BEN SHEMEN

BEN SHEMEN
BEN SHEMEN (Heb. בֶּן שֶׁמֶן), youth village and moshav in central Israel, in the northern Judean foothills, 1.8 mi. (3 km.) east of Lydda. Land bought here in 1904 by the Anglo-Palestine Bank was transferred to the jewish national fund in 1907, thus becoming one of its first holdings in the country. "Atid," a Jewish company for oil and soap production, founded a factory here in 1905. A year later, Kiryat Sefer, a children's village, was established for orphans of the kishinev pogrom, under the direction of israel belkind . In 1908 the Palestine office of the Zionist Organization set up a training farm for agricultural workers; they planted groves of olives and other fruit trees. These plantations were then named "Herzl Forest." Ten Yemenite families were settled at Ben Shemen in 1911 to combine farming with arts and crafts in the style of the bezalel School of Jerusalem. During World War I Ben Shemen was a battlefront between the German-Turkish and the Allied armies. It was abandoned and largely destroyed. In 1921 one of the first moshavim was founded at Ben Shemen. In 1927 an agricultural school was opened under the direction of siegfried lehmann and in 1934 it was among the first institutions to be included in the framework of youth aliyah . Early in 1948, during the War of Independence, both the school and the moshav came under siege and the school was evacuated to the Ḥefer Plain until the end of the year, there constituting the basis for the Ne'urim Youth Village. In 1952 a new moshav (affiliated with Tenu'at ha-Moshavim) was established by settlers from Romania, whose main occupation was dairy and citrus farming. In 1968 Ben Shemen had 920 inhabitants, of whom 720 were in the youth village. In the mid-1990s Ben Shemen had approximately 1,360 inhabitants, of whom 990 were in the youth village. In 2002 the population of Ben Shemen (moshav) was 550 residents with another 638 in the youth village. The school includes an elementary and high school with dormitories. The name is taken from Isaiah 5:1. (Efraim Orni)

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Ben-Shemen — (בן שמן) est un moshav situé à 2 km à l est de la ville de Lod, non loin de la route reliant Tel Aviv à Jérusalem. L appellation Ben Shemen ( Fils de l huile ) provient de la culture de l olivier pratiquée sur le lieu depuis l époque… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Ben Shemen — Infobox Kibbutz kibbutz name = Ben Shemen foundation = 1911 (original) 1952 (re establishment) founded by = region = council = Hevel Modi in industry = affiliation = Moshavim Movement website =Ben Shemen ( he. בֶּן שֶׁמֶן, lit. Fruitful) is a… …   Wikipedia

  • Ben Shemen Youth Village — Infobox Kibbutz kibbutz name = Ben Shemen Youth Village foundation = 1927 founded by = Siegfried Lehmann region = Central Israel council = Hevel Modi in industry = affiliation = website = [http://www.ben shemen.org.il/show item.asp?itemId=62… …   Wikipedia

  • Kerem Ben Shemen — Infobox Kibbutz kibbutz name = Kerem Ben Shemen foundation = 1923 founded by = region = Central Israel council = Hevel Modi in industry = affiliation = website = Kerem Ben Shemen ( he. כרם בן שמן, lit. Ben Shemen Vineyard ), also known as Ben… …   Wikipedia

  • Ben-Shemen forest — n. forest between Ramallah and Jerusalem (Israel) …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Dahn Ben-Amotz — in Sdot Yam, 1946 Born Moshe Tehilimzeigger April 13, 1924 Rivne, Poland Died October 20, 1989 Jaffa, Israel …   Wikipedia

  • Dahn Ben-Amotz — Dahn Ben Amotz, eigentlich Moshe Tehilimzeigger, (* 13. April 1924 in Rivne, heute Ukraine; † 20. Oktober 1989 in Jaffa) war ein israelischer Autor, Journalist und Radiomoderator. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Leben 2 Rezeption …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • DATO, MORDECAI BEN JUDAH — (1525–1591/1601), Italian kabbalist. He annotated Asis Rimmonim by elisha gallico (Venice, 1601). Dato s many writings are extant in numerous manuscripts. Two manuscripts of his piyyutim, collected in the work Shemen Arev, are found in the… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Abraham ben Samuel Cohen of Lask — was a Jewish ascetic who flourished at the end of the 18th century. He went to live at Jerusalem in 1785, but afterward traveled through Europe as an agent for the collection of donations for the Polish Jews in the Land of Israel, making… …   Wikipedia

  • HEZEKIAH BEN DAVID — (d. c. 1058), exilarch and gaon. His grandfather Hezekiah b. Judah, a grandson of david b. zakkai , is also referred to as exilarch, although there is some doubt whether he actually held the position. Hezekiah b. David became exilarch after… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”