From a historical perspective, five different currents can be identified in Zionism: the spiritual current of Ahad Ha’am; the political current, which is attributed to Herzl but whose beginnings already existed in the first half of the 19th century; the socialist current; the religious current; and the revisionist current.

Despite the classification into five currents, it can be argued, quite easily, that they all had a common vision that can be summed up as follows: to bring as many Jews as possible to the Land of Israel, and to acquire as much land as possible in order to settle Jews there. Political, practical Zionism operated in exactly these directions from the beginning of the First Aliyah until the establishment of the Jewish state. Along the way, several stops are worth noting, such as the Balfour Declaration (1917), the Great Arab Revolt (1936), and the partition decision (November 1947).

The common denominator of all currents was one: an understanding that Jews could not be equal in countries ruled by foreigners. Theodor Herzl, for example, wrote about this extensively in his diary. And when he was looking for land in which to settle Jews, he thought that they must manage their affairs independently. Actually, Herzl asked for emancipation. Why? Because the basic idea was that the person (the Jew) is at the center of a heated philosophical debate about what will lead to the freedom of Jews. The common conclusion was simple: a free Jewish state.In 1948, the vision became a reality. For the first time in history, a Jewish state was established, as stipulated in the Israeli Declaration of Independence. But after almost 77 years, it seems that Zionism has deviated from its path and needs to recalculate its course.

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