Yishuv - During The Ottoman Rule

During The Ottoman Rule

Aliyah
Jewish immigration to Israel
Pre-Zionist
  • The Return to Zion
  • Old Yishuv
Before Israeli independence
  • First
  • Second
  • During World War I
  • Third
  • Fourth
  • Fifth
  • Aliyah Bet
  • Bricha
After Israeli independence
  • Exodus from Muslim countries
  • Operation Magic Carpet (Yemen)
  • Operation Ezra and Nehemiah
  • 1968 Polish aliyah
  • Aliyah from Ethiopia
  • 1970s Soviet Union aliyah
  • 1990s Post-Soviet aliyah
  • 2000s Latin America aliyah
Concepts
  • Judaism
  • Zionism
  • Galut
  • Yerida
  • Homeland for the Jewish people
  • Jewish messianism
  • Law of Return
Persons and organizations
  • Theodor Herzl
  • Knesset
  • El Al
  • World Zionist Organization
  • Jewish Agency for Israel
  • Nefesh B'Nefesh
  • Ministry of Immigrant Absorption
Related topics
  • Yishuv
  • Immigrant camps
  • Revival of the Hebrew language
  • History of the Jews in the Land of Israel
  • Israeli Jews
  • Jewish diaspora
  • Jewish history
  • History of Zionism
  • History of Israel
  • Historical Jewish population comparisons
Category

The Ottoman government was not supportive of the new settlers from the First and Second Aliyah, as the Ottoman government officially restricted Jewish immigration. The Yishuv relied on money from abroad to support their settlements.

In 1908 the Zionist Organization founded the Palestine Office, under Arthur Ruppin, for land acquisition, agricultural settlement and training, and later for urban expansion. The first Hebrew high schools were opened in Palestine as well as the Technion, the first institution for higher learning. Hashomer, a Zionist self-defence group, was created to protect the Jewish settlements. Labor organizations were created along with health and cultural services, all later coordinated by the Jewish National Council. By 1914, the old Yishuv was a minority and the new Yishuv began to express itself and its Zionist goals.

The Zionist movement tried to find work for the new immigrants who arrived in the Second Aliyah. However, most were middle class and were not physically fit or knowledgeable in agricultural work. The Jewish plantation owners had previously hired Arab workers who accepted low wages and were very familiar with agriculture. The leaders of the Zionist movement insisted that plantation owners (those who arrived in the First Aliyah) only hire Jewish workers and grant higher wages. The conquest of labor was a major Zionist goal. However, this caused some turmoil in the Yishuv for there were those who felt that they were discriminating against the Arabs just as they had been discriminated against in Russia. The Arabs became bitter from the discrimination despite the small number of Arabs that were affected by this.

The First Aliyah was the very beginning of the creation of the New Yishuv. More than 25,000 Jews immigrated to Palestine. The immigrants were inspired by the notion of creating a national home for Jews. Most of the Jewish immigrants came from Russia, escaping the pogroms, while some arrived from Yemen. Many of the immigrants were affiliated with Habbayit Hayehudi/Hovevei Tzion. Hovevei Tzion purchased land from Arabs and other Ottoman subjects and created various settlements such as Yesud HaMa'ala, Rosh Pinna, Gedera, Rishon LeZion, Nes Tziona and Rechovot. These agricultural settlements were supported by philanthropists from abroad, chiefly Theodore Rothschild. Eliezer Ben-Yehuda also immigrated during the first Aliyah. Ben-Yehuda took it upon himself to revive the Hebrew language, and along with Nissim Bechar started a school for teaching Hebrew, later on founding the first Hebrew newspaper.

During the Second Aliyah, between 1903 and 1914, there were 35,000 new immigrants, primarily from Russia.

During World War I, the conditions for the Jews in the Ottoman Empire worsened. All those Jews, who were of an enemy nationality, were exiled and others were drafted into the Ottoman army. Many of those exiled fled to Egypt and the United States. Those, who remained in the Ottoman ruled Palestine, faced hard economic times. There was disagreement whether to support the British or the Turks. A clandestine group, Nili, was established to pass information to the British in the hope of defeating the Ottomans and ending their rule over Palestine. The purpose and members of the Nili were discovered. All involved were executed by the Ottomans except its founder, Aaron Aaronsohn, who escaped to Egypt. During World War I, the Jewish population in Palestine diminished by a third due to deportations, immigration, economic trouble and disease. During World War I, there were two British battalions of Jews, called the Zion Mule Corps, who were to fight on the front of Palestine. They helped in the British capture of Ottoman Syria (including Palestine), leading to the Turkish surrender. The members of the Zion Mule Corps later made up the Yishuv's defence groups that would fight against the British.

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