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Development town

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Israeli towns established to house new immigrants
Mitzpe Ramon, a development town in southern Israel in 1957

Development towns (Hebrew:עיירת פיתוח,Ayarat Pitu'ah) were new settlements built inIsrael during the 1950s in order to provide permanent housing for a large influx ofJewish immigrants from Arab countries,Holocaust survivors from Europe and other new immigrants, who arrived to the newly establishedState of Israel.

The towns were designed to expand the population of the country's peripheral areas while easing pressure on the crowded centre. Most of them were built in theGalilee in the north of Israel, and in the northernNegev desert in the south. In addition to the new towns,Jerusalem was also given development town status in the 1960s.[1]

In the context of theArab–Israeli conflict,Jewish refugees from Arab states were initially resettled inrefugee camps, known variously asimmigrant camps,ma'abarot and development towns. Development towns were subsequently considered by some to be places of relegation and marginalisation.[2]

Background

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In the aftermath of the establishment of the state in 1948, Israel's population doubled within two years to 1.2 million, as Holocaust survivors and Jews from Muslim countries immigrated in large numbers. At the end of 1949 around 90,000 Jews were housed inma'abarot, immigrant and refugee absorption camps. By the end of 1951 the number had risen to over 220,000 in around 125 separate communities.[3] The housing consisted of tents and makeshift shacks of tin or wood. Over 80% of the residents wereJewish refugees from Arab and Muslim countries ofMiddle East andNorth Africa. The numbers began to decline in 1952 and the last ma'abarot were closed around 1963.[3] Over time the ma'abarot metamorphosed into towns or were absorbed as neighbourhoods of the towns they were attached to, and residents were provided with permanent housing. Most of the ma'abarot became development towns, withKiryat Shmona,Sderot,Beit She'an,Yokneam Illit,Or Yehuda andMigdal HaEmek all originating as ma'abarot.

Establishment

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A ma'abara nearNahariya in northern Israel in 1952

The first development town wasBeit Shemesh, founded in 1950 around 20 km from Jerusalem. The newly established towns were mostly populated byJewish refugees from Arab and Muslim countriesMorocco,Iraq,Iran,Egypt,Libya,Yemen,Syria andTunisia. Development towns were also populated byHolocaust survivors from Europe and Jewish immigrants, who came to the newly established State of Israel. According to Khazzoom, there was a significant relationship between ethnicity and the likelihood of being placed in a development town,[4] with many of the small number ofAshkenazi Jews sent to the towns returning to central Israel.[5] By the 1960s and 1970s, 85–90 percent of development town residents wereMizrahi Jews, leading to an association between Mizrahi identity, peripheral location, and economic deprivation.[6] A high proportion of the population was also religious or traditional, with a 2003 survey showing that 39% of residents would rather Israel be run more byhalakhic law.[7]

Many towns gained a new influx of residents during themass immigration from former Soviet states in the early 1990s.[8] By 1998 130,000 Russian-speaking immigrants lived in development towns.[5]

Legacy

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Despite businesses and industries being eligible for favorable tax treatment and other subsidies, with the exception of Arad, most of the towns (particularly those in the south) have fared poorly in the economic sense, and often feature amongst the poorest Jewish Areas in Israel.[9] In 1984 the Development Towns project was awarded theIsrael Prize for its special contribution to society and the State of Israel.[10]

List of development towns

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Center

Galilee and Valleys

Negev

See also

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References

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  1. ^Teddy Kollek and his life-long dedication Jerusalem Post, 2 January 2007
  2. ^Yuval Achouch & Yoann Morvan (2012) "The Kibbutz and ”Development Towns” in Israel: Zionist utopias: Ideals ensnared in a tormented history Justice spatiale - Spatial justice
  3. ^abMa'abarot Israeli Center for Educational Technology
  4. ^A. Khazzoom (2005) "Did the Israeli State Engineer Segregation? On the Placement of Jewish Immigrants in Development Towns in the 1950s",Social Forces, vol. 84 no. 1, pp115-134
  5. ^abErez Tzfadia & Oren Yiftachel (2003) "Between urban and national: Political mobilization among Mizrahim in Israel’s ‘development towns’Archived 2015-12-11 at theWayback Machine",Cities, Vol. XX, No. XX, pp1-15
  6. ^*Oren Yiftachel & Erez Tzfadian (2004)Between Periphery and ‘Third Space’: Identity of Mizrahim in Israel’s Development TownsArchived 2017-08-21 at theWayback Machine p208
  7. ^We're not Kach, but we love KahaneHaaretz
  8. ^Israel's battered economy BBC News, 21 June 2002
  9. ^On Location: The deep southThe Jerusalem Post, 27 December 2007
  10. ^"Israel Prize Official Site – Recipients in 1984 (in Hebrew)".
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