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  1. Dov Ber Borochov (em russo: Бер Борохов, em iídiche: בער באָראָכאָװ, Zolotonosha, Oblast de Poltava, Ucrânia, 3 de julho de 1881 – Kiev, Ucrânia, 17 de dezembro de 1917) foi um dos pais do Sionismo Socialista, um dos fundadores do partido Poale Zion (Trabalhadores de Sião) e um de seus líderes.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ber_BorochovBer Borochov - Wikipedia

    Dov Ber Borochov (Russian: Дов-Бер Борохов; 3 July 1881 – 17 December 1917) was a Marxist Zionist and one of the founders of the Labor Zionist movement. He was also a pioneer in the study of the Yiddish language.

  3. A scholar of the Jewish people's history, economic structure, language and culture, Borochov—who was largely self-educated—was a brilliant analyst whose main theoretical contribution was the synthesis of class struggle and nationalism at a time when Marxist theory rejected all nationalism—particularly Jewish nationalism.

  4. 28 de out. de 2009 · In contrast to Zhitlovsky and Syrkin, whose ideologies had been largely shaped by the drama of 1881–2, Ber Borochov underwent the decisive political experience of his life in the crisis of 19037.

  5. yivoencyclopedia.org › article › Borokhov_BerYIVO | Borokhov, Ber

    (also Borochov, Borochow, Boruchow; 1881–1917), pivotal thinker and scholar who in his short life of 36 years founded two distinct fields: Labor Zionism and Yiddish studies. He played the dual roles of theoretician and primary activist in both.

  6. Ber Borochov, the founding father of Marxist Zionism, is largely a forgotten figure today. For the international labour movement and in particular, for the Marxist Left, his effort to synthesize socialist internationalism with Jewish nationalism must appear today even more bizarre, not to say illegitimate, than it did to Lenin shortly before ...

  7. BOROCHOV, BER (Dov; 1881–1917), Socialist Zionist leader and foremost theoretician; scholar of the history, economic structure, language, and culture of the Jewish people. A brilliant analyst, in debate as well as in writing, Borochov influenced wide circles of the emerging Jewish labor movement, first in Russia, later in Central and Western ...