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| | From Herzl to Rabin |
 | | Modern European experience proves, he wrote in Der Judenstaat, that through modern marketing techniques and department stores, it would be possible to prevent in the future Jewish state the renewal of the hated Jewish trades. |
 | | It will be, as Herzl titled his famous booklet Der Judenstaat, a state of the Jews, hardly a Jewish state. |
 | | In Herzl's utopian novel, Altneuland, which depicts an imaginary journey to the new state, as well as in the Zionist writings of Max Nordau, who did not forsake his militant atheism upon his conversion to Zionism, the recurrent theme is the integration of the Jew into Western civilization. |
| partners.nytimes.com /books/first/r/rubinstein-herzl.html (4899 words) |
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