Founding Program
Agudas Yisroel
1912
The purpose of Agudat Israel is the solution of the respective tasks facing the Jewish collectivity, in the spirit of the Torah. In accordance with this purpose, it sets itself the following goals: (1) the organization, concentration and unification of dispersed parts of Orthodox Jewry, especially of the Jews in Eastern and Western Europe; (2) the…
Related Guide
Politics, Culture, and Religion at the Turn of the Twentieth Century
Jewish politics became more ideological, driving cultural change and defining nationalism. Tensions arose between secular movements and religious traditionalism.
Creator Bio
Agudas Yisroel
Agudas Yisroel, the Aguda (Agudeh), Union of Israel, is an Orthodox Jewish political movement founded in Poland in 1912. Entering the modern Jewish political arena, Agudas Yisroel tried to create a universal Orthodox identity, having both Hasidic and non-Hasidic representatives. It opposed contemporary secular movements, the Zionist parties among them. Although the Aguda was active in Eastern and Western Europe, as well as in the United States and the Land of Israel, it was most influential in Eastern Europe during the interwar period, having representatives in the Polish Sejm and municipal governments, and also leading roles in some kehilot (Jewish communal governments) in Poland, Latvia, and Lithuania. The Aguda also sponsored a school network of strictly Orthodox education, among them the Beys Yankev or Bais Ya‘akov (Beth Jacob) girls’ schools, led by Sarah Schenirer. In 1937, there were 818 schools of various kinds in the Aguda network, enrolling about 109,000 pupils. Aguda continues to be influential in Israel and the United States today.