Respuesta :
Answers to your questions:
1.- Atheism
2.- Zionism
3.- Prejudice against Jews
Answers:
- atheism
- Zionism
- prejudice against Jews
Explanation/details:
- Among the founders of the nation of Israel, some were very religious and some were not. Early movements of Jews to Israel were motivated by religious Zionism. "Zion" refers to the sacred site in Jerusalem where the temple had been located. The main movement of Jewish immigration to the land then known as Palestine--based on old Roman empire name for the "Philistine" region--was motivated by secular Zionism. It was a nationalist movement for the Jews to have their own state as an answer to prejudice and persecution against them (known as anti-Semitism).
- The main Zionist movement was largely secular in nature, focused on establishing a homeland for anyone of Jewish ethnicity. Some of the early founders were socialists in their political perspective as well, and looked to found a national community of that character. Theodore Herzl is typically credited with getting the secular Zionist movement started and leading in the founding of the World Zionist Organization. Convinced that the Jews would never truly be welcomed or assimilated within the countries of Europe, Herzl argued for establishment of their own homeland somewhere. (Eventually that "somewhere" became a movement focused on going back to the ancestral land of Israel.)
- Anti-Semitism was strong in Europe already in the Middle Ages, when Jews were accused of such things as spreading the plague by poisoning wells, or using the blood of murdered Christians to make the matzah for their Passover rituals. The term "anti-Semitism" as a description for hostile opposition to the Jewish people was first used by Wilhelm Marr in 1879 in Germany. Marr supported campaigns against Jews and began using the term "anti-Semitism" as a euphemism for what better might have been called "Jew-hating."