Under the czarist regime, many Jewish democratic socialists, for example, were able to escape from prison camps and migrate to the United States.
This is nothing new either, but today it is found in all social groups, even in the Jewish socialists, for example.
Eckenstein's father was a Jewish socialist from Bonn who had fled Germany following the failed revolution of 1848.
Socialist Zionism competed with the Bund (and other socialist parties) for the hearts and minds of Jewish socialists.
Her parents separated shortly afterward, and she was raised by her mother, who was an active Jewish socialist.
His parents were Jewish socialists who were originally from South Africa.
In the 1930's, Mr. Friedman said, both of his parents "were part of a group of young Jewish intellectual socialists."
The Bundist tendency eventually prevailed after thousands of Jewish socialists fled Poland and Russian in the aftermath of the failed 1905 Revolution.
Moshe Levin (1897-1943), alias 'Batlan' and 'Elisha', was a Jewish socialist.
He has described his parents, who met at an Israeli kibbutz, as "radical Jewish socialists."