . It's also not just some Zionists or the State of Israel that treated Palestinians as strangers in their land but that isn't relevant to this article. As for what should be included, I think the lead should include a summary statement functionally equivalent to Pappe's about how Zionism became about establishing Jewish colonies in Palestine and the colonization of Palestine. The lead shouldn't just present the Zionist narrative that it was the "return of Jews to Israel". It should describe what actually happened according to historians. The history is covered in the body of the article in the ] section from "In the 19th century, a current in Judaism supporting a return to Zion grew in popularity..." onwards so it should be summarized in the lead. Something should be included about the attitudes of Zionists towards the "native population" to quote Jabotinsky, including what Pappe has written, but not just Pappe as I'm sure there were a wide variety of views...not in the lead though. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 4px 1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - ''']'''</small> 11:30, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
{{od}}
Is there some centre ground between "the rightful return of the Jews to their homeland" and "genocidal colonization" (not exactly the terms in play, but you get the gist)? "settlement" would strike me as a less rhetorically leveraged word than colonization. Looking at the text in dispute, it reads: '''Zionism emerged in the late 19th century in central and eastern Europe as a national revival movement and soon after this most leaders of the movement associated this with the colonization of ]. According to Zionist thinking Palestine was occupied by ''strangers''.''' I think the sentiment of the first sentence seems reasonable (if sourced) but the word "colonization" - as I've said - strikes me a problematic. Just doing a quick Google book search I find this "In Israeli historiography, 1882 is considered the year in which the Zionist settlement in Palestine began" , which seems more like the ''sort of thing'' that might go down better. As for the second sentence, it strikes me that "Zionist thinking" is, at the very least, going to be a contested/tricky topic ... one that I personally wouldn't try and nail down or adduce in a lede. ] (]) 11:50, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
:Well, the middle way is the kind of approach I can understand. Settlement and colonization are both fine for me, both terms are used interchangeably in this context I think. I must admit though, the word colonization means ] to me i.e. nothing to get excited about, and definitely not to be confused with colonialism which is certainly a rhetorically leveraged word. I guess anything about "Zionist thinking" concerning the people already living in Palestine probably needs hammering out on the talk page with a variety of sources before it goes in the article. I'm not sure where it would go either, perhaps the "Particularities of Zionist beliefs" section or maybe in the history section. Anyway, no rush. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 4px 1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - ''']'''</small> 12:59, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
:: I think this discussion is a bit off-topic. What should be decided as far as I can tell, is whether Pappe is a reliable source for those two sentences. If yes, there is no problem with those sentences, if no then the sentences should be left out. If there are other sources that are reliable for a conflicting or substantially alternative statement, then both views should be presented with attribution. FWIW, I don't see why Pappe (as an academic with experience in the field) wouldn't be reliable for those two sentences. Cheers, --] (]) 14:52, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
:::Pappe view is one of the many it doesn't belong in current form in the ].Much like opinion of Karsh or Morris.--] (])/] 16:24, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
:::: If this is so, then you're right, but we need sources to establish that. If there are no sources that say Pappe's view isn't universally shared, we're probably to assume it is. Cheers, --] (]) 17:42, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
:::::Well, if you read the text of the , which was adopted by the first Zionist Congress in 1897, number one on the list of things to do is promote Jewish colonization of Palestine, so I would be very surprised if you could find a historian that would say colonization of Palestine was not a primary concern of the movement at that time. ] (]) 19:09, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
:::::: Citing that source in the lead in addition to (or even instead of) Pappe could be a good idea. --] (]) 20:27, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
{{od}}
Googling around, the word that has been translated (from that Congress resolution) as ''colonization'' is ''besiedlung'' &ndash; which seems to have rather a less precise focus than that, meaning e.g. "inhabit", "populate" and "settle" as well as "colonize"; it doesn't appear to have the same meaning "colonize" (with all its negative resonances) has in modern times. Many of the translations seem to pick "settle". See for the evidence. ] (]) 20:49, 16 December 2012 (UTC)
:Yes, but I think concerns over the word colonization are probably inappropriate and serve no purpose. It was colonization and sources naturally refer to it that way. ''The New Jewish Encyclopedia'' uses it in their entry on Zionism.(). Settle/colonize, makes no difference to me, but I am concerned when words that are used without any problems by quality sources are altered in Misplaced Pages based on transformation rules that are opaque/subjective and absent from the sources themselves. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 4px 1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - ''']'''</small> 05:54, 17 December 2012 (UTC)
:There are already statement about colonization in the lead I don't think we need further emphasis on that.--] (])/] 07:03, 17 December 2012 (UTC)
::There is no statement about colonization in the lead. There is a reference to colonialism. Not the same thing. Colonization is a description of what happened. It is a neutral fact. The view that it was colonialist or colonialism is an opinion about the objectives and nature of the colonization. Colonization is like saying a company carried out exploration in country X. Colonialist/colonialism is like saying that the exploration amounted to exploitation of country X. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 4px 1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - ''']'''</small> 07:20, 17 December 2012 (UTC)
:::I'm going to re-add the uncontroversial details with extra sourcing. No one has produced any sources that contradict the statement that Zionism emerged in Central and Eastern Europe in the late 19th Century and that early on in the movement Jewish colonization of Palestine became a primary goal of the movement. These are basic (sourced) facts about the topic, that should be in the lead, if any editor wants to dispute any of the details please provide RS to support your position. ] (]) 11:48, 17 December 2012 (UTC)

I wanted to say that in the lead I think the word order is wrong at the very end "and alleged racism and violence against Palestinians." In my view it should be "violence against Palestinians and alleged racism." The reason is that violence against Palestinians is a fact and is not alleged. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 10:57, 1 March 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


::*Re: "retaining things that aren't": not proposing this be the only edit, just a first step. ] (]) 05:14, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
== History ==
::*:Yes, that's fair, I just meant that in an area where you chose to cut I saw other nearby things I might have cut instead and flowed it out different. ''']'''<span style="border:2px solid #073642;background:rgb(255,156,0);background:linear-gradient(90deg, rgba(255,156,0,1) 0%, rgba(147,0,255,1) 45%, rgba(4,123,134,1) 87%);">]</span> 05:22, 13 January 2025 (UTC)


The first two paragraphs of this section are almost entirely unsourced. The sources that are cited do not discuss or even mention the topic of this article, nor can I find any sources in the parent article relating this material to the topic of this article. ] (]) 08:51, 17 December 2012 (UTC) :::*:Sure. I think that's a reason to restore the tag, as it will encourage continued work on the problem rather than just a one-and-done. ] (]) 05:24, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
:::*::Fine by me. I know other editors tend to reflexively revert the addition of maintenance tags to the article, citing the consensus required restriction. However I personally have no objection to a too long tag. ''']'''<span style="border:2px solid #073642;background:rgb(255,156,0);background:linear-gradient(90deg, rgba(255,156,0,1) 0%, rgba(147,0,255,1) 45%, rgba(4,123,134,1) 87%);">]</span> 05:41, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
:::*:::If an editor believes an article is too long, perhaps they'd be better of considering/starting a split discussion, rather than resorting to tagging. '']''<sup>]</sup> 06:20, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
:::*::::The two big targets are the History and Anti Zionism sections, without any progress there, overall progress is unlikely. ] (]) 10:58, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
:Some of the cuts make sense to me. Would be better to trim things one by one with an edit summary rather than in one swoop that will inevitably be contested. ] (]) 14:24, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
::agreed, and also agree with self that we should focus on the longest sections. The antizionism section in particular seems excessively long and detailed. ] (]) 16:41, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
:::The current is 17,732, well into the zone where a split is recommended.--'''''] <sup>]</sup>''''' 16:52, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
:adding some justification in the edit summaries wouldnt hurt either ] (]) 05:25, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
::While I appreciate the effort you've put into this, it's important to be careful that our presentation here reflects that in RS. For example, the removal of "which began to emerge even before the appearance of modern antisemitism as a major factor" from the sentence "The development of Zionism and other Jewish nationalist movements grew out of these sentiments, which began to emerge even before the appearance of modern antisemitism as a major factor" gives it a different meaning, and minimizes the importance of antisemitism.
::Also, there is now no mention in the article that Zionism was not the only form of Jewish nationalism. ] (]) 05:33, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Overall, I think the work done to trim the article while also to strengthen has been an improvement.
:::I also quibble with some of the specific trims, e.g. I agree with DMH that a brief mention of other forms of Jewish nationalism is due. ] (]) 18:51, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
:Should we decide on a target length? Otherwise the tag will stick around forever. ] (]) 18:12, 17 January 2025 (UTC)


== Long record of Russian Genocide == == Should we mention Altneuland at all? ==


I agree that Altneuland is important, but it doesnt seem to have been important enough for this article for there to be more than 2 disconnected sentences about it. I suggest we remove them since they dont seem to be adding much at the moment. ] (]) 16:21, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
I read this sentence in the article:


== Chomsky shouldn’t be cited in the intro ==
"The Russian Empire, with its long record of state organized genocide and ethnic cleansing ("pogroms") was widely regarded as the historic enemy of the Jewish people."


He’s a linguist and polemicist, not a historian. The claim that “ Mainstream Zionist groups for the most part differ more in style than substance” isn’t true imo but that’s probably more than I want to bite off.] (]) 17:36, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Russian pogroms began in 1881 in retribution for the assassination of Alexander II. Prior to 1881, the relationship between Russians and Jews can fairly be said to be distant, since 95% of the Jewish population was relegated to the Pale of Settlement, with the remaining 5% (about 300,000 people) constituting an elite that was permitted to live in Russia proper.


:That's a little reductive of Chomsky's career. Frankly there's a lot of people, particularly in Anthropology, who think Chomsky is ]. On the other hand Chomsky has been a political analyst since at least 1967 and he has published ''multiple'' very prominent books on world politics. ] (]) 17:43, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
I hope that the author might re-consider the phrasing, I would suggest stating that the Russian government engaged in segregation and denial of equal opportunity to the Jews in the Pale of Settlement, in a manner roughly equivalent to African Americans under Jim Crow. I don't think that charges of genocide, or equating the term "pogrom" with the highly charged term "ethnic cleansing" are supported by the facts of history.
::Can we agree that he has, how can I put it, a very particular viewpoint? And Chomsky has had his share of self-owns in the political arena as well. It's like citing William F. Buckley or Friedrich Hayek (without attribution) in the lead of the ] article. I'm just saying, when I clicked on this footnote, I expected to see sources written by historians or political scientists. Seeing Chomsky makes me trust the statement less rather than more. ] (]) 18:19, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
:::For the nth time this week a person being left wing does not make them unreliable as a source. I also don't agree with everything Chomsky ever said. For instance I think he decidedly lost his ]. I've also been critical, in this thread, of his work on language acquisition. I am not suggesting Chomsky is infallable. However to suggest that citing possibly the most prominent Jewish anarchist political commentator in the world about Zionism is like citing Hayek without attribution for the Soviet Union is such a bizarre simile that I'm actually having trouble parsing it. For the record I do think statements from Chomsky should be attributed. I just think, considering his prominence as a political commentator over the last 60 years, his opinions are highly due inclusion, even in the lede. ] (]) 18:30, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
::::Anarchism is an unpopular ideology, I'm not impressed by the "most prominent Jewish anarchist political commentator in the world" descriptor. He's a prominent left-wing commentator who has opinions on many subjects, not a widely acknowledged expert on this particular topic. If it was Edward Said instead of Chomsky I probably would have let it go. But if we agree that it's inappropriate to cite him in the lede without attribution then I suppose that's progress. ] (]) 18:38, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::Sadly Said has been dead for more than 20 years which leaves him unable to speak to the suffering of Palestinians today. And, frankly, your personal opinions of anarchism are entirely irrelevant to matters of ]. ] (]) 18:52, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::The Chomsky quote we're discussing is from 1999. ] (]) 18:54, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::Wait so this is just about bundled citation 9? No that's obviously ]. It's from a very widely cited book produced by a venerable publishing house and, just to put a ribbon on top, Said wrote the foreword. ] (]) 19:01, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::::Your claims of ] are entirely backward. ] is pretty clear - you were bold. I reverted. Now you are edit warring. ] (]) 19:06, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::::Please provide some justification better than ] for cutting the Chomsky book. ] (]) 19:19, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
:I agree with what Simon wrote. Your personal opinion is not grounds for deletion. ] (]) 19:19, 15 January 2025 (UTC)


