Mahane Yehuda (Hebrew: מחנה יהודה, "Camp of Judah") is a historic neighborhood in Jerusalem. Established on the north side of Jaffa Road in 1887,[1][2] it was planned and managed by the consortium of Swiss-Christian banker Johannes Frutiger and his Jewish partners, Joseph Navon and Shalom Konstrum. By the end of the 19th century, it encompassed 162 homes. Originally occupied by upper middle-class residents, it became a working-class neighborhood beginning in the late 1920s. Today the neighborhood is part of Nachlaot.[3] The Mahane Yehuda Market ("the shuk") located across the street was named after the neighborhood.[4]
Name
Mahane Yehuda was named after Joseph Navon's brother, Yehuda, who died at a young age.[3][5]
Location
The Mahane Yehuda neighborhood is bordered by David Yellin Street to the north, Yosef ben Matityahu Street to the east, Jaffa Road to the south, and Navon Street to the west.[2][3]
History
Mahane Yehuda lay on land owned by Bank Frutiger, which owned other tracts around the city. The housing project was initially advertised in the Havatzelet newspaper in 1882 (issue 26). The advertisement, placed by Joseph Navon, promised the first fifty families a free plot on the condition that they would build their homes within six months. If this condition was not met, they would be required to pay Navon 300 groschen for the land. No one answered the advertisement.[6][7]
Five years later, the consortium of Swiss-Christian banker Johannes Frutiger and his Jewish partners Navon and Shalom Konstrum came up with another plan to sell the neighborhood. This plan called for each home buyer to pay 25 napoléons up front for the land, and the remaining 150 napoléons of the costs – including land, construction, and joint upkeep of the water cistern and roadways – over a 15-year period at a rate of 10 napoléons per year.[5][7] This arrangement proved far more attractive to buyers, who snapped up the initial offering.[7] In the month of September 1887 alone, 39 buyers signed up to purchase homes.[5]
At the time of its construction, the only other buildings in the vicinity lay on the south side of Jaffa Road: a two-story home occupied by the British Consul-General of Jerusalem (today the Mahane Yehuda Police Station) to the east,[3] and the neighborhood of Beit Yaakov, established in 1885, to the west.[6] By the end of 1888, 50 homes had been built in Mahane Yehuda and some buyers had begun re-selling their homes.[5] A decade later, 162 homes had been constructed.[8] The homes were constructed in typical fashion for the day, with an inner room accessed from an outer room.[3][7]
Residents
The first homeowners were upper middle class.[1] They included the Sephardi Rishon Letzion of Jerusalem, Hakham Raphael Meir Panigel, Rabbi Eliyahu Navon and his son Joseph Navon, Shalom Konstrum, Israel Dov Frumkin, and Ephraim Cohen (principal of the Lemel School).[5][3][7]
Beginning in the late 1920s the neighborhood began attracting working-class Jewish immigrants from Kurdistan, Baghdad, and Aleppo.[9][10] The lower-middle-class and poor Baghdadi immigrants continued there to speak the Judeo-Arabic vernacular, eat traditional cuisine, and retain the traditional ways of arranging marriages.[11]
A census conducted in 1916 by the office of the Histadrut recorded 152 families comprising 512 individuals in Mahane Yehuda.[12] A 1938 Jerusalem census noted 600 persons living in Mahane Yehuda, including both Ashkenazi and Sephardi Jews.[13]
Religious institutions
Synagogues
Mahane Yehuda is home to eight synagogues.[2] These include the landmark Zoharei Chama Synagogue ("Sundial Building"), which is open for prayer services throughout the day.[14] The three-story stone building with a wooden attic (originally there was also a fifth-floor gallery) was constructed atop a Mahane Yehuda apartment purchased by Shmuel Levy in the early 1900s; the building was originally designed as a hostel for 50 guests with the synagogue on the third floor.[15]
The Silvera synagogue and beth midrash, posthumously named Zechut Aharon, was established by Señor Aharon Silvera (d. 1925) of Aleppo on the upper floor of his two-story apartment in Mahane Yehuda.[16] The Degel Reuven Synagogue, also on a second floor, was founded in 1893 for Mizrahi Jews.[17]
Sfas Emes Yeshiva
In 1925 the Hasidim of the fourth Gerer Rebbe, Grand Rabbi Avraham Mordechai Alter (the Imrei Emes), founded the Sfas Emes Yeshiva in Mahane Yehuda.[18] The Rebbe came to live in the yeshiva from 1940 until his death in 1948, and was buried in the yeshiva courtyard.[18][19] His son, Rabbi Pinchas Menachem Alter, the seventh Gerrer Rebbe, also resided in the yeshiva and was buried beside his father in 1996.[19] A red-brick ohel was placed over both graves.[19]
Modern-day
Unlike buildings fronting Jaffa Road in the historic neighborhoods of Ohel Shlomo and Sha'arei Yerushalayim to the west, the buildings of Mahane Yehuda facing Jaffa Road were preserved during construction of the Jerusalem Light Rail.[20]
In 2011 the former bus parking lot[1] between Mehuyas and Valero Streets, astride Jaffa Road, was re-landscaped into an urban square. This 5-million-shekel project, renamed Valero Square after Jerusalem banker Jacob Valero, was faced with granite and limestone and new lighting was installed.[21] Valero Square hosts the annual municipal arba'at haminim market preceding the holiday of Sukkot.[21] In December 2014 a 2-million-shekel urban art installation was unveiled in Valero Square. Titled "Vorayda" (Kurdish for "flower"), the installation includes four huge red nylon flowers resembling poppies posted atop metal trunks, which "open and shut pneumatically under the influence of movement and sound under and around them". Within two months, however, the nylon petals had been "seriously damaged by rain, wind, snow and pollution".[22]
Landmarks
Synagogues
- Degel Reuven Synagogue
- Sathon Synagogue
- Silvera Synagogue and Beth Midrash
- Yad Mordechai Synagogue
- Zoharei Chama Synagogue ("Sundial Building")
Yeshivas
Other
In literature
Mahane Yehuda is one of the settings for Haim Sabato's 2004 novel Ke'afafei Shachar (Like the Eyelids of Morning), translated into English as The Dawning of the Day: A Jerusalem Tale (Toby Press, 2006).[24][25]
References
Notes
- 1 2 3 Wager 1988, p. 221.
