Bar Yohai Explained

Bar Yohai
Imgsize:250px
Meaning:Simeon bar Yochai
Founded:1977
Founded By:Soviet immigrants
Altunosp:Bar Yochai
District:north
Council:Merom HaGalil
Pushpin Map:Israel northeast
Pushpin Mapsize:250
Pushpin Label Position:top
Coordinates:32.9978°N 35.4489°W

Bar Yohai (Hebrew: בַּר יוֹחַאי) is a religious Jewish community settlement in northern Israel. Located near Mount Meron, it falls under the jurisdiction of Merom HaGalil Regional Council. as of its population was .

History

Bar Yohai was founded in 1977 as a settlement for immigrants from the Soviet Union. However, the immigrants were not interested in living such a distance from a city nor in such austere conditions (each side of a duplex was less than 60 square meters). Jewish Agency officials then offered the failing settlement to Religious Zionist families and members of nearby moshavim. This move was successful and Bar Yohai grew to over 100 families, including a small group of Canadian immigrants.

The village is situated on the land of the depopulated Arab village of Safsaf, whose villagers fled to Lebanon after the Safsaf massacre in October 1948, during the 1948 Arab–Israeli war.[1]

The community is named after rabbi Simeon bar Yochai who according to Jewish tradition was buried on Mount Meron nearby.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Khalidi, Walid (1992), p. 491, All That Remains: The Palestinian Villages Occupied and Depopulated by Israel in 1948, Washington D.C.: Institute for Palestine Studies,