Thank you. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 20:38, 2 April 2013 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


== Correcting opinions in Misplaced Pages's voice ==


To explain a bit further: this just seems like an outlandish claim to me, no matter how many citations are alleged to back it up. The differences between ] and ] were stylistic? It's flattening a huge range of political opinions over a broad expanse of time. I don't expect to win this one bc my commitment to the topic isn't that great but it's not an appropriate statement for the lead. ] (]) 19:28, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
I removed the last part (italics) of this sentence yesterday: "Some criticisms of Zionism specifically identify Judaism's notion of the "chosen people" as the source of racism in Zionism, ''despite that being a religious concept unrelated to Zionism''" - partly because it at that time was unsourced, but mainly because I saw it as polemic: Correcting an opinion in Misplaced Pages's voice. It's now been reinserted with source. I think it should be rewritten if not removed, maybe also writing "claim" instead of identify in the first part of the sentence. Regards, ] (]) 07:44, 5 May 2013 (UTC)
:I've removed it for now since zionism-israel.com doesn't qualify as an RS (and changed identify to claim). I assume the content can probably be replaced with a ]-compliant source but it has to avoid ] i.e. the source needs to make this "religious concept unrelated to Zionism" point to refute/challenge the claims. It can't be a Misplaced Pages editor combining multiple sources to refute/challenge the claims. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 4px 1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - ''']'''</small> 08:05, 5 May 2013 (UTC)
::I just changed the source. It's from a book, and it refutes very clearly the claim that religious concept of "God's chosen people" is related to Zionism.--] (]) 08:11, 5 May 2013 (UTC)
:::I still don't think it's right to correct arguments/opinions etc. in Misplaced Pages's voice. The correction should be attributed to someone (individuals, "most scholars" or similar). Even if a professor claimed the globe was square, I don't think it would be correct Misplaced Pages style to write a sentence saying "Professor Wright claims the globe is square, allthough it is round." ] (]) 08:26, 5 May 2013 (UTC)
:::The source looks okay and avoids synth. I think Iselilja is right about the narrative voice and attribution. Also, don't forget, this article is covered by ] and your edit is a technical violation, not that I care because your edit was constructive, but someone might. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 4px 1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - ''']'''</small> 08:37, 5 May 2013 (UTC)
::::Iranit Greenburg's edit is inconsistent with ]. We have several academic sources that say one thing that is attributed "Some criticisms of Zionism claim", then we have another source introduced by IG that contradicts the first set of sources, but instead of being attributed it is used for facts in the[REDACTED] voice. SH, you may say this edit is "constructive", but if you have an editor in the topic area who the 1rr rules and also ignores core policies of the encyclopedia then that is a big problem, because editors who do follow policy will not be able to fix the problems created by the editor as they are constrained by the 1rr regulations. ] (]) 09:07, 5 May 2013 (UTC)
::::: Div999 is correct about the edit. An opinion attributed to one source can't be refuted in Misplaced Pages's voice but only in the voice of another source. I'm not too sure that the source is reliable either. The quoted words "the biblical concept of 'Chosen People' is part of Judaism; Zionism has nothing to do with it" are actually bizarre; scores of Zionist theorists will be very surprised to learn that Zionism has nothing to do with Judaism. ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 09:28, 5 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::@Dlv999, I don't disagree with anything you have said there but my remarks were deliberately limited in scope to this article with respect to IranitGreenberg's editing and I think the NPOV issues can easily be resolved here. What's more important I think is for IranitGreenberg to curb their enthusiasm a bit, be able to see the NPOV violation, understand the role of attribution and when not to use Misplaced Pages's neutral unattributed narrative voice. I could say a lot more about their editing in general in the topic area, which appears rather aggressive and inconsistent with ], but it seems to take time for some people to learn that Misplaced Pages policy is more important here than their personal beliefs as you know. They haven't been editing for very long. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 4px 1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - ''']'''</small> 09:46, 5 May 2013 (UTC)


:Your instincts are not an appropriate measure - nor is your opinion of Chomsky's political ideology. This is just ] only now you've created two threads about it. Chomsky is due inclusion for his attributed opinion. ''There are very few living people more prominent in this space.'' ] (]) 19:33, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
== Changes in the lead and elsewhere ==
::Forget about Chomsky. Can you defend the claim that "Mainstream Zionist groups for the most part differ more in style than substance"? ] (]) 19:35, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
:::I don't need to. A reliable source said it. ] (]) 19:36, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
::::Flatly you're now asking that we conduct ] rather than include a reliable source and, in fact, are asking us to forget the source is reliable and just look at the words you dislike that the reliable source said. ] (]) 19:39, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
::::Spoken like a true Wikipedian. I'm sure I could dig up some sources for the counterclaim that "there is a wide range of opinion in the Zionist movement." Here's one. Of course it has a distinct POV but that doesn't mean it's unreliable, right? Here's another one from a University Press. This isn't really about sources. There's editorial discretion involved in which sources we cite and how we paraphrase their claims. I think this is not a good hill to die on but I'll try to make this my last comment on the issue. ] (]) 19:44, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::Unlike Chomsky the ADL is ''not'' a reliable source for Israel / Palestine conflict discussions. ] (]) 19:46, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::On the other hand ''Zionism and the Creation of a New Society'' would appear to meet ] criteria and would likely be due inclusion. Though neither of the authors have the significant reputation of Chomsky. ] (]) 19:48, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::In any case, there being a wide range of opinion in the movement does not contradict the statement that the differences between the mainstream groups were primarily differences of style. ] (]) 23:05, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::The range of scholars cited for this claim is '''very wide''': Shapira, Gorny, Ben-Ami, Shlaim, Chomsky, Penslar, Sternhell ] (]) 23:07, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::::I’m not going to track down all of those citations to see how much they really support this sentence. I’ll note that Chomsky and Sternhell are controversial to say the least. Everything about this topic is controversial. Let me further note that the intro of ] has a while section emphasizing the differences of opinion inside the movement. They’re different movements but not that different. Most political movements contain a diversity of viewpoints, while agreeing on some central tenets. If the article said that about Zionism I would be fine with it. To me that’s very different from saying the differences between Labor and Likud are primarily stylistic. And now I really will try to walk away. ] (]) 23:24, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
::It would seem that the Chomsky thing isn't attributed though but is being used to discuss a claim in wikivoice. While this sentence has been discussed in the past, ]. However, maybe this and the last thread should be combined since they seem to be the same thing. I believe this claim is unduly synthetic and an oversimplification, and we've discussed other sources which portray a range of ideological strains within Zionism. Engel, and Shindler, among others, not to rehash the same discussion again. Even Penslar doesn't really support this. Trying to be constructive, maybe there's a way to change the phrasing to accomplish what it's trying to say and summarize those sources that say it without getting into what appears to be a conclusion not stated explicitly in the sources, or portraying that ]. Also, there's a change over time element to this. Zionist groups disagreed on quite a few substantial issues but consolidated over time; that fact is elided in the intro as it stands. ''']'''<span style="border:2px solid #073642;background:rgb(255,156,0);background:linear-gradient(90deg, rgba(255,156,0,1) 0%, rgba(147,0,255,1) 45%, rgba(4,123,134,1) 87%);">]</span> 23:23, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
:::No. You are mistaken. It's literally presented as a quote.] (]) 01:16, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
::::I believe you are the one who is mistaken or it's semantic, but not according to the conventional meaning of attribution on Misplaced Pages. It's quoted in the footnote, but that's not what we mean by attribution per ]. Attribution in Misplaced Pages parlance would mean the article text would read something like "According to theorists a la Chomsky, mainstream Zionist groups for the most part differ more in style than substance...." ''']'''<span style="border:2px solid #073642;background:rgb(255,156,0);background:linear-gradient(90deg, rgba(255,156,0,1) 0%, rgba(147,0,255,1) 45%, rgba(4,123,134,1) 87%);">]</span> 03:25, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
:I support Prezbo's edit. Chomsky is not an appropriate source for the lead. There is no way that he is a best source for this contentious topic. It's simply not his area of expertise; he's not someone cited in the scholarly literature.
:The claim is a highly contentious one, that some have made. We can report that, and attribute it. Other serious scholars say the opposite, which we can also report with attribution -- in the body not the lead. It's not something we can say in our voice, and definitely not in the lead.
:The other sources cited don't really say what it was being used for either. ] (]) 18:57, 16 January 2025 (UTC) (PS speaking as an anarchist-adjacent person I want to add that Chomsky being an anarchist is a really bad reason to remove him. Plenty of serious scholars are also anarchists, and indeed for that matter a few major figures in the Zionist tradition. ] (]) 19:28, 16 January 2025 (UTC))
::But it's not just Chomsky who is making this claim. Even if you remove him from the list the range of scholars making this assessment is very wide. ] (]) 19:08, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
::While we may disagree about his relative significance as far as attributed opinion (and for the record I've never said the opinion shouldn't be attributed or should be in wiki voice) I really appreciate you giving a sanity check on those people who denigrated his politics as "unpopular" as if that was just cause to minimize his views.] (]) ] (]) 20:09, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
* Chomsky has a huge number of extremely high-profile, highly-cited works on politics published in academic sources. The argument that his only expertise is linguistics is just ''wrong'' - he's also an extremely impactful political scholar, to the point where he could trivially pass ] on politics alone (not that that threshold is necessary here, because these are published by reliable high-quality publishers.) He obviously has a stark perspective, and this does have to be evaluated when determining due weight, but his position on Israel is not fringe by any standard; as one of the most highly-cited authors alive (including, yes, in his work on politics) he's a logical source to attribute. Neither is the statement made here particularly ]; it seems to be a common position. --] (]) 20:36, 17 January 2025 (UTC)


