https://mosaicmagazine.com/essay/israel-zionism/2017/11/who-saved-israel-in-1947/

After all, the Jewish people has been closely linked with Palestine for a considerable period in history. Apart from that . . . we must not overlook the position in which the Jewish people found themselves as a result of the recent world war. . . . The solution of the Palestine problem into two separate states will be of profound historical significance, because this decision will meet the legitimate demands of the Jewish people, hundreds of thousands of whom, as you know, are still without a country, without homes, having found temporary shelter only in special camps in some Western European countries.

The Soviet Union voted “yes” for partition, as did its satellites Belorussia, Ukraine, Poland, and Czechoslovakia. (Yugoslavia, another satellite, abstained.)

“They saved the country, I have no doubt of that,” Ben-Gurion would say two decades later. “The Czech arms deal was the greatest help, it saved us and without it I very much doubt if we could have survived the first month.” Golda Meir, in her memoirs, similarly wrote that without the arms from the Eastern bloc, “I do not know whether we actually could have held out until the tide changed, as it did by June 1948.”

  • Idliketothinkimsmart@lemmygrad.ml
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    9 months ago

    No it wasn’t. Zionism itself emerged as a response to what people like Churchill saw as “Judeo-Bolshevism”. He doesn’t use the word “Judeo”, but he makes his feelings quite clear in his anti-semitic screed titled “Good Jews and Bad Jews” in which he singles out Jewish leaders as being the source of a plot to “overthrow civilization”. Leaders like Theodor Herzl also sought the allyship of Antisemitic czarists like Von Plehve on the basis that Zionism would be a counterweight to the Bolshevik party.

    The reimagining of Israel as some socialist/ leftists commune was revisionism from actors like Ben-Gurion who wanted to shy away from the brazenness of zionist leaders like Vladimir Jabotinsky. Just as in Nazi Germany, the mantle of socialism was simply picked up because of it’s popular appeal. Even the supposed communal kibbutzes today are being privatized.

    Source - Palestine: Israel and US Empire by Richard Becker

    • MinekPo1 [She/Her]@lemmygrad.ml
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      9 months ago

      now that I think about , I probably heard it from a pretty lib source (tldr news) , when talking about Ireland-Israel relations .

      And yeah , tell me this guy wouldn’t call the Democrats leftist

      Picture of Ben? from tldr news

      Though to confirm , yes , he said

      being quite left-wing in the 50s and 60s, Israel and Zionism took a rightward turn in the 70s

      here

      • MinekPo1 [She/Her]@lemmygrad.ml
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        9 months ago

        looking into it , it seems like its sloppy journalism , as their source says

        Zionism in its formative years was far more comfortable with socialist ideology, and the early history of the movement is peppered with such names as Poalei Tzion [Workers of Zion] and Achdut HaAvoda [Unity of Labour], as well as the Kibbutz movement. […] It is ironic, then, that since the late 1960s, as Zionism has drifted ever rightward, Irish Republicanism has been going in the opposite direction

        though ofc a very lib perspective too