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Yavne'el

Yavne'el (Hebrew: יַבְנְאֵל, Arabic: يفنيئيل) is a moshava and local council in the Northern District of Israel. Founded in 1901, it is one of the oldest rural Jewish communities in the country.[2] According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), in 2021 it had a population of 4,448. In 2008 the population had been of 3,100, with a growth rate of 1.4%.[citation needed]

Yavne'el
  • יַבְנְאֵל
  • يفنيئيل
Local council (from 1951)
Hebrew transcription(s)
 • ISO 259Yabnˀel
View of Yavne'el
Yavne'el
Yavne'el
Coordinates: 32°42′34″N 35°29′58″E / 32.70944°N 35.49944°E / 32.70944; 35.49944Coordinates: 32°42′34″N 35°29′58″E / 32.70944°N 35.49944°E / 32.70944; 35.49944
Grid position197/234 PAL
Country Israel
DistrictNorthern
Founded1901
Government
 • Head of MunicipalitySnir Arish
Area
 • Total31,680 dunams (31.68 km2 or 12.23 sq mi)
Population
 (2022)[1]
 • Total4,460
 • Density140/km2 (360/sq mi)

History

 
Yavne'el in 1910

Archaeological overview

Remains from the Late Bronze Age,[3][4] Iron Age I–II,[3] Persian,[3] Hellenistic,[5] Roman,[3] late Byzantine,[3][4][6] early Muslim[7] and Mamluk periods have been found here.

A residential building constructed in the Umayyad period that continued to be inhabited during the Abbasid period (eighth–tenth centuries CE) has been excavated here.[7]

Remains from the Mamluk period have also been found.[6][4]

Ottoman period

Arab village

During the Ottoman period the Muslim village in the area was known as ’’Yemma’’.[8] The village was mentioned in the Ottoman defter for the year 1555-6, located in the Nahiya of Tabariyya of the Liwa of Safad, with its land designated as Timar land.[9]

A map by Pierre Jacotin from Napoleon's invasion of 1799 noted the place.[10] In 1875 Victor Guérin visited, and described the village as rather ruined and built of basaltic stone, situated in a fertile valley.[11] In 1881, the PEF's Survey of Western Palestine (SWP) described Yemma as having basaltic stone houses, containing 100 Muslims, on an arable plain. There were no gardens or trees, but two springs were near, and the village had cisterns.[12] To the south-west of this site there was a supply of water among the rocks of the valley.[13]

Jewish settlement

The "Yamah" settlement was initially planned for 40 farms, each holding 300 dunams.[14] What is now Yavne'el was established on October 7, 1901, by the Jewish Colonization Association on lands bought from the Delaike (Al-Dalaika) Bedouin tribe by Baron Rothschild[15].[16][17] The name "Yavne'el" was taken[18] from a biblical city (Joshua 19:33) in the allotment of the tribe of Naphtali, situated in this area. The first settlers came from the Hauran region (Jewish settlers of the Hauran or "Horan" as it was called, had been evicted from there in 1898 by the Ottoman authorities),[17] joined in December 1901 by villagers from Metula.[14][16] In 1914–15, immigrant families from Yemen settled in Yavne'el.[14]

The new colony of Beit Gan was founded in 1904[14] as a moshav.[19]

British Mandate

 
Yavne’el 1937

In the 1922 census of Palestine conducted by the British Mandate authorities, Yabnieh (Yamma) had a total population of 447; 82 Muslims and 365 Jews.[20] At the time of the 1931 census, Yavneel still had exactly the same population of 447; but now it was 56 Muslims and 391 Jews, in a total of 102 houses.[21]

Hitahdut HaMoshavot BeYehuda VeShomron ('Association of moshavot in Judea and Samaria'), the oldest settlement movement for private farmers in the Land of Israel, was founded in Yavne'el in 1920.[citation needed]

When three Jewish residents were murdered by Arab rioters on the road between Yavne'el and Beit Gan in 1937 during the country-wide Arab revolt, a new settlement named in their honour, the moshav Mishmar HaShlosha (lit. 'Guard of the Three'), was established nearby.[14]