===Sources used for style not substance===
I made the changes for the following reasons: are perceptions or opinions, not indisputable facts (just like '''what they see'' as an abandoned homeland'): Israel is not an Apartheid country and many Arab refugees in 1948 fled, weren't expelled. So these things are views or opinions. On the other hand, I restored in the "History" section (1920, 1921, 1929 riots were very important) and restored in the proper place per NPOV, since anti-Zionist views are included in the lead, despite they belong to the "criticism" or "anti-Zionism" sections or articles... although perhaps the entire anti-Zionist/pro-Zionist views should be removed from the lead, they are already in the proper section and in other articles, but removing only one of them is flagrant POV.--] (]) 01:07, 7 May 2013 (UTC)
Per DMH comment on Chomsky not being only source, just pasting the sources previously cited:
{{bulleted list|
|{{harvnb|Sternhell|1999}}: "The difference between religious and secular Zionism, be- tween the Zionism of the Left and the Zionism of the Right, was merely a difference of form and not an essential difference."
|{{harvnb|Penslar|2023|p=60}}
|{{harvnb|Ben-Ami|2007|p=3}}
|{{harvnb|Shapira|1992|loc=Conclusion}}
|{{harvnb|Shlaim|2001|loc=Prologue}}
|{{cite book |first=Shlomo |last=Ben-Ami |author-link=Shlomo Ben-Ami |title=Prophets Without Honor |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hnhXEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA |year=2022 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-19-006047-3 |pages= |access-date=June 23, 2024 |archive-date=June 24, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240624173918/https://books.google.com/books?id=hnhXEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA |url-status=live}}{{page needed|date=November 2024}}
|{{harvnb|Gorny|1987|p=165}}: "As a member of the Zionist Executive in 1921-3, he soon discovered that what divided him from his colleagues in the Zionist leadership was not political differences, but mainly his style of political action"
|{{harvnb|Chomsky|1999|loc=Rejectionism and Accommodation|ps=: "In essence, then, the two programs are not very different. Their difference lies primarily in style. Labor is, basically, the party of the educated Europe-oriented elite—managers, bureaucrats, intellectuals, etc. Its historical practice has been to "build facts" while maintaining a low-keyed rhetoric with conciliatory tones, at least in public. In private, the position has been that "it does not matter what the Gentiles say, what matters is what the Jews do" (Ben-Gurion) and that "the borders are where Jews live, not where there is a line on a map" (Golda Meir).21 This has been an effective method for obtaining the ends sought without alienating Western opinion—indeed, while mobilizing Western (particularly American) support."}}}}
] (]) 11:58, 17 January 2025 (UTC)


:We ''could'' add sources that take the opposite view. Here's two to start with:
{{hat|reason=Not a forum, per ]}}
:* {{cite journal | last=Conforti | first=Yitzhak | title=East and West in Jewish nationalism: conflicting types in the Zionist vision? | journal=Nations and Nationalism | volume=16 | issue=2 | date=2010 | doi=10.1111/j.1469-8129.2010.00418.x | pages=201–219|quote=The very existence of opposing positions in classical Zionism regarding the vision of the future of the Jewish state reveals the great variety within Jewish nationalism. Zionism represented different Jewish dreams and yearnings that conflicted in their relation to consciousness of the Jewish past as well as to aspirations for the future}}
:"Israel is not an Apartheid country". POV, I feel! ], the initiator of apartheid, is said to have agreed that Israel was an apartheid state.] (]) 17:41, 7 May 2013 (UTC)
:* {{cite journal | last=Taylor | first=Alan R. | title=Zionism and Jewish History | journal=Journal of Palestine Studies | publisher=Taylor & Francis, Ltd. | volume=1 | issue=2 | year=1972 | issn=0377919X | jstor=2535953 | pages=35–51 | url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/2535953 | access-date=20 January 2025|quote=The diversity of Zionism greatly facilitated this task, since every sectarian or political preference in the Diaspora had a counterpart within the Zionist movement.}}
See also Seidler, Boyarin and Shindler quotes in current notes 249-250.
:] (]) 12:30, 20 January 2025 (UTC)
::These quotes don't actually refute the quotes above. We would need something along the lines of "left and right in Zionism were essentially different movements, with fundamentally different goals, strategies and tactics." ] (]) 17:32, 20 January 2025 (UTC)
:::The text some of us are disputing is “Mainstream Zionist groups for the most part differ more in style than substance, having in some cases adopted similar strategies to achieve their goals, such as violence or compulsory transfer to deal with the Palestinians.” That seems like an incoherent sentence, because to me the same strategies would equate to the same style while different goals would equate to a different substance. To refute the first half, we just need to show that they differed in substance. To refute the second half, we just need to show they didn’t adopt the same strategies. I think showing that lots of scholars say there were fundamental differences within the Zionist mainstream is enough to make it untenable to make the claim for homogeneity in our voice. ] (]) 05:39, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
::::The statement being contested is saying that the differences were primarily tactical or political, rather than fundamental differences of goals or strategy.
::::The quotes from Conforti and Taylor both say there was diversity in the movement. Conforti mentions differing "visions" of the future state. Neither are really talking about fundamental differences in goals or strategy. ] (]) 07:00, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::So wouldn't it be better that different scholars take a range of positions on the degree to which there is a unitary, cohesive Zionism with shared goals and visions but differences in style and strategy (eg Gorny, Marsalha, Shimoni), or if Zionism is more heterogeneous and diverse (eg Shindler, Penslar, Conforti, )? ] (]) 12:22, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::Calling zionism diverse is fine, but here we are interested in strategies and goals. ] (]) 20:06, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::It’s in the middle of a paragraph summarising the ] section, not a paragraph about strategies and goals. ] (]) 07:20, 22 January 2025 (UTC)


== my trims/additions ==
::No, it's the only democracy in the region. The antisemitic Afrikaner racist said that in 1961, precisely in retaliation for an Israeli vote against South African apartheid at the United Nations. Being insulted by Verwoerd should be a compliment for Israel, nothing more.--] (]) 03:23, 8 May 2013 (UTC)


It is entirely possible that these may be my last edits to this page for a while; wanted to leave a few notes.
:::The pre-Mandela apartheid South Africa was also a democracy, albeit one where only whites could vote. Israel is a democracy whose similarly skewed suffrage denies residency (let alone a vote) to displaced Palestinians, while granting both benefits to any non-Israeli who can call himself a Jew. Arabs are not integrated into Israeli society, but are marginalised into "Bantustans" within Israel's borders. Meanwhile Israel continues (in the face of universal global criticism) to build illegal settlements in the West Bank. Not so different from apartheid! ] (]) 12:01, 11 May 2013 (UTC)
*Regarding Hebrew, I removed the part that had no citations. I also concentrated the sentence on the main point, but I think it's worth noting that being the liturgical language meant that Hebrew did have a vibrant medieval life as the language of some poems and prayers, but also as a kind of lingua franca among Jewish communities. I suspect that some of the sources talk about this a bit as it relates to Cultural Zionism, which is really still underweight in my view.
* I continue to feel the technicalities of early Zionist parliamentarianism and early Zionists' views of issues of territory, transfer, etc. is overweight versus some of the modern stuff.
* "Zionist historiography" is basically the national-conservative historiography that is going to be opposed in a lot of ways to either the New historiography (Morris, and Pappe) and the Arab historiography. "Traditional historiography" is also a thing. I restored the mentions of the forerunners and the proto-Zionists and medieval aliyah and messianism because it's critical to understanding the traditional historiography. It has less weight in Arab and New historiography because they're focused more on labor issues, population issues, but let's not forget there are also aspects that we left out, such as the malarial swamp and technological developments which relate to labor and are covered by Shapira in her other book, that are also part of the modern historiography. Also, this article should consider patterning itself after a general world or general political history of the region in some sense, to get an outside-of-the-box view rather than this inside baseball stuff. The article still reads a bit like a term paper.
* We had a list of best sources and there is still plenty that either is over/underweight or left out altogether or probably not necessary according to my read of most of those.
* A few things I removed were tagged with "page needed" for months, but restore them if you can check the page and find a close enough, but not too close, paraphrase. I failed to. I think there are still some issues of synthesis and kludgy frankensteining to fix.
''']'''<span style="border:2px solid #073642;background:rgb(255,156,0);background:linear-gradient(90deg, rgba(255,156,0,1) 0%, rgba(147,0,255,1) 45%, rgba(4,123,134,1) 87%);">]</span> 04:05, 16 January 2025 (UTC)


:Reverted because I don't agree with your assessment of UNDUE or that stuff was duplicative. '']''<sup>]</sup> 06:17, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
::::1) Jews building homes in their native homeland cannot possibly be illegal, despite what anti-Semitic UN says.
::Fine, on some of it, but this part: {{tq|the decline of the status of religion in the Jewish community.{{sfn|Yadgar|2017}}{{page needed|date=November 2024}}}} What page of Yadgar is that summarizing? AFAIK, it's not a true statement that Zionism caused a decline in the status of religion of the Jewish community. Zionism was/is a fundamentally secular movement and a secularization of certain Jewish religious concepts that predate Zionism, but that isn't the same thing. Many Jewish communities are extremely religious, while other groups are less so, but in general, the religiosity of every group has been declining for a while - not just Jewish groups - and the Haskalah has more to do with the Jewish secularization, and is also a cause of/related to the growth of Zionism. Also, on another point, you restored a statement that had a citation needed tag, so you should provide a citation for it. And the ones with no pages numbered need page numbers. They've been tagged for months. ''']'''<span style="border:2px solid #073642;background:rgb(255,156,0);background:linear-gradient(90deg, rgba(255,156,0,1) 0%, rgba(147,0,255,1) 45%, rgba(4,123,134,1) 87%);">]</span> 06:26, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
::::2) Whites were colonist foreigners in South Africa, but Jews are the natives in Israel. The colonist foreigners are the illegal settlers from Arabia. <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 06:55, 13 May 2013 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:::@] reverted the stuff to do with page numbers. You'll need to ask them about that. I took the revert further. '']''<sup>]</sup> 06:48, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
::::There were page numbers needed in that text you reverted too, if I'm not mistaken. Such as the one I just quoted. Fine for DMH223344 to respond too of course, as most likely he was the one who originally added it anyway.
::::Here is what you restored:
{{talkquote|"The Zionist goal of reframing of Jewish identity in secular-nationalist terms meant primarily the decline of the status of religion in the Jewish community.{{sfn|Yadgar|2017}}{{page needed|date=November 2024}}Prominent Zionist thinkers frame this development as nationalism serving the same role as religion, functionally replacing it.{{sfn|Avineri|2017}}{{page needed|date=November 2024}} Zionism sought to make Jewish ] the distinctive trait of Jews rather than their commitment to Judaism.{{sfn|Shimoni|1995}}{{page needed|date=November 2024}} Zionism instead adopted a racial understanding of Jewish identity.{{sfn|Yadgar|2017}}{{page needed|date=November 2024}} Framed this way, Jewish identity is only secondarily a matter of tradition or culture.{{sfn|Yadgar|2020}}{{page needed|date=November 2024}} Zionist nationalism embraced pan-Germanic ideologies, which stressed the concept of das ]: people of shared ancestry should pursue separation and establish a unified state. Zionist thinkers view the movement as a "revolt against a tradition of many centuries" of living parasitically at the margins of Western society. Indeed, Zionism was uncomfortable with the term "Jewish," associating it with passivity, spirituality and the stain of "galut". Instead, Zionist thinkers preferred the term "Hebrew" to describe their identity. In Zionist thought, the new Jew would be productive and work the land, in contrast to the diaspora Jew. Zionism linked the term "Jewish" with negative characteristics prevalent in European anti-Semitic stereotypes, which Zionists believed could be remedied only through sovereignty.{{sfn|Masalha|2012|p=}}"}}
''']'''<span style="border:2px solid #073642;background:rgb(255,156,0);background:linear-gradient(90deg, rgba(255,156,0,1) 0%, rgba(147,0,255,1) 45%, rgba(4,123,134,1) 87%);">]</span> 06:57, 16 January 2025 (UTC)


