Neha Patil (Editor)

Faction independent of Ahdut HaAvoda

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Founded
  
20 January 1953

Split from
  
Mapam

Political position
  
Left-Wing

Dissolved
  
13 January 1954

Merged into
  
Mapai

Leader
  
David Livschitz Hannah Lamdan

The Faction independent of Ahdut HaAvoda (Hebrew: סיעה בלתי תלויה באחדות העבודה‎‎, Sia Bilti Talouya BeAhdut HaAvoda) was a short-lived political party in Israel.

History

The Faction independent of Ahdut HaAvoda was formed on 20 January 1953 (during the second Knesset) as a breakaway from Mapam in the aftermath of the Prague Trials. The show trials in which mostly Jewish leaders of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia were purged, falsely implicated Mapam's envoy in Prague, Mordechai Oren, as part of a Zionist conspiracy. This, and later Nikita Khrushchev's Secret Speech at the 20th Party Congress in the Soviet Union, led to Mapam moving away from some of their more radical left wing positions, and towards social democracy.

Unhappy with the move, several Mapam MKs left the party; Rostam Bastuni, Avraham Berman and Moshe Sneh established the Left Faction and Moshe Aram, Yisrael Bar-Yehuda, Yitzhak Ben-Aharon and Aharon Zisling set up Ahdut HaAvoda – Poale Zion, recreating the old party that had merged into Mapam. However, Hannah Lamdan and David Livschitz did not wish to join the new Ahdut HaAvoda party, so created the Faction independent of Ahdut HaAvoda.

The faction ceased to exist on 13 January 1954 when Lamdan and Livschitz both joined Mapai.

References

Faction independent of Ahdut HaAvoda Wikipedia