![]()
From its inception the JLC had supported the demand for free immigration of Jews into Palestine and lent support to labor and Yiddish cultural institutions there. When the British White Paper of 1939 virtually cut off Jewish immigration, the JLC protested vigorously and enlisted the help of its AFL and Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) allies in demanding that the gates be reopened for the desperate victims of Nazism. By 1945 the JLC had adopted a stance of benign neutrality toward Jewish nationalism, but still would not officially endorse the notion of a Jewish state.
In the shadow of the European debacle, more and more JLC affiliates began to look favorably upon the development of some sort of Jewish "home" in Palestine; many expressed the hope that Arab and Jewish workers could build the country together, join in common labor struggles, and live in peace and mutual respect.
|
| |||||
|
| |||||