:Correct me if I'm wrong but your edits to do with page numbers were at ] and ], those were reverted by DMH223344 at ]. The fact that I reverted back to an edition without the page numbers is immaterial as the diff of the article I reverted from didn't have the page numbers. In any case I would have been restricted from overriding DMH223344's reverts because of the consensus required restriction. The only option available to me if I wanted to over-ride your edits, without reinstating what DMH223344 reverted, was to rollback to a time before you had made any adjustment that I disagreed with and which DMH223344 had reverted. '']''<sup>]</sup> 07:53, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
Arrivisto claims he teaches "Maritime Law at an English university." He is lucky he is anonymous because such blatantly racist lies could get him fired. <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 07:00, 13 May 2013 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
::I believe you must be incorrect, because I just pasted the text and that text is restored in your diff. If you agree with removing that text, you may do so. ''']'''<span style="border:2px solid #073642;background:rgb(255,156,0);background:linear-gradient(90deg, rgba(255,156,0,1) 0%, rgba(147,0,255,1) 45%, rgba(4,123,134,1) 87%);">]</span> 08:21, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
{{hab}}
:I don't think a page needed tag is a good reason for removal. If there's doubt about the source, maybe a verify quote tag is better. I see page needed as more of a technical improvement issue. My main issue is that some of these claims are the opinions or interpretations of scholars that we should be attributing, rather than the scholarly consensus, so most of the deleted material doesn't look strong enough to keep in a bloated article. ] (]) 19:01, 16 January 2025 (UTC)


{{reflist talk}}
== Anti-Zionism=Anti-Semitism meme inserted into the lead ==


== Ethnocultural nationalism ==
I would argue that this is undue and not suitable for inclusion in the lead. If it remains in the lead I will insist that counter arguments to the claim are also included per RS. For instance notable liberal Zionist Peter Beinhart quotes Foxman: ''"most of the current attacks on Israel and Zionism are not, at bottom, about policies and conduct of a particular nation-state. They are about Jews... When other countries and people pursue policies that are similar (or far worse than) those of Israel, do the critics condemn them? If so, do they condemn them with the same fervor as they condemn Israel? If not, it's hard to deny that anti-Antisemitism explains the discrepancy."''


I have long been not a fan of the opening sentence use of "ethnocultural nationalist", currently citing one source, the Israeli philosopher ]. Looking back over the talk archive, I don't see the establishment of consensus for this. It's been disputed by multiple editors, and supported by few. (Open to being corrected on that if I missed a robust RfC or similar strong establishment of consensus.) I've looked in Google Scholar to identify if it's a term used widely about Zionism in the academic literature, and it seems to me clear it isn't. It's a term used by Gans, but by almost nobody else that I can see. Open to persuasion if I'm missing something, but if my reading is right, it's not something we should say in our voice and certainly not in the opening sentence.
To which Beinhart responds: ''In their effort to inoculate Israeli policy from criticisms, American Jewish organizations have stretched anti-Antisemitism's definition to the point of absurdity. And many in the organized Jewish world know it. "on a Daily basis", notes Jodi Ochstein, who worked in the ADL's Washington office from 2006 to 2010, "people thought it was over the top. It would be one of those eye -rolling days; you were embarrassed to be working there on those days." But rarely does embarrassment translate into empathy for the people unfairly charged with one of the most damning epithets in contemporary America.'' (Beinhart 2012 pp55-58 ).
:It is wp:undue in the lead.
:This article concerns Zionism. So we can give the mind of pro-Zionists and anti-Zionists but not in more some particular critics against anti-Zionist. That would be a basic case of unaccepable pov-pushing given it discredits these critics (true or not).
:] (]) 11:05, 12 May 2013 (UTC)
::By the way, this is alos WP:UNDUE : "Defenders of Zionism say it is a national movement for the repatriation of a dispersed socio-religious group to what they see as an abandoned homeland. Critics of Zionism say it is a colonialist or racist ideology. Reasons for opposing Zionism are varied and include the confiscation of land from indigenous Palestinians and their ensuing expulsions, racism and violence against Palestinians, and a refutation of the Zionist claim of a Jewish scriptural entitlement to the Holy Land."
::Zionism is an historical movement. No need to talk about current controversies that are more linked to the current I-P conflict than to the debate at the time even if there were already opposition at the time. ] (]) 11:12, 12 May 2013 (UTC)
:::Your version gives anti-Zionist opinions much more prominence over pro-Zionist views. Let me give you an example: anti-Zionist words and accusations have 349 characters against 160 characters of pro-Zionist opinions. It's clear POV and undue weight. However, I do believe the entire paragraph should be removed, since the lead must be only a descriptive text, while the negative criticism belongs to "anti-Zionism" section (in addition to an entire article about it).
:::'''Pro-Zionist views:'''
:::''Defenders of Zionism say it is a national movement for the repatriation of a dispersed socio-religious group to what they see as an abandoned homeland.''
:::'''Anti-Zionist views:'''
:::''Critics of Zionism say it is a colonialist or racist ideology. Reasons for opposing Zionism are varied and include the confiscation of land from indigenous Palestinians and their ensuing expulsions, racism and violence against Palestinians, and a refutation of the Zionist claim of a Jewish scriptural entitlement to the Holy Land.''
:::I just wrote a more balanced text. But if you want to remove the entire paragraph, I have no problem with it.--] (]) 12:18, 12 May 2013 (UTC)
:I think the (after new revisions) is fine. It's one line about the position of zionist defenders and an about equally long sentence about criticims, and I think those two sentences adequately summarize the main positions. Regards, ] (]) 13:55, 12 May 2013 (UTC)
:: I think that when counting characters (if that's seen as useful) should include characters in the first lead paragraph that portray Zionism in a rather positive light. Or, should we lace that too with "balancing" refutations? --] (]) 17:14, 12 May 2013 (UTC)
:::I don't think so. The first lead paragraph is an historical description (information), not a subjective point of view or opinion.--] (]) 17:37, 12 May 2013 (UTC)
:::: The first paragraph is a part of the lead in the same way as the second paragraph is, and the same principles apply to it as do to the second paragraph. --] (]) 18:57, 13 May 2013 (UTC)
:: Agree with IranitGreenberg. The edits made by Pluto violated 1rr on 12/05/2013 so I asked him for immediate self revert.--] (]) 05:53, 13 May 2013 (UTC)
:::I really wonder which ones ? ] (]) 06:02, 13 May 2013 (UTC)
#
#
# --] (]) 06:40, 13 May 2013 (UTC)


Even if we agree with Gans that it is an ethnocultural nationalism not a civic nationalism, we still shouldn't use it in our voice in the lead, given that his argument that it is one notes that Herzl and Pinsker were civic not ethnocultural nationalists; that it should specifically be understood as representing a sub-species: a "liberal ethnocultural nationalism"; that many have tried to generate a civic rather than ethnocultural Zionism; and that he is disagreeing with other scholars who don't share his analysis.
I think the lead should be a little more balanced and NPOV by saying ''Critics of Zionism see it as a colonialist or racist ideology that led '''to what they see as a''' denial of rights, dispossession and expulsion of the indigenous population of Palestine.''. After all, I don't think Zionism is responsible for such things (the cause of the conflict and refugees is Arab refusal to accept the Jewish state's right to exist), but I also believe anti-Zionism is a valid opinion that should be reflected as long as we clarify it's a subjective point of view, not indisputable facts, just like “'''''what they see''' as an abandoned homeland''”.--] (]) 11:27, 13 May 2013 (UTC)
:NPOV means accurately reflecting reliable sources. It is not about opinions of editors. Telling us your opinions on the topic bears no relation to the article. ] (]) 12:14, 13 May 2013 (UTC)
::Your sources are reliable to reflect anti-Zionist '''opinions''' (Ilan Pappe, Edward Said, Abdul Wahhab Kayyali, etc), not indisputable facts. Per NPOV we should use the same language for both points of view.--] (]) 12:39, 13 May 2013 (UTC)
:::Actually I checked the sources for the "abandoned homeland" claim and none of them support it ( for example has a whole section discussing the interaction between the Jewish colonists and the indigenous population of Palestine). This kind of claim is ] territory. I suggest deleting the "abandoned homeland" claim altogether as unsourced. The second sentence should remain as is: the views are already attributed to "critics of Zionism" so your suggestion is unnecessary. The "abandoned homeland" idea is more of a historical concept that was used by some to promote Zionism, but I doubt you would find any serious modern scholarship supporting the notion, though you are welcome to look for yourself. ] (]) 12:53, 13 May 2013 (UTC)
::::Eretz Israel was the Jewish birthplace since Biblical times (where were the Palestinian Arab colonists then? perhaps in the Arabian peninsula), but if you want a specific source to claim that Jews around world consider Eretz Israel their ancient national homeland (before and after Herzl), I can give you as an example. The alleged "denial of rights, dispossession and expulsion of the indigenous population" are not facts (denial of rights?? dispossession? most of 1948 refugees weren't "expelled" by Israeli soldiers)... "what they see as" is completely necessary. Per NPOV we use the same language for both opinions or we don't use it at all.--] (]) 03:28, 14 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::IranitGreenberg,[REDACTED] is not a forum but an encyclopaedia.
:::::We are not here to discuss politics. ] (]) 05:39, 14 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::Hypocrite--] (]) 12:38, 14 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::Please cite a page reference for the "abandoned homeland" claim. ] (]) 07:03, 14 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::::. I'm going to include "what the see as" in the anti-Zionist point of view.--] (]) 12:38, 14 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::::Jerusalem Post is not a WP:RS source for this topic that was widely covered by historians.
::::::::] (]) 18:41, 14 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::::::That is a serious reference, published by a serious newspaper, and it meets all the requirements of ]. You do not get to ignore anything you dislike. I brought a source, and I'm entitled to use it in the article.--] (]) 06:27, 15 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::::::The source doesn't support the claim. ] (]) 06:54, 15 May 2013 (UTC)
:::::::::::But I'm going to add "what they see" as soon as I can, per NPOV. <small>See also ]. Jewish connection to this land dates back from thousands of years.</small>--] (]) 06:59, 15 May 2013 (UTC)
::::::::::::I think there are two separate points here. The idea of a Jewish connection to Palestine in Zionist thought - which of course i would not dispute that this is an important idea in Zionist political ideology. Second is the notion of an "abandoned homeland" - that there was no-one in Palestine prior to Zionist colonization. The second idea was historically used by some who supported Zionism, but I don't think it would be a claim made today in RS. Your source would support the first idea being a part of Zionist thought but not the "abandoned homeland" claim. Regarding your stated intention to edit war content into the article ASAP, rather than seeking to find consensus - I would advise against it. ] (]) 07:15, 15 May 2013 (UTC)
::The idea of "Zionist colonization" of Palestine Is dangerously one sided view in complex Israeli-Palestinian conflict held by small group of extremist and equals the idea that Palestine was empty in the begging of 19th century. While the first idea is based o fact that the population of what would be determined by Brits to become Mandatory Palestine a century letter had only about 200 000 inhabitants in 1800 of numerous ethnicity or just 2% of today population, it neglects the fact that Palestine was not empty. The second idea is based on fact that most of Israelis today are descendants of immigrants from Middle Eastern and European countries. This is one sided presentation neglects that Palestine is historically the birth place of Hebrew language and the Jewish people-something which has been recognized by almost all non Arab countries. In this context I do not see IranitGreenberg edits as "edit war" but as a constructive balancing of article. Both views should be left out (better proposition) or presented by WP:NPOV with criticism as they are not opinions supported by the mainstream uninvolved to this conflict.--] (]) 10:19, 16 May 2013 (UTC)
:::Zionist colonization of Palestine is uncontroversial in the literature. See e.g. , which is being used as a reference for the opinion of defenders of zionism. Or look at the "Basel program" ratified at the first Zionist congress. One of the primary concerns was "The promotion, on suitable lines, of the colonization of Palestine by Jewish agricultural and industrial workers". Or cite note Refferring to the 6th Zionist congress: "Palestine was affirmed as the 'old new land' of Zionist colonization". It's kind of tedious to have to go through this with you as it has been discussed before. I would ask you to stop making claims that are not supported by sources and also to read the sources in the article, which will allow you to make a useful contribution to the page. ] (]) 10:46, 16 May 2013 (UTC)


