
EconTalk Zionism, the Melting Pot, and the Galveston Project (with Rachel Cockerell)
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Jan 26, 2026 Rachel Cockerell, author of The Melting Point, traces her family’s role in early Zionist debates and the Galveston Project. She recounts reassembling history from newspapers, letters, and diaries. Conversations touch on Israel Zangwill, the Melting Pot play, the plan to reroute refugees to Texas, and a family's dispersal across London, New York, and Jerusalem.
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Primary Sources As A Time Machine
- Rachel Cockerell removed her own voice and constructed the book almost entirely from primary sources to create a "time machine" effect.
- This method centers historical actors and lets readers experience events through contemporary language and perspectives.
Family History Linked To Big History
- The book traces a family story back to the founding of Zionism and shows how global politics shaped individual lives.
- Small family details connect to large movements like the Zionist Congress and migration decisions.
Uganda Plan Exposed Zionist Schism
- The Uganda proposal revealed a deep schism in early Zionism between idealists focused on Palestine and territorialists seeking immediate refuge.
- That split shaped strategies and personalities in the movement going forward.














