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Ilaniya

Coordinates:32°45′30″N35°24′7″E / 32.75833°N 35.40194°E /32.75833; 35.40194
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Place in Northern, Israel
Ilaniya
אִילָנִיָּה
Ilaniya is located in Northeast Israel
Ilaniya
Ilaniya
Coordinates:32°45′30″N35°24′7″E / 32.75833°N 35.40194°E /32.75833; 35.40194
CountryIsrael
DistrictNorthern
CouncilLower Galilee
AffiliationAgricultural Union
Founded1899; 126 years ago (1899)
Founded byJewish Colonization Association
Population
 (2022)[1]
476

Ilaniya (Hebrew:אִילָנִיָּה) is amoshav in northernIsrael. Also known asSejera, after the adjacent Arab villageal-Shajara, it was the first Jewish settlement in theLower Galilee and played an important role in the Jewish settlement of the Galilee from its early years until the1948 Arab–Israeli War. It falls under the jurisdiction ofLower Galilee Regional Council, and had a population of 476 in 2022.[1]

History

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Byzantine period

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An ancient burial cave near Ilaniya displays a red-paintedmenorah on one wall, with above it, indistinct letters inJewish script that remain unexamined.[2]

Modern Jewish settlements

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Ilaniya 1937

The agricultural colony of Sejera, later Ilaniya, was established in 1900-1902 on land purchased by BaronEdmond James de Rothschild which was transferred to the management of theJewish Colonization Association (JCA/ICA) in 1899. Also in 1899, JCA bought additional land for its plannedcolony. The first settlers were residents ofSafed, a group of immigrants from Kurdistan and eight families ofSubbotniks, Russian Christians who had converted to Judaism, among them theDubrovin family.[3]

The small settlement founded by JCA had two sections, asharecroppers' colony for more experienced farmers, and atraining farm for unskilled workers. The former consisted of a short street with private houses on both sides with garden plots in front and sheds at the back.

The training farm was located slightly higher up the slope, with a yard enclosed by a wall and single rooms for workers. The overall concept came from JCA official Chaim Margalioth Kalvarisky. The JCA's purpose was to help settle the land with professional Jewish farmers, agriculture being seen as a morally as well as economically sound activity. Unwilling to run their project as a charity organisation in the style of Baron de Rothschild, the JCA leaders in Paris expected the training farm to be self-sufficient and to generate profit. When this did not happen, they replaced Kalvarisky in 1901 with the young agronomist Eliyahu Krause. Since the farm continued losing money, the JCA started in 1906 a process of reducing the administered training farm and gradually transferring its allocated land to the sharecroppers.

In 1907-1908, a socialist commune led byManya Wilbushewitch andIsrael Shochat was contracted to run the farm autonomously for one year, without administrative interference. Wilbushewitch received the support ofYehoshua Hankin, who brought in Eliahu Krause to design an operative plan. The eighteen commune members, young men and women from Sejera and elsewhere in Palestine, aided by a number of sympathisers, managed for the first time to generate a profit and ensure constant employment for all workers of Sejera (with the side effect that outside Arab workers were no longer needed), while also pioneering full equality for women. Along with their work in agriculture there were daily educational meetings where they learned Hebrew from the youngDavid Grün, the future prime-minister of Israel David Ben-Gurion, Arabic from an Arab villager, socialist theory from Manya Wilbushewitch, and the latest news fromIsrael Shochat. Less publicly, the group used Sejera for training the newly constitutedBar-Giora Jewish self-defense organisation, which eventually took over fromCircassians and Arabs the guarding duties in Sejera and other nearby Jewish settlements. Manya Wilbushewitch and Israel Shochat married in Sejera in 1908.[4] Ben Gurion worked as a farm hand and later as a guard for 13 months from 1908; at the time Sejera had a population of around 200.[5]

On 12 April 1909 two Jews from Sejera were killed in clashes following the death of a villager fromKfar Kanna, shot in an attempted robbery.[6]

Despite the economic success, JCA did not renew the agreement with the socialist commune at the end of the one-year experiment. By taking what was one of the least profitable ranches in the land and making it profitable, Manya Shochat showed that her ideas for a communal collective could work. This first well-run socialist-Zionist commune in Palestine is counted as an important precursor of thekibbutz movement and one of the nuclei of Jewish rural settlement in Palestine.

Historic cypress of Sejera

By 1912-1913, the training farm was closed down, its land reallocated to the sharecroppers or sold to a Jewish plantation company. Still, after over a decade of teaching essential skills to agricultural workers, and by bringing together some of the leading pioneers of theFirst andSecond Aliyah who would go on to establish the infrastructure of the pre-state Zionist society, the farm can be said to have played an essential role in the Zionist enterprise.[7]

During the1948 Arab–Israeli War the village was attacked several times by theArmy for the Liberation of Palestine, led byFawzi al-Qawuqji.[8] Most of the Jewish inhabitants temporarily abandoned the place, while the remaining ones took part in the fighting. By 1949 the settlement expanded and included the territory of the adjacentPalestinian Arab village of al-Shajara, which had been depopulated during the war.

At some point Ilaniya became a moshav.[when?]

Notable residents

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References

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  1. ^ab"Regional Statistics".Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved21 March 2024.
  2. ^"CV. Sejera (Ilaniyya)",Volume 5/Part 1 Galilaea and Northern Regions: 5876-6924, De Gruyter, pp. 993–994, 2023-03-20,doi:10.1515/9783110715774-113,ISBN 978-3-11-071577-4, retrieved2024-02-07
  3. ^The first settlement in the Lower GalileeArchived 2013-10-18 at theWayback Machine
  4. ^The Jewish Connection, Phyllis Appel
  5. ^Segev, Tom (2018 - 2019 translationHaim Watzman)A State at Any Cost. The Life of David Ben-Gurion. Apollo.ISBN 9-781789-544633. p. 87
  6. ^Segev p.94
  7. ^The first settlement in the Lower GalileeArchived 2013-10-18 at theWayback Machine
  8. ^The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited, Benny Morris
  9. ^God, Guns and Israel: Britain, The First World War And The Jews in the Holy City, byJill, Duchess of Hamilton
  10. ^Hess, Orna."Judith Marquet-Krause".Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved2022-12-22.

Further reading

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  • HaReuveni, Immanuel (1999).Lexicon of the Land of Israel (in Hebrew). Miskal - Yedioth Ahronoth Books and Chemed Books. p. 33.ISBN 978-965-448-413-8.
  • ed. Yuval Elazari -Map's Concise Gazetteer of Israel Today MAP - Mapping and Publishing, Tel Aviv, 2003(in Hebrew)
  • Ran Aharonson (2000).Rothschild and Early Jewish Colonization in Palestine. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 282–283.
  • Neville J. Mandel (1977).Arabs and Zionism Before World War I. University of California Press. pp. 67–70.
  • Derek Jonathan Penslar (1991).Zionism and Technocracy: The Engineering of Jewish Settlement in Palestine, 1870-1918. Indiana University Press. pp. 29–33.
  • Paul R. Mendes-Flohr; Jehuda Reinharz, eds. (2010).The Jew in the Modern World: A Documentary History. Oxford University Press. p. 565.
  • Shulamit Reinharz (1992). "The winding road to Sejera". In Deborah S. Bernstein (ed.).Pioneers and Homemakers: Jewish Women in Pre-State Israel. State University of New York Press. pp. 95,105–116.

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toIlaniya.
Kibbutzim
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