 
Yavne’el 1947

In the 1945 statistics, Yavneel was home to 590 people, all Jews.[22][23]

In 1947 an improvised landing strip in the fields of the moshava was used for landing by a transport airplane bringing Jewish refugees, twice from Baghdad and once from Italy.[24]

State of Israel

 
Moshav Yavne’el, 1948

Located southwest of Tiberias, it was declared a local council in 1951.[citation needed]

Many organisations were established in Yavne'el, including the Israeli Farmers Union, the Galilee Squadron and the Golani Brigade.[citation needed]

Administration

The local council is jointly responsible for Yavne'el, Beit Gan, Mishmar HaShlosha, and Smadar.[19] The first three were established as moshavot (early Zionist agricultural colonies) and are very close to each other, while Smadar, originally a moshav (communal village with more economic autonomy for the member families than a kibbutz), is slightly farther away.[19]

Farmer community

In 1991, the authors of a book on Jewish identity in contemporary Israel noticed that, although in many ways typical for the processes Israeli society underwent since its inception, Yavne'el has a core group of farmers described as "rooted yeomanry", uncommon outside the few moshavot of the first hour of Zionist settlement that retained their initial rural character - no more than a dozen in the entire country.[25] These farmers are deeply connected to the place, dedicated to working the land, and see themselves as spearheading the tremendously important task of returning the nation to a set of values long lost or ignored by Jews everywhere else, starting with different-minded neighbours from Yavne'el.[25] They are compared to wheat farmers of the American Midwest or Sweden, in the way they both sound and look.[25]

Breslov community

In 1986, Rabbi Eliezer Shlomo Schick founded a Breslov community largely consisting of baalei teshuvah (newly religious) adherents in Yavne'el. As of 2015 this community, which calls itself "Breslov City",[26] numbers nearly 400 families, representing 30 percent of the town's population.[27] The community has its own educational and civic organizations, including a Talmud Torah, girls' school, yeshiva ketana, yeshiva gedola, kollel,[28] beis medrash (study/prayer hall), and charity and humanitarian organizations.[27]

Notable residents

See also

  • Saham al-Jawlan, village in the Hauran with a short-lived Jewish settlement (1895–96), some of whose colonists, evicted by Ottoman authorities, became the founders of Yavne'el

