19/11/2024
Happy Birthday, Sir Moses Montefiore! 🎂🎈🎉 But why do they all look so serious?
The 100th birthday celebrations for Moses Montefiore in November 1884 (18 Heshvan 5645) were just a clever cover for a much more significant event. On this day, exactly 140 years ago, 36 bearded Jewish delegates gathered for the Katowice Conference, organized by Yehuda Leib Pinsker, author of Auto-Emancipation, and Rabbi Shmuel Mohilever, founder of Hovevei Zion (the Society for the Lovers of Zion). Representatives of Hovevei Zion branches from across Europe gathered together to chart a course for Jewish national renewal.
Dozens of such societies had sprouted throughout Eastern Europe in the aftermath of the pogroms of 1881, fostering the idea of a Jewish revival in the Land of Israel. However, in Russia – where most of these groups were based – political and Zionist activity was strictly prohibited under the czar's regime, making communication between members of the different groups almost impossible. To avoid unpleasant consequences for Russian participants, the organizers chose to meet in Katowice, Silesia (southern Poland), and disguised the conference as a birthday celebration for the elderly Montefiore.
This wasn’t the first attempt at uniting these groups. In 1882, Romanian Jews, disillusioned by their lack of civil rights, convened the Focșani Congress, which resolved to promote settlement in the Land of Israel. The Katowice Conference built on this vision, and its resolutions became a driving force behind the First Aliyah and the establishment of early agricultural settlements in the region.
A commemorative plaque at the site of the conference calls it the starting point of the modern State of Israel:
"A gathering of the Hovevei Zion movement was held here, an event recorded in history as the Katowice Conference, marking the beginning of the process that led to the establishment of Israel in 1948."
The photograph is from the archive of Dr. Yosef Hazanovich, a Hovevei Zion representative from Bialystok who was also among the founders of the National Library of Israel.
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