- קאמוניסטישנ ארבעטער בונד, 'Idishe
Kommunistishe Arbeiter-Bund'), or the
Kombund (קאמבונד), was a
Jewish Communist political party in Ukraine,
formed after...
- קאָמוניסטישנ אַרבעטער בּונד אין פוילין),
generally referred to as the
Kombund, was a
Jewish political party in Poland. It was
formed in 1922,
after a...
- pro-communist
Kombund majority faction.
During 1920 and 1921
Frumkin and
Vaynsthteyn were the key
leaders of the
Kombund.
Vainshtein served as the
Kombund representative...
- the
majority in the Bund in Ukraine)
adopted the name
Communist Bund (
Kombund), re-constituting
themselves as an
independent party.
Moisei Rafes, who...
- of the Bund,
which eventually joined the
Soviet Communist Party as the
Kombund in 1921, and the
United Jewish Socialist Workers Party.
Former elements...
-
suppressed the Bund.
Bundists supportive of the
Bolsheviks formed short-lived
Kombund (Communist Bund)
parties (such as the
Jewish Communist Labour Bund (Ukraine)...
-
European countries,
where the
revolutionary communist factions formed the
Kombund, and
supported organising with
other communist groups.
Bundism opposed...
- 12th Bund conference, Der
Veker became an
organ of the
Communist Bund (
Kombund),
albeit published irregularly. As the
Communist Bund
merged with the Communist...
-
Conferences of He-Ḥaluts (1920) and Ha-Shomer ha-Tsa‘ir (1923). The
Kharkiv Kombund, the
local affiliate of the anti-Zionist Bund, had a
small presence in...
- May 22, 1919,
through the
merger of the
Jewish Communist Labour Bund (
Kombund) and the
United Jewish Communist Party (Komfareynikte). The Komfarband...