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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. 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.

  4. Aḥad Haʿam was a Zionist leader whose concepts of Hebrew culture had a definitive influence on the objectives of the early Jewish settlement in Palestine. Reared in Russia in a rigidly Orthodox Jewish family, he mastered rabbinic literature but soon was attracted to the rationalist school of.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. On May 19, 1914, when the Hebrew teachers in Palestine proclaimed their boycott against a technical school employing a “foreign” language of instruction, Ahad Ha’am with all his love for Hebrew protested: “I am in general absolutely opposed to all forms of boycott.

  6. Jewish texts and source sheets about Achad HaAm from Torah, Talmud and other sources in Sefaria's library.

  7. 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.