By A.M. Goldstein
HAIFA
—The
old joke that Moses should have turned right—to what is now
Saudi Arabia
and its oil fields—instead of left to
Israel
actually had a true modern counterpart. And
this article might never have been datelined
Haifa
.
Had Nahum Vilbush, one of the 3-man delegation sent by the World Zionist
Congress in 1903 to "spy out"
Uganda
as a possible Jewish homeland, not lost his way in the African wilderness, the
Jewish state might have a different location. Prior to the Balfour Declaration,
the British government had okayed an East African location for a Jewish state.
Dr. Gur Alroey of the
University
of
Haifa
's Dept. of Land of Israel Studies revealed this anecdote of history in a recent
"Academic Diary" interview telecast on cable TV's
Academic Channel.
Vilbush,
incensed by his experience, went back to write a strongly negative report.
The positive report submitted by his two fellow land inspectors was
effectively sidelined, and the trek was renewed to the Middle East rather than
the heart of
Africa
.
The African land that was spied out was not present-day
Uganda
, but a section of
Kenya
. The three who were sent to scout
out the land, Alroey related, separated to cover more of it.
They were to meet at a prearranged point.
Vilbush's compass broke down, and he experienced a mentally harrowing
time finding the meeting point, which influenced his report.
It was this very negative reaction, that "there was noting to look for in
Uganda
," that was played up at the 7th Zionist Congress, according to
the
University
of
Haifa
historian. The argument of the
other two, that the African location was free of diseases, had little
population, and was in good condition, was not stressed.
As a result of the rejection of the
Uganda
option, Israel Zangwill led a group that resigned from the Zionist Congress to
form the "Jewish Territorial Organization."
Vilbush went on to settle in
Haifa
.
A.M.
Goldstein is the English language editor for the University of Haifa's Department
of External Affairs.
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