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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ahad_Ha'amAhad Ha'am - Wikipedia

    Asher Zvi Hirsch Ginsberg (18 August 1856 – 2 January 1927), primarily known by his Hebrew name and pen name Ahad Ha'am (Hebrew: אחד העם, lit. 'one of the people', Genesis 26:10), was a Hebrew journalist and essayist, and one of the foremost pre-state Zionist thinkers.

  2. Ahad Ha'am (em hebraico: אחד העם, literalmente, "alguém deste povo", Gênesis 26:10) é o nome hebraico e pseudônimo literário de Asher Zvi Hirsch Ginsberg (Skvira, Oblast de Kiev, Ucrânia, 18 de agosto de 1856 – Tel Aviv, 2 de janeiro de 1927) foi um filósofo e ensaísta judeu - um dos mais destacados pensadores ...

  3. Aḥad Haʿam was an intimate adviser to the Zionist leader Chaim Weizmann during the time that Weizmann was playing a leading role in eliciting from the British government its Balfour Declaration of 1917, a document supporting a Jewish homeland in Palestine.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Ascher Hirsch Ginsberg, bekannt auch unter seinem Pseudonym Achad Ha'am, war ein zionistischer Aktivist und Journalist. Er gilt als Hauptvertreter des später so genannten Kulturzionismus, der Lehre vom „geistigen Zentrum“ in Palästina.

  5. Ahad Ha’am believed that the creation in Eretz-Israel of a Jewish cultural center would act to reinforce Jewish life in the Diaspora. His hope was that in this center a new Jewish national identity based on Jewish ethics and values might resolve the crisis of Judaism.

  6. Ahad Ha‑Am,”One of the People”, was the pen‑name of Asher Ginsberg (1856‑1927), Hebrew essay­ist and Zionist thinker. For Ginsberg, Zion­ism was important not only because it sought to provide a physical homeland for the Jewish people but because this homeland had the potential of becoming a spiritual center for world Jewry.

  7. Ahad Ha’am was convinced that “long ago, in the days of the Prophets, we Jews learned to despise physical force and to respect only spiritual power.” In it he saw the justification for the efforts to assure the survival and reflowering of Judaism.