Conforti argues that Zionism is a clear case of ethnocultural nationalism, but with paradoxical civic elements: {{tq|This research concludes that the state of Israel, which developed from a nationalist ethnic-cultural movement, integrated within it ethnic values as well as Western civic values. The founders of the central wing of the movement all aspired to create a Jewish national state that upheld these values... Since Zionism is a clear example of an ethnic national movement, scholars usually tend to ignore its civic components.... I will argue that the two characteristics, civic and ethnic, were continuously present in mainstream Zionist thought and activities from the 1880s to 1948. The primary aim of the 'Zionist consensus' was to create a Western Jewish nation-state, in contrast to two alternatives that were proposed by marginal movements within Zionism: a bi-national state or the messianic Israelite kingdom.}}
== Massive Islamic propaganda in introduction ==


makes the same argument: that Zionism, like Czech nationalism, contains elements of both ethnocultural and civic. ] (]) 19:24, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
In the introduction, it states Arabs the "indigenous population of Palestine." This is Islamic propaganda because the indigenous population of Palestine are Jews. <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 04:33, 13 May 2013 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


:We've had discussions about NPOV previously and there has been consensus against adding such tags. Please don't do it. '']''<sup>]</sup> 14:37, 17 January 2025 (UTC)
I also wonder why there isn't any criticism of ] in that article's introduction. Hmmm, it seems the rumors that Misplaced Pages is a far-left/Islamist site are true. <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 04:34, 13 May 2013 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:Describing Zionism as civic nationalism is absolutely a fringe standpoint. Maybe it has "elements" of it, (wouldn't many other forms of ethnic nationalism also have elements of civic nationalism?) but it certainly cannot be characterized as civic nationalism (and is for the most part not characterized as such in RS).
:Quickly flipping through my library:
:Shimoni: {{tq|It has identified Zionism as manifestly a case of ethnic nationalism}}
:Masalha (doesnt use the term, but still describes it throughout his work): {{tq|Zionist nationalism adopted German völkisch theory: people of common descent should seek separation and form one common state. But such ideas of racial nationalism ran counter to those held by liberal nationalism in Western Europe, whereby equal citizenship regardless of religion or ethnicity — not ‘common descent’ — determined the national character of the state.}}
:Sand: {{tq|Zionism from its inception was an ethnocentric nationalist movement}}
:Shafir: {{tq|Zionism was founded, like other types of nationalism, on a ''theory of political legitimacy, which requires that ethnic boundaries should not cross political ones."}}
:Shapira (also does not use the same term, but describes it and uses a similar term): {{tq|The concept of nation that originated in the French Revolution was not ser­ viceable as a basis for a Jewish conception of nationhood. A stateless people, the Jews could not embrace the idea of citizenship based on the notion of a state. Iron­ ically, it was the Romantic-exclusivistic brand of nationalism (whose prescriptions meant that the Jews could never be an integral part of the organic nation) that con­ tained certain ideas able to function as a basis for an elaborated notion of a Jewish nation and national movement.}}
:Stanislawski: {{tq| Indeed, in most ways Zionism followed the common pattern of modern nationalist movements, which began in the early nineteenth century in Western and Central Europe and then spread into Eastern Europe in the middle and late nineteenth century. These began as ideologies of cultural renaissance among small groups of intellectuals and writers who were heavily influenced by the ideas of philosophers such as J. G. Herder and J. G. Fichte, who argued that humanity was fundamentally divided into distinct “nations,” each of which had a unique history, culture, and “national spirit” ( Volksgeist in German). Thus, the word “nation,” which previously had a very loose meaning that could apply to essentially any group of people united by some common bond (one spoke, for example, of the “nation of students”), now acquired a highly specific and exclusive meaning: every person’s primary identification was as a member of his or her nation, rather than other forms of self-definition or loyalty—religious, regional, local, even familial.}} ] (]) 16:58, 17 January 2025 (UTC)
::Some persuasive quotes there, but not all unproblematic.
::*First, I'd discount Sand as very fringe and contrarian, not an instance of the academic best source, let alone the consensus view (See, for example, . Among other things, she points out that Sand reject's Smith's theory, which includes the very distinction between ethnic and civic nationalism)
::*Shimoni and Marsalha do indeed argue strongly (and often, to me, compellingly) that Zionism as a movement and labour Zionism in particular was an "eastern European" ethnic nationalism, at least in the late 19th/early 20th centuries. But this is their position, not the settled view of scholars in general that we can relay in our own voice.
::*Shafir is quoting Gellner about ''all'' nationalisms: his position is that all nationalisms are essentially ethnocultural, in which case it's a redundancy. In fact Shafir immediately goes on to problematise the categorisation: {{tq|Zionism was founded, ''like other types of nationalism,'' on a 'theory of political legitimacy, which requires that ethnic boundaries should not cross political ones." The conditions under which nation-states come into existence do, however, call for strikingly different methods of mobilization, which accordingly generate distinct societies. To which of these configurations does Zionism belong? Obviously, Zionism cannot be classed with the English or French cases. ... Faced with the multi-ethnic Habsburg, Romanov, and Ottoman Empires, which impeded modern state formation, the Eastern European method23 did require nationalist ideological mobilization for secession. This model is applicable to Israeli state and nation formation, but only in part. ''At the outset, Zionism was a variety of Eastern European nationalism, that is, an ethnic movement in search of a state. But at the other end of the journey it may be seen more fruitfully as a late instance of European overseas expansion,'' which had been taking place from the sixteenth through the early twentieth centuries.}}
::*I haven't got Shapira to hand so maybe she works for "ethnocultural" although she doesn't use the term. On the basis of this quote alone it feels a slight stretch. I note she uses the term "ethnic" nine times in her book, and "ethnocultural" not once.
::*Stanislawki is simply saying that Zionism is a form of nationalism. In ''most ways'', he says, ''it followed the pattern of nationalism in general''. The fact he uses the word "ethnic" just five times in his whole book and "ethnocultural" not once (versus "nationalism/t" some 50+ times) shows how central this is to his understanding, and why it shouldn't be in the first sentence.
::] (]) 12:10, 20 January 2025 (UTC)
::''Describing Zionism as civic nationalism is absolutely a fringe standpoint.'' That's not Conforti's view. He says {{tq|This article analyses the ethnic and civic components of the early Zionist movement. The debate over whether Zionism was an Eastern-ethnic nationalist movement or a Western-civic movement began with the birth of Zionism.... The debate over the character of Jewish nationalism – ethnic or civic – continues to engage researchers and remains a topic of public debate in Israel even today. As this article demonstrates, the debate between ‘Eastern’ and ‘Western’ Zionism has its foundations in the origins of the Zionist movement.}} His conclusion: {{tq|Ahad Ha’am’s vision was not entirely particularistic and ethnic, nor was Herzl’s vision entirely universalistic and civic. Both visions rest on the middle ground between East and West, ethnic and civic Jewish nationalism. The civic model per se cannot fully explain Jewish nationalism, which stemmed from the ethnic consciousness of the Jewish people and not from a territorial basis. On the other hand, from the outset Zionism adopted Western civic political thought, which intensified }through continued cooperation between the Zionist movement and the Jewish communities in the West... The current debate over the desired character of Israeli democracy – ethnic or civic – is based on questions raised by the classic Zionist thinkers. The approach of researchers who consider that Zionism expressed ethnic aspirations only and was devoid of civic elements is based on the belief that Israel as a civic state was preferable to Israel as a nation-state (Sand 2008: 277–92; Wassermann 2007: 377–88). But in classical Zionism, as we have seen, both elements, ethnic and civic, operated in parallel on the path to fulfillment of the Zionist project.}} ] (]) 12:19, 20 January 2025 (UTC)
:::In that article conforti acknowledges that the mainstream view is to characterize Zionism as an ethnic nationalism. ] (]) 17:41, 20 January 2025 (UTC)
::::Where does he say that? ] (]) 05:26, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::Conforti is arguing in contrast to Kohn's characterization of Zionism which is the mainstream characterization. ] (]) 06:59, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::Kohn's view set the paradigm for nationalism studies in the 1940s (and shaped Gellner), but has been sharply under attack by people like AD Smith on one hand, who argue that all nationalisms are ethnic, and by people like Brubaker on the other who argue that Kuhn's dichotomy is a false one. Smith's and Brubaker positions have now overtaken Kohn's as the dominant ones in nationalism studies. Conforti: {{tq|Kohn’s dichotomy is important as an analytical tool in research on nationalism; however, as ''many critics'' have noted, we cannot clearly separate between ethnic and civic, Eastern and Western models, in all nationalist movements (Brown 1999; Kuzio 2002; Kymlicka 1995; Smith 1998: 210–13; Yack 1996)... In the modern discourse, ''some'' follow Kohn’s approach and view Jewish nationalism as a development of ethnic nationalism (Dahan and Wassermann 2006: 11–28; Sand 2008; Wassermann 2007), but ''others'' believe that the Jewish nation-state follows the principles of Western liberalism (Yakobson and Rubinstein 2009).}} As Conforti notes, all of these positions are positions in a contentious terrain of scholarly debate, on which we should not rule in our voice, least of all in the first sentence of the lead. ] (]) 12:19, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::The emphasis on "others" here is key, especially noting that Conforti cites a single publication for this view.
:::::::As for Smith, Shimoni, cited above, heavily relies on Smith in his coverage of Zionist ideology and explicitly characterizes Zionism as an ethnic nationalism. ] (]) 19:42, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::::Yes as I said, Smith departs from Kohn in basically seeing all nationalisms as ethnic, making the prefix redundant. There are three major positions on this, and our first sentence privileges Kohn’s as the truth. ] (]) 07:23, 22 January 2025 (UTC)

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All prior and subsequent edits to the article are noted in its revision history.

ConsensusCurrent consensus (January 2025):
  • In this RfC it was found that there was consensus that the sentence "Zionists wanted to create a Jewish state in Palestine with as much land, as many Jews, and as few Palestinian Arabs as possible" is compliant with NPOV and should remain in the lead.

