Talme Menasche

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Talme Menasche
תלמי מנשה. Jpg
Basic data
hebrew : תלמי מנשה
State : IsraelIsrael Israel
District : Central
Founded : 1953
Coordinates : 31 ° 57 '  N , 34 ° 51'  E Coordinates: 31 ° 56 '42 "  N , 34 ° 50' 56"  E
Area : 1,800  km²
Time zone : UTC + 2
 
Community type: Moshav
Talme Menasche (Israel)
Talme Menasche
Talme Menasche

Talme Menasche ( Hebrew תלמי מנשה) is a moshav in the central district of Israel , which was founded in 1953 by the General Zionist Movement. It consists of 62 farms, 5 side farms and a residential area ("Harchava") on a total area of ​​1,800 dunams . It belongs to the local association Beer Jaʿakov .

history

The moshav was founded in 1953 on the area of ​​the former Palestinian village of Abu al-Fadl , which was depopulated by Israel in 1948 during the Palestinian War. The former headquarters of the Palestinian field commander Hasan Salama is on the farmland of the village . The moshav was named after Menashe Meirovitch (1860-1949), a bilu and politician who lived after Israel's independence.

The first residents arrived in 1953. They mainly raised poultry and cattle and grew citrus and apricots.

In 2006, part of the farmland was transferred to Beer Jaʿakov to build a residential area.

See also

Individual evidence

  1. Walid Khalidi : All That Remains: The Palestinian Villages Occupied and Depopulated by Israel in 1948 . Institute for Palestine Studies , Washington DC 1992, ISBN 0-88728-224-5 , pp. 357 (English, google.com ).
  2. Hassan Salama's HQ. In: Amud Anan. Retrieved January 17, 2020 (English).
  3. "Tonight we conquer the HQ! ...", the story of Hassan Salama's HQ. In: History on the Map. February 1, 2013, accessed January 17, 2020 .
  4. ^ Announcement of settlement names . In: Israeli Government Gazette . December 31, 1953, p. 360 (Hebrew, nevo.co.il [PDF]).
  5. 55 first buildings in Talmei Menashe. Al HaMishmar , April 1954, accessed January 17, 2020 (Hebrew).
  6. Be'er Ya'akov; The Moshava that is turning into a city of towers. In: Globes . March 11, 2013, accessed January 17, 2020 (Hebrew).