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  1. Nathan Birnbaum (Hebrew: נתן בירנבוים; pseudonyms: "Mathias Acher", "Dr. N. Birner", "Mathias Palme", "Anton Skart", "Theodor Schwarz", and "Pantarhei"; 16 May 1864 – 2 April 1937) was an Austrian writer and journalist, Jewish thinker and nationalist.

  2. Nathan Birnbaum (נתן בירנבוים) est un penseur et un écrivain juif, né le 16 mai 1864 à Vienne (Autriche) et mort le 2 avril 1937 à Schéveningue aux Pays-Bas. Issu de milieux très modestes, il est l'un des pionniers du mouvement sioniste .

  3. Birnbaum eventually left the Zionist movement and later became a leading spokesman for Jewish cultural autonomy in the Diaspora. He stressed the Yiddish language as the basis of Ashkenazi Jewish culture and was chief convenor of the Conference on Yiddish held in Czernowitz, Bukovina, in 1908.

  4. A book review of Jess Olson's biography of Nathan Birnbaum, the forgotten father of Zionism who coined the term and later rejected it. The review traces Birnbaum's journey from traditional Judaism to Zionism, Yiddishism, and Orthodoxy, and his conflicts with Herzl and other Zionist leaders.

  5. 2 avr. 2014 · On April 2, 1937, Nathan Birnbaum, a thinker and activist whose ideological transformations ran the full gamut of the Jewish experience in the half-century before the Holocaust – but who is as little remembered today as he was influential during his lifetime – died, at the age of 72.

  6. Nathan Birnbaum est un penseur et un écrivain juif, né le 16 mai 1864 à Vienne (Autriche) et mort le 2 avril 1937 à Schéveningue aux Pays-Bas. Issu de milieux très modestes, il est l'un des pionniers du mouvement sioniste.

  7. 9 janv. 2013 · This book explores the life and thought of one of the most important but least known figures in early Zionism, Nathan Birnbaum. Now remembered mainly for his coinage of the word “Zionism,” Birnbaum was a towering figure in early Jewish nationalism.