Section sizes
Section size for Zionism (54 sections)
Section name Byte
count
Section
total
(Top) 21,251 21,251
Terminology 3,947 3,947
Beliefs 14 48,523
National self-determination 1,580 1,580
Claim to a Jewish demographic majority and a Jewish state in Palestine 18,414 18,414
Zionism, antisemitism and an "existential need" for self-determination 3,926 3,926
Racial conceptions of Jewish identity 10,637 10,637
Conquest of labor 3,038 3,038
Negation of the life in the Diaspora 1,077 7,431
Zionism and secular Jewish identity 6,354 6,354
Revival of the Hebrew language 3,483 3,483
History 80 93,147
Historical and religious background 6,634 6,634
Forerunners of Zionism 5,078 5,078
Establishment of the Zionist movement 329 14,294
Jewish nationalism and emancipation 3,846 3,846
Leon Pinsker, Theodor Herzl and the birth of modern political Zionism 6,207 6,207
Territories considered 3,912 3,912
Early Zionist settlement 13,849 14,956
Second Aliyah 1,107 1,107
The Balfour Declaration and World War I 2,457 4,789
King-Crane Commission 2,332 2,332
British Mandate and development of the Zionist quasi-state 6,556 6,556
Zionist policies and the 1936–1939 Arab Revolt 3,999 3,999
The Peel Commission transfer proposal 8,748 8,748
Nazism, World War II and the Holocaust 8,412 8,412
End of the Mandate and expulsion of the Palestinians 9,291 11,216
Hebraization of names 1,925 1,925
Post-World War II 5,179 5,179
Religious Zionism and the Six-Day War 3,206 3,206
Types 2,531 28,993
Early Zionist Strains 3,032 3,032
Labor Zionism 9,582 9,582
Synthetic and General Zionism 3,282 3,282
Revisionist Zionism 3,140 3,140
Religious Zionism 3,385 3,385
Liberal Zionism 2,391 2,391
Cultural Zionism 1,650 1,650
Non-Jewish support 26 8,559
Christian support 6,380 6,380
Hindu support 2,153 2,153
Anti-Zionism 13,990 27,118
Characterization as colonialist and racist 5,495 5,495
Haredi Judaism and Zionism 5,208 5,208
Anti-Zionism or antisemitism 2,425 2,425
Zionism and colonialism 16,017 18,911
Zionism as settler colonialism 2,894 2,894
Violence 52 52
See also 345 345
Notes 47 47
References 30 35,517
Works cited 35,487 35,487
Further reading 2,887 2,887
External links 864 864
Total 290,161 290,161

Length

This article is massively overlength, more than double the size identified at Misplaced Pages:Summary_style#Article_size. I propose, as a first step towards resolving this problem, reinstating this edit. Nikkimaria (talk) 04:41, 13 January 2025 (UTC)

  • Oppose wholesale specific diff, support some cuts. In my view it removes some things that are valuable while retaining things that aren't. However I do agree with some of the removals, such as the clause, "a term denoting the force needed to prevent Palestinian resistance against colonization", the Morris quote, the Herzl quote about antisemitism, the quotes in the section about Gandhi, the lengthy part about South Africa, and the lengthy quotes in the section about Chomsky and Finkelstein, the Sternhell and Busbridge parts. That should all be cut in my view. I'd leave the stuff about the declaration of independence and the framework of the Israeli government since I think that's fairly critical to Zionism, and I'd leave the stuff about the revival of Hebrew. Andre🚐 05:04, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
Some of the cuts make sense to me. Would be better to trim things one by one with an edit summary rather than in one swoop that will inevitably be contested. BobFromBrockley (talk) 14:24, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
agreed, and also agree with self that we should focus on the longest sections. The antizionism section in particular seems excessively long and detailed. DMH223344 (talk) 16:41, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
The current word count is 17,732, well into the zone where a split is recommended.--♦IanMacM♦ 16:52, 13 January 2025 (UTC)
adding some justification in the edit summaries wouldnt hurt either DMH223344 (talk) 05:25, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
While I appreciate the effort you've put into this, it's important to be careful that our presentation here reflects that in RS. For example, the removal of "which began to emerge even before the appearance of modern antisemitism as a major factor" from the sentence "The development of Zionism and other Jewish nationalist movements grew out of these sentiments, which began to emerge even before the appearance of modern antisemitism as a major factor" gives it a different meaning, and minimizes the importance of antisemitism.
Also, there is now no mention in the article that Zionism was not the only form of Jewish nationalism. DMH223344 (talk) 05:33, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Overall, I think the work done in these edits to trim the article while also to strengthen has been an improvement.
I also quibble with some of the specific trims, e.g. I agree with DMH that a brief mention of other forms of Jewish nationalism is due. BobFromBrockley (talk) 18:51, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
Should we decide on a target length? Otherwise the tag will stick around forever. DMH223344 (talk) 18:12, 17 January 2025 (UTC)

Should we mention Altneuland at all?

I agree that Altneuland is important, but it doesnt seem to have been important enough for this article for there to be more than 2 disconnected sentences about it. I suggest we remove them since they dont seem to be adding much at the moment. DMH223344 (talk) 16:21, 15 January 2025 (UTC)

Chomsky shouldn’t be cited in the intro

He’s a linguist and polemicist, not a historian. The claim that “ Mainstream Zionist groups for the most part differ more in style than substance” isn’t true imo but that’s probably more than I want to bite off.Prezbo (talk) 17:36, 15 January 2025 (UTC)

That's a little reductive of Chomsky's career. Frankly there's a lot of people, particularly in Anthropology, who think Chomsky is at his weakest as a linguist. On the other hand Chomsky has been a political analyst since at least 1967 and he has published multiple very prominent books on world politics. Simonm223 (talk) 17:43, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Can we agree that he has, how can I put it, a very particular viewpoint? And Chomsky has had his share of self-owns in the political arena as well. It's like citing William F. Buckley or Friedrich Hayek (without attribution) in the lead of the Soviet Union article. I'm just saying, when I clicked on this footnote, I expected to see sources written by historians or political scientists. Seeing Chomsky makes me trust the statement less rather than more. Prezbo (talk) 18:19, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
For the nth time this week a person being left wing does not make them unreliable as a source. I also don't agree with everything Chomsky ever said. For instance I think he decidedly lost his debate with Foucault. I've also been critical, in this thread, of his work on language acquisition. I am not suggesting Chomsky is infallable. However to suggest that citing possibly the most prominent Jewish anarchist political commentator in the world about Zionism is like citing Hayek without attribution for the Soviet Union is such a bizarre simile that I'm actually having trouble parsing it. For the record I do think statements from Chomsky should be attributed. I just think, considering his prominence as a political commentator over the last 60 years, his opinions are highly due inclusion, even in the lede. Simonm223 (talk) 18:30, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Anarchism is an unpopular ideology, I'm not impressed by the "most prominent Jewish anarchist political commentator in the world" descriptor. He's a prominent left-wing commentator who has opinions on many subjects, not a widely acknowledged expert on this particular topic. If it was Edward Said instead of Chomsky I probably would have let it go. But if we agree that it's inappropriate to cite him in the lede without attribution then I suppose that's progress. Prezbo (talk) 18:38, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Sadly Said has been dead for more than 20 years which leaves him unable to speak to the suffering of Palestinians today. And, frankly, your personal opinions of anarchism are entirely irrelevant to matters of WP:DUE. Simonm223 (talk) 18:52, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
The Chomsky quote we're discussing is from 1999. Prezbo (talk) 18:54, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Wait so this is just about bundled citation 9? No that's obviously WP:DUE. It's from a very widely cited book produced by a venerable publishing house and, just to put a ribbon on top, Said wrote the foreword. Simonm223 (talk) 19:01, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Your claims of WP:ONUS are entirely backward. WP:BRD is pretty clear - you were bold. I reverted. Now you are edit warring. Simonm223 (talk) 19:06, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Please provide some justification better than disliking anarchists for cutting the Chomsky book. Simonm223 (talk) 19:19, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
I agree with what Simon wrote. Your personal opinion is not grounds for deletion. DMH223344 (talk) 19:19, 15 January 2025 (UTC)


To explain my edit summary a bit further: this just seems like an outlandish claim to me, no matter how many citations are alleged to back it up. The differences between Hashomer Hatzair and Irgun were stylistic? It's flattening a huge range of political opinions over a broad expanse of time. I don't expect to win this one bc my commitment to the topic isn't that great but it's not an appropriate statement for the lead. Prezbo (talk) 19:28, 15 January 2025 (UTC)

Your instincts are not an appropriate measure - nor is your opinion of Chomsky's political ideology. This is just WP:IDONTLIKEIT only now you've created two threads about it. Chomsky is due inclusion for his attributed opinion. There are very few living people more prominent in this space. Simonm223 (talk) 19:33, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Forget about Chomsky. Can you defend the claim that "Mainstream Zionist groups for the most part differ more in style than substance"? Prezbo (talk) 19:35, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
I don't need to. A reliable source said it. Simonm223 (talk) 19:36, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Flatly you're now asking that we conduct WP:OR rather than include a reliable source and, in fact, are asking us to forget the source is reliable and just look at the words you dislike that the reliable source said. Simonm223 (talk) 19:39, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Spoken like a true Wikipedian. I'm sure I could dig up some sources for the counterclaim that "there is a wide range of opinion in the Zionist movement." Here's one. Of course it has a distinct POV but that doesn't mean it's unreliable, right? Here's another one from a University Press. This isn't really about sources. There's editorial discretion involved in which sources we cite and how we paraphrase their claims. I think this is not a good hill to die on but I'll try to make this my last comment on the issue. Prezbo (talk) 19:44, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
Unlike Chomsky the ADL is not a reliable source for Israel / Palestine conflict discussions. Simonm223 (talk) 19:46, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
On the other hand Zionism and the Creation of a New Society would appear to meet WP:RS criteria and would likely be due inclusion. Though neither of the authors have the significant reputation of Chomsky. Simonm223 (talk) 19:48, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
In any case, there being a wide range of opinion in the movement does not contradict the statement that the differences between the mainstream groups were primarily differences of style. DMH223344 (talk) 23:05, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
The range of scholars cited for this claim is very wide: Shapira, Gorny, Ben-Ami, Shlaim, Chomsky, Penslar, Sternhell DMH223344 (talk) 23:07, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
I’m not going to track down all of those citations to see how much they really support this sentence. I’ll note that Chomsky and Sternhell are controversial to say the least. Everything about this topic is controversial. Let me further note that the intro of Palestinian nationalism has a while section emphasizing the differences of opinion inside the movement. They’re different movements but not that different. Most political movements contain a diversity of viewpoints, while agreeing on some central tenets. If the article said that about Zionism I would be fine with it. To me that’s very different from saying the differences between Labor and Likud are primarily stylistic. And now I really will try to walk away. Prezbo (talk) 23:24, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
It would seem that the Chomsky thing isn't attributed though but is being used to discuss a claim in wikivoice. While this sentence has been discussed in the past, WP:CCC. However, maybe this and the last thread should be combined since they seem to be the same thing. I believe this claim is unduly synthetic and an oversimplification, and we've discussed other sources which portray a range of ideological strains within Zionism. Engel, and Shindler, among others, not to rehash the same discussion again. Even Penslar doesn't really support this. Trying to be constructive, maybe there's a way to change the phrasing to accomplish what it's trying to say and summarize those sources that say it without getting into what appears to be a conclusion not stated explicitly in the sources, or portraying that WP:SOURCESDIFFER. Also, there's a change over time element to this. Zionist groups disagreed on quite a few substantial issues but consolidated over time; that fact is elided in the intro as it stands. Andre🚐 23:23, 15 January 2025 (UTC)
No. You are mistaken. It's literally presented as a quote.Simonm223 (talk) 01:16, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
I believe you are the one who is mistaken or it's semantic, but not according to the conventional meaning of attribution on Misplaced Pages. It's quoted in the footnote, but that's not what we mean by attribution per WP:ATTRIBUTEPOV. Attribution in Misplaced Pages parlance would mean the article text would read something like "According to theorists a la Chomsky, mainstream Zionist groups for the most part differ more in style than substance...." Andre🚐 03:25, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
I support Prezbo's edit. Chomsky is not an appropriate source for the lead. There is no way that he is a best source for this contentious topic. It's simply not his area of expertise; he's not someone cited in the scholarly literature.
The claim is a highly contentious one, that some have made. We can report that, and attribute it. Other serious scholars say the opposite, which we can also report with attribution -- in the body not the lead. It's not something we can say in our voice, and definitely not in the lead.
The other sources cited don't really say what it was being used for either. BobFromBrockley (talk) 18:57, 16 January 2025 (UTC) (PS speaking as an anarchist-adjacent person I want to add that Chomsky being an anarchist is a really bad reason to remove him. Plenty of serious scholars are also anarchists, and indeed for that matter a few major figures in the Zionist tradition. BobFromBrockley (talk) 19:28, 16 January 2025 (UTC))
But it's not just Chomsky who is making this claim. Even if you remove him from the list the range of scholars making this assessment is very wide. DMH223344 (talk) 19:08, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
While we may disagree about his relative significance as far as attributed opinion (and for the record I've never said the opinion shouldn't be attributed or should be in wiki voice) I really appreciate you giving a sanity check on those people who denigrated his politics as "unpopular" as if that was just cause to minimize his views.Simonm223 (talk) Simonm223 (talk) 20:09, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
  • Chomsky has a huge number of extremely high-profile, highly-cited works on politics published in academic sources. The argument that his only expertise is linguistics is just wrong - he's also an extremely impactful political scholar, to the point where he could trivially pass WP:EXPERTSPS on politics alone (not that that threshold is necessary here, because these are published by reliable high-quality publishers.) He obviously has a stark perspective, and this does have to be evaluated when determining due weight, but his position on Israel is not fringe by any standard; as one of the most highly-cited authors alive (including, yes, in his work on politics) he's a logical source to attribute. Neither is the statement made here particularly WP:EXCEPTIONAL; it seems to be a common position. --Aquillion (talk) 20:36, 17 January 2025 (UTC)

