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Hashomer Hatzair (alt. Hashomer Hatsair and HaShomer HaTzair) (Hebrew for "The Young Guard") is a Zionist-socialist youth movement founded in 1913 in Galicia (now in Poland), and is the oldest Zionist youth movement still in existence. Initially Marxist-Zionist, the movement was influenced by the ideas of Ber Borochov as well as Baden-Powell and the German Wandervogel movement. Hashomer Hatzair believed that the liberation of Jewish youth could be accomplished by aliya (emigration) to Palestine and living in kibbutzim. After the war the movement spread to Jewish communities throughout the world as a scouting movement.
Members of the movement first settled in Palestine in 1919. In 1927 the four kibbutzim founded by Hashomer Hatzair banded together to form the Kibbutz Artzi federation. The movement also formed a political party under the name Hashomer Hartzair which advocated a Binational solution in Palestine with equality between Arabs and Jews. Accordingly, Hashomer Hatzair voted against the Biltmore Program in 1942.
By 1939 Hashomer Hatzair had 70,000 members worldwide. The movement's base was in Eastern Europe. With the advent of World War II and the Holocaust members of Hashomer Hatzair changed their focus from settlement in Palestine to resistance against the Nazis. Mordechaj Anielewicz, the leader of Hashomer Hatzair's Warsaw branch, became head of the Jewish Fighting Organization and leader of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Other members of the movement were involved in Jewish resistance and rescue in Hungary, Lithuania, Slovakia. The leaders of Hashomer Hatzair in Romania were arrested and executed for anti-fascist activities.
After the war, the movement was involved in organising illegal immigration of Jewish refugees to Palestine. Members were also involved in the Haganah military movement as well as in the leadership of the Palmach.
After the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, the Hashomer Hatzair political party merged with other left wing parties to form Mapam which became the political party of both the youth movement and the Kibbutz Artzi federation.
Today, Hashomer Hatzair remains as a youth movement operating summer camps and youth clubs and running educational activities promoting the peace process and withdrawal from the Occupied territories both in Israel and around the world. In Israel it is aligned with Mapam's successor, the lefft-wing Yahad party.
The movement has 3000 members worldwide (excluding Israel) running youth activites in Canada, the United States, Mexico, Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina. Uruguay, Chile, France, Belgium. Austria, Italy, Switzerland, Holland, Hungary, Bulgaria, Belarus, Ukraine and Australia.
Famous alumni include Noam Chomsky, Tony Cliff, Mordecai Anielewicz, Abraham Leon and even Menachem Begin who was briefly a member before joining the right wing Betar.
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