References

  1. ^ "Regional Statistics". Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
  2. ^ Tradition, Innovation, Conflict: Jewishness and Judaism in Contemporary Israel, ed. Zvi Sobel and Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi
  3. ^ a b c d e Leibowitz 1995, cited in Hanna, 2017, Yavne’el
  4. ^ a b c Brink, van den, 2017, Yavne’el, Tel Yin’am
  5. ^ Dalali-Amos, 2011, Yavne’el, Bet Gan
  6. ^ a b Hanna, 2009, Yavne’el
  7. ^ a b Hanna, 2017, Yavne’el
  8. ^ from a personal name, according to Palmer, 1881, p. 138
  9. ^ Rohde, 1979, p. 104
  10. ^ Karmon, 1960, p. 167 2018-09-05 at the Wayback Machine.
  11. ^ Guérin, 1880, p. 268
  12. ^ Conder and Kitchener, 1881, SWP I, p. 362
  13. ^ Conder and Kitchener, 1881, SWP I, p. 379
  14. ^ a b c d e Leah Haber Gedalia (2018). "Yavne'el, Israel: The First Century (1901-2001). A Timeline" (PDF). JewishGen KehilaLinks. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  15. ^ Marom, Roy (January 2021). "The Abu Hameds of Mulabbis: An Oral History of a Palestinian Village Depopulated in the Late Ottoman Period". British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. 48: 2.
  16. ^ a b Avik Kustizki, Yossi Dolah, Amit Ben Zvi - Heads of the Yavne’el, Kefar Tavor, and Menahamiya Local Councils, respectively (2001). "Centenary of Yavne'el , Kefar Tavor & Menahamiya". Israel Philatelic Federation. Retrieved 5 December 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  17. ^ a b Ben-Porat, Amir (1991). "Immigration, proletarianization, and deproletarianization: A case study of the Jewish working class in Palestine, 1882-1914". Theory and Society (20): 244.
  18. ^ Carta's Official Guide to Israel and Complete Gazetteer to all Sites in the Holy Land. (3rd edition 1993) Jerusalem, Carta, p.476, ISBN 965-220-186-3
  19. ^ a b c Yavneel Local Council, Lower Galilee, Galilee Development Authority website, retrieved 6 December 2019
  20. ^ Barron, 1923, Table XI, Sub-District of Tiberias, p. 39
  21. ^ Mills, 1932, p. 85
  22. ^ Department of Statistics, 1945, p. 12
  23. ^ Government of Palestine, Department of Statistics. Village Statistics, April, 1945. Quoted in Hadawi, 1970, p. 73
  24. ^ "Operation 'Michaelberg': a Commando transport flown by two American pilots brings illegal Jewish immigrants from Iraq into Palestine". Israeli Air Force. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  25. ^ a b c Sobel, Zvi; Beit-Hallahmi, Benjamin (1991). Tradition, Innovation, Conflict: Jewishness and Judaism in Contemporary Israel. SUNY series in Israeli Studies. SUNY Press. ISBN 9780791405550. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
  26. ^ "yavne'el in breslevcity".
  27. ^ a b "Harav Eliezer Shlomo Shick, zt"l, of Yavne'el". Hamodia, Israel news, February 12, 2015, p. 9.
  28. ^ Tzoren, Moshe Michael. "Away From the Hustle and Bustle of the Big City: Investors from Israel and abroad are buying up large lots in Yavniel, a quiet village in the Galilee, with an eye on building hundreds of housing units for the chareidi public". Hamodia Israel news, 23 December 2010, pp. A26-A27. Retrieved 29 January 2011.

Bibliography

  • Barron, J. B., ed. (1923). Palestine: Report and General Abstracts of the Census of 1922. Government of Palestine.
  • Brink, van den, Edwin C.M. (2017-12-04). "Yavne'el, Tel Yin'am" (129). Hadashot Arkheologiyot – Excavations and Surveys in Israel. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Conder, C.R.; Kitchener, H.H. (1881). The Survey of Western Palestine: Memoirs of the Topography, Orography, Hydrography, and Archaeology. Vol. 1. London: Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund.
  • Dalali-Amos, Edna (2011-08-16). "Yavne'el" (123). Hadashot Arkheologiyot – Excavations and Surveys in Israel. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Dalali-Amos, Edna (2011-12-19). "Yavne'el, Bet Gan" (123). Hadashot Arkheologiyot – Excavations and Surveys in Israel. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Department of Statistics (1945). Village Statistics, April, 1945. Government of Palestine.
  • Guérin, V. (1880). Description Géographique Historique et Archéologique de la Palestine (in French). Vol. 3: Galilee, pt. 1. Paris: L'Imprimerie Nationale.
  • Hadawi, S. (1970). Village Statistics of 1945: A Classification of Land and Area ownership in Palestine. Palestine Liberation Organization Research Centre.
  • Hanna, Butros (2009-09-30). "Yavne'el" (121). Hadashot Arkheologiyot – Excavations and Surveys in Israel. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Hanna, Butros (2017-08-29). "Yavne'el" (129). Hadashot Arkheologiyot – Excavations and Surveys in Israel. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Karmon, Y. (1960). (PDF). Israel Exploration Journal. 10 (3, 4): 155–173, 244–253. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-09-05. Retrieved 2015-12-10.
  • Palmer, E.H. (1881). The Survey of Western Palestine: Arabic and English Name Lists Collected During the Survey by Lieutenants Conder and Kitchener, R. E. Transliterated and Explained by E.H. Palmer. Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund.
  • Rhode, H. (1979). . Columbia University. Archived from the original on 2020-03-01. Retrieved 2017-12-20.

