The list below contains both historical moments of Jewish self-governance as well as other proposals for Jewish self-governance.
Ancient times •
Adiabene – an ancient kingdom in Mesopotamia with its capital at Arbil was ruled by Jewish converts during the first century. •
Nehardea – the seat of the
exilarch in
Babylonia. •
Himyar – there were many Jewish kings at this region of
Yemen since 390 CE when a local chieftain named Tub'a Abu Kariba As'ad formed an Empire. •
Kingdom of Semien – a Jewish kingdom in Ethiopia.
Medieval times •
Khazar Khaganate – an
Oghuric Turkic empire that dominated the
Eurasian Steppe in the
Early Middle Ages and lasted from 650 to 969, its ruling elite converted to Judaism sometime during the 8th century.
Modern times •
Aba-Sava – a
Dagestani semi-independent polity located south of
Derbent was founded by
Mountain Jews, being relatively autonomous from
Persian authority and lasting from 1630 to 1800. • In 1823 a proposal was put forward by
Pavel Pestel and adopted by the
Southern Society of the Decembrists for the forceful expulsion of the Jews of the Russian Empire to a "special Jewish state" in
Asia Minor if they did not assimilate. • In 1902, Zionist
Max Bodenheimer proposed the idea of the
League of East European States, which would entail the establishment of a buffer state (Pufferstaat) within the Jewish
Pale of Settlement of Russia, composed of the former Polish provinces annexed by Russia. • In the early 20th century
Cyprus and
El Arish on the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt and its environs were proposed as a site for Jewish settlement by
Herzl. • Several proposals for a Jewish "republic" under Arab or
Transjordanian suzerainty were put forward by the
Hashemite kings of
Hejaz and emirs of
Transjordan; the closest these proposals came to fruition was the
Faisal–Weizmann Agreement, which proved to be impossible to implement subsequent to the division of the Levant into
League of Nations Mandates. •
Jewish autonomy in Crimea – a Soviet proposal in the 1920s and 1930s to create an autonomous region for Jews in Crimea. •
Kimberley Plan — a failed plan by the
Freeland League, led by
Isaac Nachman Steinberg, to resettle
Jewish refugees from Europe in the
Kimberley region in
Australia before and during
the Holocaust. •
Portuguese West Africa – British Member of Parliament
Victor Cazalet, during a debate on Palestine in 1938, suggested that wealthy Jews, especially those in America, buy a large block of land in Portuguese West Africa (today
Angola), saying that the soil was available and suitable. He also added that there are practically no indigenous or resident populations in that country. The advantage of this is that the Jews there will have control over their own immigration. •
Port Davey, Tasmania, Australia – With the support of the then
Premier of Tasmania,
Robert Cosgrove (in office from 1939),
Critchley Parker proposed a Jewish settlement at
Port Davey, in south west
Tasmania. Parker surveyed the area, but his death in 1942 put an end to the idea. •
British Guiana – in March 1940, British Guiana (now
Guyana) was proposed as a Jewish homeland. However, the British Government decided that "the problem is at present too problematical to admit of the adoption of a definite policy and must be left for the decision of some future Government in years to come". •
Sitka, Alaska – a plan for Jews to settle the Sitka area in Alaska, the
Slattery Report, was proposed in 1939 by
Harold L. Ickes, U.S. President
Franklin Roosevelt's
Secretary of the Interior, but it failed to win support either from leaders of the
American Jewish community or from Roosevelt. An
alternate history of the proposal where Jews do settle in Sitka is the subject of author
Michael Chabon's novel ''
The Yiddish Policemen's Union''.
Contemporary proposals for a second Jewish state Following the creation of the State of Israel, the goal of establishing a Jewish state was achieved. However, since then, there have been some proposals for a second Jewish state, in addition to Israel: •
State of Judea – many
Israeli settlers in the
West Bank have mulled declaring independence as the State of Judea should Israel ever withdraw from the West Bank. In January 1989, several hundred activists met and announced their intention to create such a state in the event of Israeli withdrawal. ==See also==