Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
A victory for socialism? The Israeli Kibbutz
A victory for socialism? The Israeli Kibbutz
Dec 17, 2025 5:16 AM

While eating lunch at an Israeli Kibbutz last winter, I learned firsthand about what used to be a self-contained, munity. I was struck by the local guide’s positive view of socialism, believing it to produce munal life and economic prosperity. The guide’s praise only echoes A.I. Rabin and Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi from Michigan State University who wrote that “[t]he most successful attempt at building a mune has been the Israeli Kibbutz.” The optimism expressed by these observations is not without cause – the kibbutz movement was foundational to the establishment and success of the Israeli state.

“Kibbutz” refers to munities in Israel that were historically characterized by collective ownership of property, an emphasis on the dignity of manual labor, a system of direct democracy munal child care. In other words, no member exercised personal property rights but instead received toiletries, food and other necessities according to a distribution system. All members earned the same allowance for their work – regardless of whether their occupation consisted of milking cows, preparing meals or managing a large production facility. Children did not live in their family homes but instead grew up munal, child-rearing facilities. Marx would have smiled in his grave if he knew munal goods and services were provided “from each according to his or her ability, to each according to his or her needs.” Although most of the kibbutzim privatized in recent years, the appeal of its socialist ideology lives on; in fact, Senator Bernie Sanders himself lived and volunteered on a kibbutz in 1963 and is now a self-described democratic socialist.

Before Israel’s independence, the kibbutz provided structure for the defense of Jewish settlers and was the backbone of the rural economy. After Israel’s independence, the kibbutz supplied around twenty-percent of the country’s top military officers. Five prime ministers of Israel – David Ben-Gurion, Levi Eshkol, Golda Meir, Shimon Peres and Ehud Barak – were all at some point members of a kibbutz. In terms of members’ satisfaction, life expectancy, economic performance and demographic growth, the kibbutz society was “relative to the rest of society in Israel – very successful” until the nineties. These observations have led academics to ask whether the Israeli kibbutz sets itself apart from the myriad of failed socialist societies as a proven paragon of success.

Democratic socialists today like Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez believe that socialism is the key to poverty alleviation, and a rising number of young Americans are attracted to socialism as a moral economic system necessary to meet basic human needs. A YouGov survey revealed that 43% of respondents under age thirty had a favorable view of socialism. When asked what socialism is, millennials use phrases such as “nice”, “being together” or “the government pays for our needs.” Perhaps the success of the Israeli kibbutz is finally a victory for socialism. munal ideology propelled widespread killing and poverty in the Soviet Union, China, Vietnam, North Korea and Cambodia, the socialist values of the kibbutz society seemed to engender security, harmony and even prosperity.

But eventually the kibbutz would join the list of socialist models that were ultimately not ideologically sustainable. Debt and economic crisis were in part responsible for the abandonment of munalism. Mid-1980s Israel experienced a dire economic crisis with a 400 percent inflation rate and high levels of unemployment. Although the government and banks later on agreed to bailouts, the economic situation still disheartened many members of the kibbutz. In particular, the elderly worried if the kibbutz failed to provide for them again in the future, their lack of personal pensions would be problematic. The uncertainty and feelings of vulnerability sewn by the financial crisis incentivized individuals to build personal saving accounts rather than deposit all revenue munal funds.

Economic crisis was not the only culprit for munal values; quite the opposite phenomenon – a rise in industrialization and opportunity for higher standard of living – were additional blows to the sustainability of the kibbutz. Russell Raymond et al. write in their book The Renewal of the Kibbutz: From Reform to Transformation that “[i]n the first years of the kibbutzim, kibbutz members had little to share with each other but their poverty. The kibbutzniks’ self-denying, ascetic values were well suited to the economic condition of the kibbutzim.” munal ownership of housing, means of production and cafeterias was feasible – even attractive – when members were themselves impoverished, the pull munity weakened with an increase in the standard of living and availability of resources. The challenge of increased standards of living munal life is illustrated by the fact that more children moved to live with their parents as standard houses grew in size. Kibbutzim traditionally decried “the close knit family a creation of capitalism,” but eventually munities had to bow to the demands of children and parents. The new living situation led to increased privatization and individualization, munal cafeterias were less used and home-cooked meals became an accepted norm.

The popularity of the kibbutz in Israel is peculiar to me, given that Judaism emphasizes the importance of the nuclear family. Parents have a sacred obligation to care for and raise their children in Jewish tradition; children manded to respect their parents. Kibbutzim challenged the nuclear household, separating children from their parents. But families eventually united under one roof. Kibbutzim traditionally proportioned goods to members according to their needs regardless of their skill, but individuals eventually requested market-based wages. Members of kibbutzim were willing to equally share poverty, but when the individuals experienced prosperity from industrializing, inequality ensued. Ultimately, the story of the kibbutz highlights the crucial problem of socialism: its core tenants are at odds not only with Judeo-Christian principles but also with innate human tendencies to raise a pete in the workplace and make self-interested decisions.