External links

  • Nefesh B'Nefesh Community Guide for Yavnael, Israel
  • Official website of Breslov community in yavne'el
  • Survey of Western Palestine, Map 6: IAA, Wikimedia commons

yavne, hebrew, arabic, يفنيئيل, moshava, local, council, northern, district, israel, founded, 1901, oldest, rural, jewish, communities, country, according, israel, central, bureau, statistics, 2021, population, 2008, population, been, with, growth, rate, citat. Yavne el Hebrew י ב נ א ל Arabic يفنيئيل is a moshava and local council in the Northern District of Israel Founded in 1901 it is one of the oldest rural Jewish communities in the country 2 According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics CBS in 2021 it had a population of 4 448 In 2008 the population had been of 3 100 with a growth rate of 1 4 citation needed Yavne el י ב נ א ל يفنيئيلLocal council from 1951 Hebrew transcription s ISO 259YabnˀelView of Yavne elYavne elShow map of Northeast IsraelYavne elShow map of IsraelCoordinates 32 42 34 N 35 29 58 E 32 70944 N 35 49944 E 32 70944 35 49944 Coordinates 32 42 34 N 35 29 58 E 32 70944 N 35 49944 E 32 70944 35 49944Grid position197 234 PALCountry IsraelDistrictNorthernFounded1901Government Head of MunicipalitySnir ArishArea Total31 680 dunams 31 68 km2 or 12 23 sq mi Population 2022 1 Total4 460 Density140 km2 360 sq mi Contents 1 History 1 1 Archaeological overview 1 2 Ottoman period 1 2 1 Arab village 1 2 2 Jewish settlement 1 3 British Mandate 1 4 State of Israel 2 Administration 3 Farmer community 4 Breslov community 5 Notable residents 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory Edit Yavne el in 1910 Archaeological overview Edit Remains from the Late Bronze Age 3 4 Iron Age I II 3 Persian 3 Hellenistic 5 Roman 3 late Byzantine 3 4 6 early Muslim 7 and Mamluk periods have been found here A residential building constructed in the Umayyad period that continued to be inhabited during the Abbasid period eighth tenth centuries CE has been excavated here 7 Remains from the Mamluk period have also been found 6 4 Ottoman period Edit Arab village Edit During the Ottoman period the Muslim village in the area was known as Yemma 8 The village was mentioned in the Ottoman defter for the year 1555 6 located in the Nahiya of Tabariyya of the Liwa of Safad with its land designated as Timar land 9 A map by Pierre Jacotin from Napoleon s invasion of 1799 noted the place 10 In 1875 Victor Guerin visited and described the village as rather ruined and built of basaltic stone situated in a fertile valley 11 In 1881 the PEF s Survey of Western Palestine SWP described Yemma as having basaltic stone houses containing 100 Muslims on an arable plain There were no gardens or trees but two springs were near and the village had cisterns 12 To the south west of this site there was a supply of water among the rocks of the valley 13 Jewish settlement Edit The Yamah settlement was initially planned for 40 farms each holding 300 dunams 14 What is now Yavne el was established on October 7 1901 by the Jewish Colonization Association on lands bought from the Delaike Al Dalaika Bedouin tribe by Baron Rothschild 15 16 17 The name Yavne el was taken 18 from a biblical city Joshua 19 33 in the allotment of the tribe of Naphtali situated in this area The first settlers came from the Hauran region Jewish settlers of the Hauran or Horan as it was called had been evicted from there in 1898 by the Ottoman authorities 17 joined in December 1901 by villagers from Metula 14 16 In 1914 15 immigrant families from Yemen settled in Yavne el 14 The new colony of Beit Gan was founded in 1904 14 as a moshav 19 British Mandate Edit Yavne el 1937 In the 1922 census of Palestine conducted by the British Mandate authorities Yabnieh Yamma had a total population of 447 82 Muslims and 365 Jews 20 At the time of the 1931 census Yavneel still had exactly the same population of 447 but now it was 56 Muslims and 391 Jews in a total of 102 houses 21 Hitahdut HaMoshavot BeYehuda VeShomron Association of moshavot in Judea and