Sources used for style not substance

Per DMH comment on Chomsky not being only source, just pasting the sources previously cited:

  • Sternhell 1999 harvnb error: no target: CITEREFSternhell1999 (help): "The difference between religious and secular Zionism, be- tween the Zionism of the Left and the Zionism of the Right, was merely a difference of form and not an essential difference."
  • Penslar 2023, p. 60 harvnb error: no target: CITEREFPenslar2023 (help)
  • Ben-Ami 2007, p. 3 harvnb error: no target: CITEREFBen-Ami2007 (help)
  • Shapira 1992, Conclusion harvnb error: no target: CITEREFShapira1992 (help)
  • Shlaim 2001, Prologue harvnb error: no target: CITEREFShlaim2001 (help)
  • Ben-Ami, Shlomo (2022). Prophets Without Honor. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-006047-3. Archived from the original on June 24, 2024. Retrieved June 23, 2024.
  • Gorny 1987, p. 165 harvnb error: no target: CITEREFGorny1987 (help): "As a member of the Zionist Executive in 1921-3, he soon discovered that what divided him from his colleagues in the Zionist leadership was not political differences, but mainly his style of political action"
  • Chomsky 1999, Rejectionism and Accommodation: "In essence, then, the two programs are not very different. Their difference lies primarily in style. Labor is, basically, the party of the educated Europe-oriented elite—managers, bureaucrats, intellectuals, etc. Its historical practice has been to "build facts" while maintaining a low-keyed rhetoric with conciliatory tones, at least in public. In private, the position has been that "it does not matter what the Gentiles say, what matters is what the Jews do" (Ben-Gurion) and that "the borders are where Jews live, not where there is a line on a map" (Golda Meir).21 This has been an effective method for obtaining the ends sought without alienating Western opinion—indeed, while mobilizing Western (particularly American) support." harvnb error: no target: CITEREFChomsky1999 (help)

BobFromBrockley (talk) 11:58, 17 January 2025 (UTC)

We could add sources that take the opposite view. Here's two to start with:
  • Conforti, Yitzhak (2010). "East and West in Jewish nationalism: conflicting types in the Zionist vision?". Nations and Nationalism. 16 (2): 201–219. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8129.2010.00418.x. The very existence of opposing positions in classical Zionism regarding the vision of the future of the Jewish state reveals the great variety within Jewish nationalism. Zionism represented different Jewish dreams and yearnings that conflicted in their relation to consciousness of the Jewish past as well as to aspirations for the future
  • Taylor, Alan R. (1972). "Zionism and Jewish History". Journal of Palestine Studies. 1 (2). Taylor & Francis, Ltd.: 35–51. ISSN 0377-919X. JSTOR 2535953. Retrieved 20 January 2025. The diversity of Zionism greatly facilitated this task, since every sectarian or political preference in the Diaspora had a counterpart within the Zionist movement.

See also Seidler, Boyarin and Shindler quotes in current notes 249-250.

BobFromBrockley (talk) 12:30, 20 January 2025 (UTC)
These quotes don't actually refute the quotes above. We would need something along the lines of "left and right in Zionism were essentially different movements, with fundamentally different goals, strategies and tactics." DMH223344 (talk) 17:32, 20 January 2025 (UTC)
The text some of us are disputing is “Mainstream Zionist groups for the most part differ more in style than substance, having in some cases adopted similar strategies to achieve their goals, such as violence or compulsory transfer to deal with the Palestinians.” That seems like an incoherent sentence, because to me the same strategies would equate to the same style while different goals would equate to a different substance. To refute the first half, we just need to show that they differed in substance. To refute the second half, we just need to show they didn’t adopt the same strategies. I think showing that lots of scholars say there were fundamental differences within the Zionist mainstream is enough to make it untenable to make the claim for homogeneity in our voice. BobFromBrockley (talk) 05:39, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
The statement being contested is saying that the differences were primarily tactical or political, rather than fundamental differences of goals or strategy.
The quotes from Conforti and Taylor both say there was diversity in the movement. Conforti mentions differing "visions" of the future state. Neither are really talking about fundamental differences in goals or strategy. DMH223344 (talk) 07:00, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
So wouldn't it be better that different scholars take a range of positions on the degree to which there is a unitary, cohesive Zionism with shared goals and visions but differences in style and strategy (eg Gorny, Marsalha, Shimoni), or if Zionism is more heterogeneous and diverse (eg Shindler, Penslar, Conforti, Dubnov)? BobFromBrockley (talk) 12:22, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
Calling zionism diverse is fine, but here we are interested in strategies and goals. DMH223344 (talk) 20:06, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
It’s in the middle of a paragraph summarising the Types of Zionism section, not a paragraph about strategies and goals. BobFromBrockley (talk) 07:20, 22 January 2025 (UTC)

my trims/additions

It is entirely possible that these may be my last edits to this page for a while; wanted to leave a few notes.

  • Regarding Hebrew, I removed the part that had no citations. I also concentrated the sentence on the main point, but I think it's worth noting that being the liturgical language meant that Hebrew did have a vibrant medieval life as the language of some poems and prayers, but also as a kind of lingua franca among Jewish communities. I suspect that some of the sources talk about this a bit as it relates to Cultural Zionism, which is really still underweight in my view.
  • I continue to feel the technicalities of early Zionist parliamentarianism and early Zionists' views of issues of territory, transfer, etc. is overweight versus some of the modern stuff.
  • "Zionist historiography" is basically the national-conservative historiography that is going to be opposed in a lot of ways to either the New historiography (Morris, and Pappe) and the Arab historiography. "Traditional historiography" is also a thing. I restored the mentions of the forerunners and the proto-Zionists and medieval aliyah and messianism because it's critical to understanding the traditional historiography. It has less weight in Arab and New historiography because they're focused more on labor issues, population issues, but let's not forget there are also aspects that we left out, such as the malarial swamp and technological developments which relate to labor and are covered by Shapira in her other book, that are also part of the modern historiography. Also, this article should consider patterning itself after a general world or general political history of the region in some sense, to get an outside-of-the-box view rather than this inside baseball stuff. The article still reads a bit like a term paper.
  • We had a list of best sources and there is still plenty that either is over/underweight or left out altogether or probably not necessary according to my read of most of those.
  • A few things I removed were tagged with "page needed" for months, but restore them if you can check the page and find a close enough, but not too close, paraphrase. I failed to. I think there are still some issues of synthesis and kludgy frankensteining to fix.

Andre🚐 04:05, 16 January 2025 (UTC)

Reverted because I don't agree with your assessment of UNDUE or that stuff was duplicative. TarnishedPath 06:17, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
Fine, on some of it, but this part: the decline of the status of religion in the Jewish community. What page of Yadgar is that summarizing? AFAIK, it's not a true statement that Zionism caused a decline in the status of religion of the Jewish community. Zionism was/is a fundamentally secular movement and a secularization of certain Jewish religious concepts that predate Zionism, but that isn't the same thing. Many Jewish communities are extremely religious, while other groups are less so, but in general, the religiosity of every group has been declining for a while - not just Jewish groups - and the Haskalah has more to do with the Jewish secularization, and is also a cause of/related to the growth of Zionism. Also, on another point, you restored a statement that had a citation needed tag, so you should provide a citation for it. And the ones with no pages numbered need page numbers. They've been tagged for months. Andre🚐 06:26, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
@DMH223344 reverted the stuff to do with page numbers. You'll need to ask them about that. I took the revert further. TarnishedPath 06:48, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
There were page numbers needed in that text you reverted too, if I'm not mistaken. Such as the one I just quoted. Fine for DMH223344 to respond too of course, as most likely he was the one who originally added it anyway.
Here is what you restored:

"The Zionist goal of reframing of Jewish identity in secular-nationalist terms meant primarily the decline of the status of religion in the Jewish community.Prominent Zionist thinkers frame this development as nationalism serving the same role as religion, functionally replacing it. Zionism sought to make Jewish ethnic-nationalism the distinctive trait of Jews rather than their commitment to Judaism. Zionism instead adopted a racial understanding of Jewish identity. Framed this way, Jewish identity is only secondarily a matter of tradition or culture. Zionist nationalism embraced pan-Germanic ideologies, which stressed the concept of das völk: people of shared ancestry should pursue separation and establish a unified state. Zionist thinkers view the movement as a "revolt against a tradition of many centuries" of living parasitically at the margins of Western society. Indeed, Zionism was uncomfortable with the term "Jewish," associating it with passivity, spirituality and the stain of "galut". Instead, Zionist thinkers preferred the term "Hebrew" to describe their identity. In Zionist thought, the new Jew would be productive and work the land, in contrast to the diaspora Jew. Zionism linked the term "Jewish" with negative characteristics prevalent in European anti-Semitic stereotypes, which Zionists believed could be remedied only through sovereignty."

