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Ussishkin, Avraham Menahem Mendel (1863-1941)
Zionist
leader and president of the Jewish National Fund (JNF).
Born in Russia, Ussishkin became an enthusiastic reader of the works
of contemporary Hebrew writers in his teens, and from then on the revival
of the Hebrew language was one of the main goals of his life work. Like
many other early Hibbat Zion members, he was shocked by the Russian pogroms
of 1881, which emphasized to him the necessity for Jewish emigration.
Ussishkin then began working actively for several Zionist groups. After
graduating as a technical engineer from the Technological Institute in
Moscow, he became active in Hebrew educational work as well as in Zionist
propaganda and fund-raising in Russia.
Ussishkin was a "practical" Zionist who viewed agricultural settlement
in Erez Israel as the first and most important step toward attaining a
Jewish state. He was thus active in recruiting youth for pioneer work
and for agricultural settlement of the land. He was a delegate to the
First Zionist Congress held in Basle in 1893, and was appointed Hebrew
secretary of the Congress. At the Seventh Zionist Congress (1905), he
was among the leaders of those who forced the abandonment of the Uganda
Scheme, and he then proposed a program of Zionism which was later adopted
by the Zionist movement.
Under his influence the Zionist movement actively supported the establishment
of agricultural settlements, educational and cultural institutions, and
a Hebrew university. In 1919 Ussishkin himself settled in Erez Israel,
and in 1923 he was chosen to head the Jewish National Fund, a position
he held for nearly twenty years.
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by C.D.I. Systems 1992 (LTD) and Keter.
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