Samaria the oldest settlement movement for private farmers in the Land of Israel was founded in Yavne el in 1920 citation needed When three Jewish residents were murdered by Arab rioters on the road between Yavne el and Beit Gan in 1937 during the country wide Arab revolt a new settlement named in their honour the moshav Mishmar HaShlosha lit Guard of the Three was established nearby 14 Yavne el 1947 In the 1945 statistics Yavneel was home to 590 people all Jews 22 23 In 1947 an improvised landing strip in the fields of the moshava was used for landing by a transport airplane bringing Jewish refugees twice from Baghdad and once from Italy 24 State of Israel Edit Moshav Yavne el 1948 Located southwest of Tiberias it was declared a local council in 1951 citation needed Many organisations were established in Yavne el including the Israeli Farmers Union the Galilee Squadron and the Golani Brigade citation needed Administration EditThe local council is jointly responsible for Yavne el Beit Gan Mishmar HaShlosha and Smadar 19 The first three were established as moshavot early Zionist agricultural colonies and are very close to each other while Smadar originally a moshav communal village with more economic autonomy for the member families than a kibbutz is slightly farther away 19 Farmer community EditIn 1991 the authors of a book on Jewish identity in contemporary Israel noticed that although in many ways typical for the processes Israeli society underwent since its inception Yavne el has a core group of farmers described as rooted yeomanry uncommon outside the few moshavot of the first hour of Zionist settlement that retained their initial rural character no more than a dozen in the entire country 25 These farmers are deeply connected to the place dedicated to working the land and see themselves as spearheading the tremendously important task of returning the nation to a set of values long lost or ignored by Jews everywhere else starting with different minded neighbours from Yavne el 25 They are compared to wheat farmers of the American Midwest or Sweden in the way they both sound and look 25 Breslov community EditIn 1986 Rabbi Eliezer Shlomo Schick founded a Breslov community largely consisting of baalei teshuvah newly religious adherents in Yavne el As of 2015 this community which calls itself Breslov City 26 numbers nearly 400 families representing 30 percent of the town s population 27 The community has its own educational and civic organizations including a Talmud Torah girls school yeshiva ketana yeshiva gedola kollel 28 beis medrash study prayer hall and charity and humanitarian organizations 27 Notable residents EditRuth Amiran 1914 2005 Israeli archaeologist Keren Peles born 1979 Israeli singer songwriter and pianist Eliezer Shlomo Schick 1940 2015 Hasidic rabbiSee also EditSaham al Jawlan village in the Hauran with a short lived Jewish settlement 1895 96 some of whose colonists evicted by Ottoman authorities became the founders of Yavne elReferences Edit Regional Statistics Israel Central Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 22 February 2023 Tradition Innovation Conflict Jewishness and Judaism in Contemporary Israel ed Zvi Sobel and Benjamin Beit Hallahmi a b c d e Leibowitz 1995 cited in Hanna 2017 Yavne el a b c Brink van den 2017 Yavne el Tel Yin am Dalali Amos 2011 Yavne el Bet Gan a b Hanna 2009 Yavne el a b Hanna 2017 Yavne el from a personal name according to Palmer 1881 p 138 Rohde 1979 p 104 Karmon 1960 p 167 Archived 2018 09 05 at the Wayback Machine Guerin 1880 p 268 Conder and Kitchener 1881 SWP I p 362 Conder and Kitchener 1881 SWP I p 379 a b c d e Leah Haber Gedalia 2018 Yavne el Israel The First Century 1901 2001 A Timeline PDF JewishGen KehilaLinks Retrieved 5 December 2019 Marom Roy January 2021 The Abu Hameds of Mulabbis An Oral History of a Palestinian Village Depopulated in the Late Ottoman Period British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 48 2 a b Avik Kustizki Yossi Dolah Amit Ben Zvi Heads of the Yavne el Kefar Tavor and