Andre🚐 06:57, 16 January 2025 (UTC)

Correct me if I'm wrong but your edits to do with page numbers were at Special:Diff/1269740494 and Special:Diff/1269740570, those were reverted by DMH223344 at Special:Diff/1269747214. The fact that I reverted back to an edition without the page numbers is immaterial as the diff of the article I reverted from didn't have the page numbers. In any case I would have been restricted from overriding DMH223344's reverts because of the consensus required restriction. The only option available to me if I wanted to over-ride your edits, without reinstating what DMH223344 reverted, was to rollback to a time before you had made any adjustment that I disagreed with and which DMH223344 had reverted. TarnishedPath 07:53, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
I believe you must be incorrect, because I just pasted the text and that text is restored in your diff. If you agree with removing that text, you may do so. Andre🚐 08:21, 16 January 2025 (UTC)
I don't think a page needed tag is a good reason for removal. If there's doubt about the source, maybe a verify quote tag is better. I see page needed as more of a technical improvement issue. My main issue is that some of these claims are the opinions or interpretations of scholars that we should be attributing, rather than the scholarly consensus, so most of the deleted material doesn't look strong enough to keep in a bloated article. BobFromBrockley (talk) 19:01, 16 January 2025 (UTC)

References

  1. ^ Yadgar 2017. sfn error: no target: CITEREFYadgar2017 (help)
  2. Avineri 2017. sfn error: no target: CITEREFAvineri2017 (help)
  3. Shimoni 1995. sfn error: no target: CITEREFShimoni1995 (help)
  4. Yadgar 2020. sfn error: no target: CITEREFYadgar2020 (help)
  5. Masalha 2012. sfn error: no target: CITEREFMasalha2012 (help)

Ethnocultural nationalism

I have long been not a fan of the opening sentence use of "ethnocultural nationalist", currently citing one source, the Israeli philosopher Chaim Gans. Looking back over the talk archive, I don't see the establishment of consensus for this. It's been disputed by multiple editors, and supported by few. (Open to being corrected on that if I missed a robust RfC or similar strong establishment of consensus.) I've looked in Google Scholar to identify if it's a term used widely about Zionism in the academic literature, and it seems to me clear it isn't. It's a term used by Gans, but by almost nobody else that I can see. Open to persuasion if I'm missing something, but if my reading is right, it's not something we should say in our voice and certainly not in the opening sentence.

Even if we agree with Gans that it is an ethnocultural nationalism not a civic nationalism, we still shouldn't use it in our voice in the lead, given that his argument that it is one notes that Herzl and Pinsker were civic not ethnocultural nationalists; that it should specifically be understood as representing a sub-species: a "liberal ethnocultural nationalism"; that many have tried to generate a civic rather than ethnocultural Zionism; and that he is disagreeing with other scholars who don't share his analysis.

Conforti argues that Zionism is a clear case of ethnocultural nationalism, but with paradoxical civic elements: This research concludes that the state of Israel, which developed from a nationalist ethnic-cultural movement, integrated within it ethnic values as well as Western civic values. The founders of the central wing of the movement all aspired to create a Jewish national state that upheld these values... Since Zionism is a clear example of an ethnic national movement, scholars usually tend to ignore its civic components.... I will argue that the two characteristics, civic and ethnic, were continuously present in mainstream Zionist thought and activities from the 1880s to 1948. The primary aim of the 'Zionist consensus' was to create a Western Jewish nation-state, in contrast to two alternatives that were proposed by marginal movements within Zionism: a bi-national state or the messianic Israelite kingdom.

Michael Berkowitz makes the same argument: that Zionism, like Czech nationalism, contains elements of both ethnocultural and civic. BobFromBrockley (talk) 19:24, 16 January 2025 (UTC)

We've had discussions about NPOV previously and there has been consensus against adding such tags. Please don't do it. TarnishedPath 14:37, 17 January 2025 (UTC)
Describing Zionism as civic nationalism is absolutely a fringe standpoint. Maybe it has "elements" of it, (wouldn't many other forms of ethnic nationalism also have elements of civic nationalism?) but it certainly cannot be characterized as civic nationalism (and is for the most part not characterized as such in RS).
Quickly flipping through my library:
Shimoni: It has identified Zionism as manifestly a case of ethnic nationalism
Masalha (doesnt use the term, but still describes it throughout his work): Zionist nationalism adopted German völkisch theory: people of common descent should seek separation and form one common state. But such ideas of racial nationalism ran counter to those held by liberal nationalism in Western Europe, whereby equal citizenship regardless of religion or ethnicity — not ‘common descent’ — determined the national character of the state.
Sand: Zionism from its inception was an ethnocentric nationalist movement
Shafir: Zionism was founded, like other types of nationalism, on a theory of political legitimacy, which requires that ethnic boundaries should not cross political ones."
Shapira (also does not use the same term, but describes it and uses a similar term): The concept of nation that originated in the French Revolution was not ser­ viceable as a basis for a Jewish conception of nationhood. A stateless people, the Jews could not embrace the idea of citizenship based on the notion of a state. Iron­ ically, it was the Romantic-exclusivistic brand of nationalism (whose prescriptions meant that the Jews could never be an integral part of the organic nation) that con­ tained certain ideas able to function as a basis for an elaborated notion of a Jewish nation and national movement.
Stanislawski: Indeed, in most ways Zionism followed the common pattern of modern nationalist movements, which began in the early nineteenth century in Western and Central Europe and then spread into Eastern Europe in the middle and late nineteenth century. These began as ideologies of cultural renaissance among small groups of intellectuals and writers who were heavily influenced by the ideas of philosophers such as J. G. Herder and J. G. Fichte, who argued that humanity was fundamentally divided into distinct “nations,” each of which had a unique history, culture, and “national spirit” ( Volksgeist in German). Thus, the word “nation,” which previously had a very loose meaning that could apply to essentially any group of people united by some common bond (one spoke, for example, of the “nation of students”), now acquired a highly specific and exclusive meaning: every person’s primary identification was as a member of his or her nation, rather than other forms of self-definition or loyalty—religious, regional, local, even familial. DMH223344 (talk) 16:58, 17 January 2025 (UTC)
Some persuasive quotes there, but not all unproblematic.
  • First, I'd discount Sand as very fringe and contrarian, not an instance of the academic best source, let alone the consensus view (See, for example, Shapira's response. Among other things, she points out that Sand reject's Smith's theory, which includes the very distinction between ethnic and civic nationalism)
  • Shimoni and Marsalha do indeed argue strongly (and often, to me, compellingly) that Zionism as a movement and labour Zionism in particular was an "eastern European" ethnic nationalism, at least in the late 19th/early 20th centuries. But this is their position, not the settled view of scholars in general that we can relay in our own voice.
  • Shafir is quoting Gellner about all nationalisms: his position is that all nationalisms are essentially ethnocultural, in which case it's a redundancy. In fact Shafir immediately goes on to problematise the categorisation: Zionism was founded, like other types of nationalism, on a 'theory of political legitimacy, which requires that ethnic boundaries should not cross political ones." The conditions under which nation-states come into existence do, however, call for strikingly different methods of mobilization, which accordingly generate distinct societies. To which of these configurations does Zionism belong? Obviously, Zionism cannot be classed with the English or French cases. ... Faced with the multi-ethnic Habsburg, Romanov, and Ottoman Empires, which impeded modern state formation, the Eastern European method23 did require nationalist ideological mobilization for secession. This model is applicable to Israeli state and nation formation, but only in part. At the outset, Zionism was a variety of Eastern European nationalism, that is, an ethnic movement in search of a state. But at the other end of the journey it may be seen more fruitfully as a late instance of European overseas expansion, which had been taking place from the sixteenth through the early twentieth centuries.
  • I haven't got Shapira to hand so maybe she works for "ethnocultural" although she doesn't use the term. On the basis of this quote alone it feels a slight stretch. I note she uses the term "ethnic" nine times in her book, and "ethnocultural" not once.
  • Stanislawki is simply saying that Zionism is a form of nationalism. In most ways, he says, it followed the pattern of nationalism in general. The fact he uses the word "ethnic" just five times in his whole book and "ethnocultural" not once (versus "nationalism/t" some 50+ times) shows how central this is to his understanding, and why it shouldn't be in the first sentence.
BobFromBrockley (talk) 12:10, 20 January 2025 (UTC)
Describing Zionism as civic nationalism is absolutely a fringe standpoint. That's not Conforti's view. He says This article analyses the ethnic and civic components of the early Zionist movement. The debate over whether Zionism was an Eastern-ethnic nationalist movement or a Western-civic movement began with the birth of Zionism.... The debate over the character of Jewish nationalism – ethnic or civic – continues to engage researchers and remains a topic of public debate in Israel even today. As this article demonstrates, the debate between ‘Eastern’ and ‘Western’ Zionism has its foundations in the origins of the Zionist movement. His conclusion: Ahad Ha’am’s vision was not entirely particularistic and ethnic, nor was Herzl’s vision entirely universalistic and civic. Both visions rest on the middle ground between East and West, ethnic and civic Jewish nationalism. The civic model per se cannot fully explain Jewish nationalism, which stemmed from the ethnic consciousness of the Jewish people and not from a territorial basis. On the other hand, from the outset Zionism adopted Western civic political thought, which intensified }through continued cooperation between the Zionist movement and the Jewish communities in the West... The current debate over the desired character of Israeli democracy – ethnic or civic – is based on questions raised by the classic Zionist thinkers. The approach of researchers who consider that Zionism expressed ethnic aspirations only and was devoid of civic elements is based on the belief that Israel as a civic state was preferable to Israel as a nation-state (Sand 2008: 277–92; Wassermann 2007: 377–88). But in classical Zionism, as we have seen, both elements, ethnic and civic, operated in parallel on the path to fulfillment of the Zionist project. BobFromBrockley (talk) 12:19, 20 January 2025 (UTC)
In that article conforti acknowledges that the mainstream view is to characterize Zionism as an ethnic nationalism. DMH223344 (talk) 17:41, 20 January 2025 (UTC)
Where does he say that? BobFromBrockley (talk) 05:26, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
Conforti is arguing in contrast to Kohn's characterization of Zionism which is the mainstream characterization. DMH223344 (talk) 06:59, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
Kohn's view set the paradigm for nationalism studies in the 1940s (and shaped Gellner), but has been sharply under attack by people like AD Smith on one hand, who argue that all nationalisms are ethnic, and by people like Brubaker on the other who argue that Kuhn's dichotomy is a false one. Smith's and Brubaker positions have now overtaken Kohn's as the dominant ones in nationalism studies. Conforti: Kohn’s dichotomy is important as an analytical tool in research on nationalism; however, as many critics have noted, we cannot clearly separate between ethnic and civic, Eastern and Western models, in all nationalist movements (Brown 1999; Kuzio 2002; Kymlicka 1995; Smith 1998: 210–13; Yack 1996)... In the modern discourse, some follow Kohn’s approach and view Jewish nationalism as a development of ethnic nationalism (Dahan and Wassermann 2006: 11–28; Sand 2008; Wassermann 2007), but others believe that the Jewish nation-state follows the principles of Western liberalism (Yakobson and Rubinstein 2009). As Conforti notes, all of these positions are positions in a contentious terrain of scholarly debate, on which we should not rule in our voice, least of all in the first sentence of the lead. BobFromBrockley (talk) 12:19, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
The emphasis on "others" here is key, especially noting that Conforti cites a single publication for this view.
As for Smith, Shimoni, cited above, heavily relies on Smith in his coverage of Zionist ideology and explicitly characterizes Zionism as an ethnic nationalism. DMH223344 (talk) 19:42, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
Yes as I said, Smith departs from Kohn in basically seeing all nationalisms as ethnic, making the prefix redundant. There are three major positions on this, and our first sentence privileges Kohn’s as the truth. BobFromBrockley (talk) 07:23, 22 January 2025 (UTC)
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