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Throughout history, the area of Palestine experienced turbulence and radical transformations. Ruled by many, dozens of armies trampled through the coastal regions and into the central mountainous range surrounding Jerusalem. Agriculture and land use dominated its economic past from the Iron Age to the present.

Palestine, like much of the Mediterranean coastal regions, possessed minimal cultivable land areas. Mountainous areas, deserts and valley regions typified the landscape. Periods of physical and political insecurity caused populations to ebb and flow. The Arab rural population employed extensive agricultural methods, assuring bare subsistence existence. Drought, wars, locust plagues, malaria outbreaks, intermittent rainfall, extensive rural debt, rapacious tax farmers and greedy moneylenders collectively conspired against rural financial solvency. With few notable exceptions, the region lacked an abundance of nutrient-rich soil, efficient horticultural practices, or sufficient water to grow but a limited amount of cash crops, such as citrus in the coastal plain.

Since the beginnings of Zionist immigration to Palestine in the middle of the 1800s, a dedicated few of the new arrivals chose agricultural work. They established their own settlements away from Arab villages or urban Jewish growth. Many early immigrants rejected lives of active religious study, likewise shunning occupations in commercial trades. Early rural Zionist communities evolved into incubators for adoption of modern agricultural techniques. These immigrants spawned socialist ideals among the variations of Zionism in the forms of collectivist agricultural communities, kibbutzim and moshavim.

Individual Zionists invested financially in rural, communal agriculture. By 1914, private Jewish buyers owned 75% of all the land purchased by new Jewish immigrants. Not until the 1920s did national Jewish organizations play central roles in providing the major funds and impetus for collective rural and urban settlement. Drip irrigation, shade house agriculture, aquaponics and mineral-rich fertilizers from the Dead Sea became some of the techniques developed in a slowly emerging Zionist and Israeli agricultural revolution.

The Key Curated Essentials for Agriculture and Ecology

Israel and Water

Israel and Water Poster Set

An Interdisciplinary Unit on Israel and Water

These posters are an ideal way to bring teachers of general studies and Judaic studies together, while making explicit connections for students. Posters can be used for parent and community education, while adding aesthetic and visual value to your institution.

  • Suitable for learners 5th grade and up
  • A perfect bridge topic between teachers of general and Judaic studies
  • Understand the importance and integration of water to Israel from biblical times to the present
  • Each poster is filled with guiding questions and activities for each topic.

Fed Up With the Waste, Israel Is Going Plastic-Free

Israel has a plastic problem. The Israel Union for Environmental Defense (Adam Teva V’Din) reports that Israelis produce twice the international average of plastic waste per person per day. Aside from all the plastic bags, takeaway containers, forks, knives and spoons, we throw out 250 million plastic cups every month. The Tel Aviv-Yafo and Jerusalem municipalities are working toward removing disposable plates, cups and cutlery from public preschools and schools.

Issues and Analyses|December 18, 2019

More Curated Essentials for Agriculture and Ecology

Winery cultivates caring for Israel along with the grapes

Boys from an alternative agricultural high school tend Bat Shlomo Vineyards, with winning results for the student farmers and the finished product. At 15, Shilo Eliash was thoroughly urban. Growing up in Petah Tikva near Tel Aviv, he thought of agriculture – if he thought of it at all – as a menial job for foreign workers. Yet when he heard about a new alternative high school for religious boys dedicated to educational, personal and spiritual development through a connection with the land, he persuaded his parents to let him try the boarding school far from home near the Jordan River.

Issues and Analyses|April 24, 2019