Menahamiya Local Councils respectively 2001 Centenary of Yavne el Kefar Tavor amp Menahamiya Israel Philatelic Federation Retrieved 5 December 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link a b Ben Porat Amir 1991 Immigration proletarianization and deproletarianization A case study of the Jewish working class in Palestine 1882 1914 Theory and Society 20 244 Carta s Official Guide to Israel and Complete Gazetteer to all Sites in the Holy Land 3rd edition 1993 Jerusalem Carta p 476 ISBN 965 220 186 3 a b c Yavneel Local Council Lower Galilee Galilee Development Authority website retrieved 6 December 2019 Barron 1923 Table XI Sub District of Tiberias p 39 Mills 1932 p 85 Department of Statistics 1945 p 12 Government of Palestine Department of Statistics Village Statistics April 1945 Quoted in Hadawi 1970 p 73 Operation Michaelberg a Commando transport flown by two American pilots brings illegal Jewish immigrants from Iraq into Palestine Israeli Air Force Retrieved 5 December 2019 a b c Sobel Zvi Beit Hallahmi Benjamin 1991 Tradition Innovation Conflict Jewishness and Judaism in Contemporary Israel SUNY series in Israeli Studies SUNY Press ISBN 9780791405550 Retrieved 5 December 2019 yavne el in breslevcity a b Harav Eliezer Shlomo Shick zt l of Yavne el Hamodia Israel news February 12 2015 p 9 Tzoren Moshe Michael Away From the Hustle and Bustle of the Big City Investors from Israel and abroad are buying up large lots in Yavniel a quiet village in the Galilee with an eye on building hundreds of housing units for the chareidi public Hamodia Israel news 23 December 2010 pp A26 A27 Retrieved 29 January 2011 Bibliography EditBarron J B ed 1923 Palestine Report and General Abstracts of the Census of 1922 Government of Palestine Brink van den Edwin C M 2017 12 04 Yavne el Tel Yin am 129 Hadashot Arkheologiyot Excavations and Surveys in Israel a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Conder C R Kitchener H H 1881 The Survey of Western Palestine Memoirs of the Topography Orography Hydrography and Archaeology Vol 1 London Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund Dalali Amos Edna 2011 08 16 Yavne el 123 Hadashot Arkheologiyot Excavations and Surveys in Israel a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Dalali Amos Edna 2011 12 19 Yavne el Bet Gan 123 Hadashot Arkheologiyot Excavations and Surveys in Israel a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Department of Statistics 1945 Village Statistics April 1945 Government of Palestine Guerin V 1880 Description Geographique Historique et Archeologique de la Palestine in French Vol 3 Galilee pt 1 Paris L Imprimerie Nationale Hadawi S 1970 Village Statistics of 1945 A Classification of Land and Area ownership in Palestine Palestine Liberation Organization Research Centre Hanna Butros 2009 09 30 Yavne el 121 Hadashot Arkheologiyot Excavations and Surveys in Israel a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Hanna Butros 2017 08 29 Yavne el 129 Hadashot Arkheologiyot Excavations and Surveys in Israel a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Karmon Y 1960 An Analysis of Jacotin s Map of Palestine PDF Israel Exploration Journal 10 3 4 155 173 244 253 Archived from the original PDF on 2018 09 05 Retrieved 2015 12 10 Palmer E H 1881 The Survey of Western Palestine Arabic and English Name Lists Collected During the Survey by Lieutenants Conder and Kitchener R E Transliterated and Explained by E H Palmer Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund Rhode H 1979 Administration and Population of the Sancak of Safed in the Sixteenth Century Columbia University Archived from the original on 2020 03 01 Retrieved 2017 12 20 External links EditNefesh B Nefesh Community Guide for Yavnael Israel Official website of Breslov community in yavne el Survey of Western Palestine Map 6 IAA Wikimedia commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yavne 27el amp oldid 1141765097, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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