- 1 2 3 Tagger & Kerem 2006, p. 41.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Lev Ha'ir (Machane Yehuda and Nachlaot)". Jerusalem Municipality. Archived from the original on 17 June 2016. Retrieved 8 September 2016.
- ↑ Wager 1988, p. 218.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Ben-Arieh 1979, p. 231.
- 1 2 Ben-Arieh 1979, p. 230.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Kfir, Rafi. "שכונת מחנה יהודה" [Mahane Yehuda Neighborhood] (in Hebrew). Ahavat Yerushalayim. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
- ↑ Ben-Arieh 1979, p. 232.
- ↑ Sabar 1975, p. 489.
- ↑ Rejwan 2009, pp. 25–27.
- ↑ Rejwan 2009, pp. 26–27.
- ↑ Ben-Arieh 1979, p. 319.
- ↑ Rossoff 2001, p. 587.
- ↑ Veeder, Nechama (12 December 2003). "Time to Pray". The Jerusalem Post. Archived from the original on 5 November 2012. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
- ↑ Kroyanker & Wahrman 1983, p. 316.
- ↑ Sutton 2005, pp. 69, 327.
- ↑ Ben-Arieh 1979, p. 365.
- 1 2 Kaploun 1987, pp. 252–253.
- 1 2 3 Frankfurter, Rabbi Yitzchok. "A Riveting Visit to the Historic Home of the Pnei Menachem of Ger zt"l". Ami, February 17, 2016, pp. 60–73.
- ↑ Kroyanker, David (18 October 2002). "Preservation, with Reservations". Haaretz. Retrieved 8 September 2016.
- 1 2 Zohar, Gil (12 August 2011). "The Future of the City". The Jerusalem Post. Archived from the original on 19 June 2014. Retrieved 28 June 2016.
- ↑ Siegel-Itzkovich, Judy (12 February 2015). "Urban Art: Drooping flowers". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 8 September 2016.
- 1 2 "סיור ברחוב יפו (4)- מכיכר הדוידקא לשוק מחנה יהודה" [Jaffa Road Tour (4): From Davidka Square to Mahane Yehuda Market] (in Hebrew). Ahavat Yerushalayim. Retrieved 9 September 2016.
- ↑ Bouskila, Rabbi Daniel (18 April 2013). "A Sephardic S. Y. Agnon". The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles. Retrieved 8 September 2016.
- ↑ Halkin, Talya (4 February 2005). "The Believer". The Jerusalem Post. Archived from the original on 8 October 2016. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
Sources
- Ben-Arieh, Yehoshua (1979). עיר בראי תקופה: ירושלים החדשה בראשיתה [A City Reflected in its Times: New Jerusalem – The Beginnings] (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Yad Izhak Ben-Zvi Publications.
- Kaploun, Uri (1987). Rebbes of Ger: Sfas Emes and Imrei Emes. Mesorah Publications, Ltd. ISBN 0-89906-484-1.
- Kroyanker, David; Wahrman, Dror (1983). Jerusalem Architecture, Periods and Styles: The Jewish quarters and public buildings outside the Old City walls, 1860–1914. Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies. ISBN 9652610194.
- Rejwan, Nissim (2009). Outsider in the Promised Land: An Iraqi Jew in Israel. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0292774438.
- Rossoff, Dovid (2001). Where Heaven Touches Earth: Jewish life in Jerusalem from medieval times to the present. Feldheim Publishers. ISBN 0-87306-879-3.
- Sabar, Yona (1975). "The Impact of Israeli Hebrew on the Neo-Aramaic Dialect of the Kurdish Jews of Zakho: A case of language shift". Hebrew Union College Annual. 46: 489–508. JSTOR 23506884.
- Sutton, Rabbi David (2005). Aleppo, City of Scholars. Mesorah Publications. ISBN 1-57819-056-8.
- Tagger, Mathilde A.; Kerem, Yitzchak (2006). Guidebook for Sephardic and Oriental Genealogical Sources in Israel. Avotaynu. ISBN 1886223289.
- Wager, Eliyahu (1988). Illustrated Guide to Jerusalem. The Jerusalem Publishing House.