HaRav
Tzvi Hirsch Kalischer (1795 - 1874)
Rabbi and pioneer Zionist (b. Leszno, Prussia, 1795; d. Thorn, Prussia,
1874). A student of Rabbi Akiva Eger and a strong opponent of Reform Judaism,
Kalischer also acquired a knowledge of philosophy and other secular subjects.
He spent most of his life as a rabbi in Thorn (now Torun, Poland), serving
without salary. In 1882 he declared that the redemption of Zion would
have to begin with action on the part of the Jewish people; the messianic
miracle would then follow. He frequently had to defend these views against
rabbinic opponents in both Europe and Eretz- Israel who insisted that
the Jewish people would have to wait for the Messiah without taking any
action to hasten its deliverance. His volume Derishat Tziyon ve-Hevrat
Erez Noshevet (1862) was in effect the first Hebrew book to appear
in eastern Europe on the subject of modern Jewish agricultural settlement
in Eretz- Israel.
Kalischer traveled through Germany asking wealthy and influential Jews
to aid Jewish settlement projects. His influence inspired the founding
of several settlement societies, and in 1864 he was responsible for the
establishment of the Central Committee for Settlement in Eretz-Israel
in Berlin. Kalischer first interested the Alliance Israelite Universelle
in aiding agriculture in Erez Israel, an interest which led to the opening
of the Mikve Yisrael Agricultural School in 1870. In reply to the argument
from various quarters in Eretz-Israel that conditions were not propitious
for the establishment of agricultural settlements, he proposed that the
settlers organize guard units whose members would combine farm work with
defense against attack. Tirat Tzevi, a religious kibbutz in the Bet She'an
Valley, is named for him.
-- "New Encyclopedia of Zionism and Israel,"ed. Geoffrey Wigoder. Copyright
1994 by Associated University Press.
|