World Zionist Congress


The Zionist Congress was established in 1897 by Theodor Herzl as the supreme organ of the Zionist Organization and its legislative authority. In 1960 the names were changed to World Zionist Congress and World Zionist Organization, respectively. The World Zionist Organization elects the officers and decides on the policies of the WZO and the Jewish Agency, including "determining the allocation of funds." The first Zionist Congress was held in Basel, Switzerland in 1897.
Any Jew over age 18 who belongs to a Zionist association is eligible to vote, and the number of elected delegates to the Congress is 500. 38% of the delegates are allocated to Israel, 29% to the United States of America, and 33% to the remainder of the countries of the Diaspora. In addition there are about 100 delegates which are appointed by International Organizations affiliated with WZO.
After the First Zionist Congress in 1897, the Zionist Congress met every year until 1901, then every second year from 1903 to 1913 and 1921 to 1939. Until 1946, the Congress was held every two years in various European cities, save for interruptions during the two World Wars. Their goal was to build an infrastructure to further the cause of Jewish settlement in Palestine. Since the Second World War, meetings have been held approximately every four years. Also, since the creation of the State of Israel, the Congress has met every four or five years in Jerusalem.
The upcoming 38th World Zionist Congress will take place in 2020.

Representatives at the World Zionist Congress

The World Zionist Congress includes representatives of [|Zionist World Unions], Women's [|Zionist Organizations with Special Status] and [|International Jewish Organizations].

Zionist World Unions

Zionist participants in the World Zionist Congress are free to form Brit Olamit or Zionist World Unions, which are somewhat like political parties. While Israeli political parties can participate in the Congress, brits are also organized and voted into the Congress by non-Israelis, making the Congress a multinational deliberative body for the Jewish diaspora. However, as aliyah has brought Jews to Israel from other countries, Israeli representation in the legislature has increased at the expense of non-Israeli Jewish diaspora representation. A Brit Olamit must have representation in at least five countries to send a delegation to the Congress.
There are currently six Zionist World Unions :
Since the creation of the State of Israel, there are no elections held for Israeli delegates to the World Zionist Congress. Rather, elections to the Knesset, Israel's parliament, are deemed to fulfill this function, and Zionist parties represented in the Knesset are apportioned a number of Congress delegates proportional to their strength in the Knesset. The late Left Wing leader Shulamit Aloni on several occasions criticized this practice, stating that "Most Israeli citizens neither know nor care that when they go to the polls they are among other things also electing delegates to the World Zionist Congress. Had the Zionist Movement been required to do in Israel what it does in other countries - i.e., recruit paying members and get these members to hold specific elections to the World Zionist Congress - there might have been revealed an embarrassing low number of committed Zionists in Israel".

Zionist organizations with special status

Two women's organizations have special status in the Zionist Organization and have full voting rights:
The international Jewish organizations have also been represented in the Zionist Congress since 1972, provided that they accept the Jerusalem Program, even if not all their members are declared Zionists. These bodies have limited voting rights they do not vote on matters of candidature and elections to the institutions of the WZO.
The following are the International Jewish Organizations :
The Zionist Congress is conducted by the Congress Presidium. Congress deliberations are divided into five stages:
The Zionist Congress, later to become the World Zionist Congress, was held at intervals of 1 year, then 2 years until the outbreak of the Second World War, with an eight-year break due to the First World War.
NumberNameLocationYear
1Basel, Switzerland
2Basel, Switzerland
3Basel, Switzerland
4London, England
5Basel, Switzerland
6Basel, Switzerland
7Basel, Switzerland
8The Hague, Netherlands
9Hamburg, Germany
10Basel, Switzerland
11Vienna, Austria
12Carlsbad, Czechoslovakia
13Carlsbad, Czechoslovakia
14Vienna, Austria
15Basel, Switzerland
16Zürich, Switzerland
17Basel, Switzerland
18Prague, Czechoslovakia
19Lucerne, Switzerland
20Zürich, Switzerland
21Geneva, Switzerland
22Basel, Switzerland
23Jerusalem, Israel
24Jerusalem, Israel
25Jerusalem, Israel
26Jerusalem, Israel
27Jerusalem, Israel
28Jerusalem, Israel
29Jerusalem, Israel
30Jerusalem, Israel
31Jerusalem, Israel
32Jerusalem, Israel
33Jerusalem, Israel
34Jerusalem, Israel
35Jerusalem, Israel
36Jerusalem, Israel
37Jerusalem, Israel
38Jerusalem, Israel

Important moments

Herzl wrote in his diary,