Search JTA's historical archive dating back to 1923

Sacher. of Z.o. Triumvirate, Explains His Program to London Zionist Meeting

October 21, 1927
See Original Daily Bulletin From This Date
Advertisement

(J. T. A. Mail Service)

Philip Guedalla, President of the English Zionist Federation presided at a public meeting held here last night to hear the report of the English Delegation to the Fifteenth Zionist Congress at Basle.

Mr. G?edalh said that there was a noticeable tendency in the Congress mind, the General Zionist mind, to belittle the importance and the value of English Zionism. It was a very general tendency and one with the approval of his Delegation he resolved to do his best to correct. Because a tone which he thought was not very helpful, was addressed to the British Government by one of the best friends of Zionism in the United States, Dr. Wise. Mr. G?edalh tried to make it plain than that tone was not altogether a helpful one, he said.

Harry Sachet, in the course of a statement on the future policy to be ## by the near Executive, said that the reason why Congress made up its mind to constitute the Executive for this ## in a somewhat moved form was because every member present fully understood that the situation ## a special remedy.

One of the ## of Executives in Palestine, ## was that they were not ## in construction. Too much of the members’ time and energy was taken up in ## one another and overcoming one another’s objections. Too often they had to ## for the very fact of their composition to ## which ## at ## a ## and ## the wishes and ## of put one simple member.

“Some ##” said Mr. S## “has ## as to the ## which this next Palestine Executive of this Palestine section of the Executive committees its ##. There are some people who say than this Executive nearly ## forces and ## something the a ## of war upon Labor. That is not only ## it is also very ##. For my ## I am prepared to adopted ## school of economics or policies which will committee the building up of a Jewish National Ham## in Palestine.

“Two years ## of ## were not a time of acting they were as best a time for ##,” he said. They must continue the week they had ## and were doing and introduce such changes as might the necessary in ## and secure the work. “During the five-years that are in front of us,” he said, “## we have the means ## we can council the work, ## upon the Jewish people. But we can and must prepared and clear the way for further ## work after the work of ## and ## have been finished.”

Professor ?rodensky said than he was ## that the only way to ## such problems, as they were interested in connection with the Congress was to have these ## discussed in between Congresses. If they wanted to ## the Zionist Organization it was their business to ## discussing resolution and pressing them on the ## Zionism needed ## from the point of view that Zionist themselves had forgotten with Zionist ## was.

Dr. J. K. Goldl##. Mr. Heberman and Mr. S## also spoke.

Recommended from JTA

Advertisement