Featured Image: Government Press Office (Israel) [CC BY-SA 3.0]

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
How Christopher Columbus helped bring the School of Salamanca to the Americas
Every Columbus Day gives rise to endless debates and recriminations over the impact of Christopher Columbus’ expedition upon the indigenous peoples of the Americas. No honest observer can dismiss the injustices perpetrated after Columbus’ landing (nor before it), but one benefit of his voyage has been forgotten: It inadvertently exposed the Americas to theSchool of Salamanca. This late scholastic school of Roman Catholic thought emphasized individual rights, human dignity, and economic liberty (particularly against government-sponsored inflation; for more, see Faith...
Unemployment as economic-spiritual indicator — September 2017 report
Series Note: Jobs are one of the most important aspects of a morally functioning economy. They help us serve the needs of our neighbors and lead to human flourishing both for the individual and munities. Conversely, not having a job can adversely affect spiritual and psychological well-being of individuals and families. Because unemployment is a spiritual problem, Christians in America need to understand and be aware of the monthly data on employment. Each month highlight the latest numbers we need...
Putting Columbus in context
A few years ago the following quote from Christopher Columbus started making the rounds: For one woman they give a hundred castellanos, as for a farm; and this sort of trading is mon, and there are already a great number of merchants who go in search of girls; there are at this moment some nine or ten on sale; they fetch a good price, let their age be what it will. Sounds pretty damning. Christopher Columbus did, indeed, write that....
Religious liberty in employment marches forward across the Atlantic
On Friday, the Department of Health and Human Services issued two interim rules rolling back the HHS mandate, which requires employers to furnish female employees with contraception, sterilization, and potentially abortifacient drugs for “free.” The two rules, which take effect immediately, do not repeal the HHS mandate. One rule grants an exemption to nonprofits, closely held businesses, and some publicly traded corporations that have sincerely held religious objections to its terms. The other allows all but publicly traded corporations to...
The international perils of corruption and cronyism
An international conference recently addressed the dangers of corruption to liberty, economic growth, and human flourishing. Many of these criticisms can be applied to cronyism, often the byproduct of formal corruption. “There is an undeniable link between good governance and human flourishing,” U.S. Deputy Assistant General Roger Alford told the International Conference on the Rule Of Law and Anti-Corruption Challenges in São Paulo on Tuesday. By “good governance,” Alford – also an assistant dean and professor at Notre Dame –...
‘Work Songs’: A new collection of hymns on work and vocation
In June of 2017, a group of 60 Christian creatives gathered in New York City to discuss and reflect on the intersection of worship and vocation.Known as the The Porter’s Gate Worship Project, the group prised of musicians, pastors, writers, and scholars, aiming to “reimagine and recreate worship that es, reflects and impacts munity and the Church.” Their first album, Work Songs, is a collection of 13 modern hymns, each crafted to connect the meaning and dignity of daily work...
Department of Justice memo reaffirms our rights of religious liberty
In May President Trump issued an executive order directing Attorney General Sessions to address several issues concerning religious liberty, including: • Issue explicit guidance from the Attorney General to the Treasury Department to prohibit the revocation of tax exempt status to an organization based on its religious beliefs; • Encourage the Department of Health & Human Services to issue the draft interim final rule providing relief to the contraceptive mandate; • Ensure a Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) analysis is...
The surprising good news about child poverty
Here’s some good news you probably haven’t heard: Over the past fifty years the child poverty rate has almost been cut in half, falling to a record low of 15.6 percent in pared to the 1967 level of 28.4 percent. That’s the finding in a new report by Isaac Shapiro and Danilo Trisi of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The “official” child poverty rate provided by the government, though, is listed as 19.7 percent. Why the substantial difference?...
What a Chinese economist learned from American churches
“Only through awe can we be saved. Only through faith can the market economy have a soul.” -Zhao Xiao When French diplomat and historian Alexis de Tocqueville visited America in the 1830s, he marveled at the “associational life” of munities, noting the particular influence of religion and local churches. “Not until I went into the churches of America and heard her pulpits flame with righteousness did I understand the secret of her genius and power,” he wrote. “…The safeguard of...
Does tying benefit social welfare?
Note: This is post #52 in a weekly video series on basic microeconomics. What is tying and how is this a form of price discrimination? An example of a tied good is an HP printer and the HP ink you need for that printer. The printer (the base good) is often relatively cheap whereas the ink (the variable good) has a high markup, and eventually costs you far more than what you paid for the printer. Why panies tie their...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved