Simḥa Ben-Tsiyon

1870–1932

Born Simḥa Alter Gutman in Teleneshty, Bessarabia (today Telensti, Moldova), Simḥa Ben-Tsiyon received a traditional heder education supplemented with some maskilic texts. In the late 1890s, embracing the Zionist and Hebraist ideas of Jewish cultural revival associated with Ahad Ha-am, he became an innovative teacher of Hebrew and began a literary career. Moving to Odessa in 1899 to teach in one of the first modern Zionist-Hebraist schools, he became a pioneer of the ‘Ivrit be-‘ivrit (Hebrew in Hebrew) teaching pedagogy, which he disseminated in his Ben-ami textbooks. With Elhanan Leib Levinsky, Chaim Nahman Bialik, and Yehoshu‘a Ḥana Ravnitski, he also cofounded the Moriah publishing house, which became the flagship publishing house for modern Hebraist educational materials and essential works of the new Hebrew culture in the years that followed. In 1905, he moved with his family to Palestine with the intention of guiding the development of the new Hebrew culture there toward Ahad Ha-am’s vision of the Yishuv as a “spiritual center” for Jewish-Hebraic national revival. Working as a teacher and writer, he also founded the Hebrew journal Ha-omer and the monthly for young people Moledet (Motherland) in 1911. His son, Naḥum Gutman, was a renowned Tel Aviv artist and writer.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Moledet (cover)

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Front page of the first issue of Moledet (Homeland), a Hebrew monthly for youth created by Simḥah Ben-Tsiyon and published by the Hebrew Teacher’s Union in Palestine from 1911 to 1946. The goal of the…

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Prospectus for Moledet

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A. Stories and sketches from life today and in the past; legends and poems.B. Articles about Jewish history and the Land of Israel, and the history of the achievements of…

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Editorial Statement of The Palestine News’ Literary Supplement

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From the hour of distress (Psalms 118:5) as if [emerging] from the suffocating darkness of troublesome nightmares, we woke up; from the expanse, the lights of dawn welcomed us . . . Lights from…