Moshav
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Moshav (Template:Lang-he, plural מוֹשָׁבִים moshavim, lit. settlement, village) is a type of Israeli town or settlement, in particular a type of cooperative agricultural community of individual farms pioneered by the Labour Zionists during the second wave of aliyah. A resident or a member of a moshav can be called a "moshavnik" (מוֹשַׁבְנִיק).
The moshavim are similar to kibbutzim with an emphasis on community labour. They were designed as part of the Zionist state-building programme following the green revolution Yishuv ("settlement") in the British Mandate of Palestine during the early 20th century, but in contrast to the collective kibbutzim, farms in a moshav tended to be individually owned but of fixed and equal size. Workers produced crops and goods on their properties through individual and/or pooled labour and resources and used profit and foodstuffs to provide for themselves. Moshavim are governed by an elected council (Template:Lang-he, va'ad, lit. committee). Community projects and facilities were financed by a special tax (Template:Lang-he, mas va'ad, lit. committee tax). This tax was equal for all households of the community, thus creating a system where good farmers were better off than bad ones, unlike in the communal kibbutzim where (at least theoretically) all members enjoyed the same living standard.
Different types
There are several variants, of which the most common are:
- Moshav ovdim (Template:Lang-he, lit. workers' moshav), a workers cooperative settlement. This is the more numerous (405) type and relies on cooperative purchasing of supplies and marketing of produce; the family or household is, however, the basic unit of production and consumption.
- Moshav shitufi (Template:Lang-he, lit. collective moshav), a collective smallholder's settlement that combines the economic features of a kibbutz with the social features of a moshav. Farming is done collectively and profits are shared equally. This form is closer to the collectivity of the kibbutz: although consumption is family- or household-based, production and marketing are collective. Unlike the moshav ovdim, land is not allotted to households or individuals, but is collectively worked.
History
The first moshav, Nahalal, was established in the Jezreel Valley (also known as the Valley of Esdraelon) on September 11, 1921. By 1986 about 156,700 Israelis lived and worked on 448 moshavim; the great majority of these are divided among eight federations.
Because the moshav organisation retained the family as the centre of social life, it was much more attractive to traditional Mizrahi immigrants in the 1950s and early 1960s; they eschewed bold experiments, like communal child-rearing or equality of the sexes, practiced by the more radical communal kibbutz. These so-called "immigrants' moshav" (Template:Lang-he, moshav olim) were one of the most-used and successful forms of absorption and integration of Oriental immigrants; it allowed them a much steadier ascent into the middle class than did life in some development towns. For this reason, the moshav became largely a Mizrahi institution, whereas the kibbutz movement remained basically an Ashkenazi institution.
Since the Six-Day War in 1967, both moshavim and kibbutzim have relied increasingly on outside—particularly Palestinian—labour. Financial instabilities in the early 1980s hit many moshavim hard, as did their high birth rate and the problem of absorbing all the children who might wish to remain in the community. By the late 1980s, moshav members increasingly came to be employed in non-agricultural sectors outside the community, so that some moshavim began to resemble suburbs or commuter towns whose residents commute to work. In general, moshavim never enjoyed the "political elite" status afforded to kibbutzim during the period of Israeli Labor Party dominance; correspondingly the moshavim did not endure the decline in prestige experienced by kibbutzim in the 1970s and 1980s, during the period of Likud dominance starting in 1977.
List of moshavim
- Aderet
- Adirim
- Almagor
- Amirim
- Amqa
- Argaman
- Ashalim
- Aviel
- Aviezer
- Avigdor
- Avihayil
- Avital
- Avivim
- Avnei Eitan
- Balfouria
- Bar Giora
- Bedolah
- Be'erotayim
- Be'er Milka
- Be'er Tuvia
- Beit Elazari
- Beit Gamliel
- Beit Hanan
- Beit Hanania
- Beit Herut
- Bethlehem of Galilee
- Beit Meir
- Beit Nehemia
- Beit Yitzhak
- Beit Zayit
- Ben Shemen
- Bitzaron
- Beka'ot
- Dekel
- Dishon
- Dor
- Efrat
- Even Menachem
- Even Sapir
- Ein Sarid
- Ein HaBesor
- Ein Yahav
- Eitan
- Eliakim
- Eshbol
- Gadid
- Gan HaDarom
- Gan HaShomron
- Gan Or
- Gilat
- Gimzo
- Gitit
- Giv'at Hen
- Giv'at Ye'arim
- Giv'ati
- Hagor
- Hamra
- HaOn
- HaZor'im
- Heletz
- Hogla
- Idan
- Ilaniya
- Katif
- Kerem Maharal
- Kfar Malal
- Kfar Mordechai
- Kfar Sirkin
- Kfar Yabetz
- Kmehin
- Luzit
- Maor
- Mazor
- Margaliot
- Masua
- Megadim
- Mehola
- Mekhora
- Meron
- Mevo Modi'im
- Mishmar HaShiv'a
- Morag
- Nahalal
- Na'omi
- Nehalim
- Ne'ot Golan
- Neot HaKikar
- Netaim
- Netiv HaAsara
- Netiv HaGdud
- Netzer Hazani
- Nevatim
- Neve Ativ
- Nir Akiva
- Nir Banim
- Nir Hen
- Nir Zevi
- Odem
- Ofer
- Ora
- Orot
- Otzem
- Paran
- Petza'el
- Prazon
- Ramat Raziel
- Rishpon
- Ro'i
- Sde David
- Sde Nitzan
- Sde Uziyahu
- Sde Ya'akov
- Shadmot Devora
- Shadmot Mehola
- Shachar
- Shokeda
- Shtulim
- Talmei Yosef
- Telamim
- Tomer
- Vered Yeriho
- Ya'ad
- Yakhini
- Yad Rambam
- Yad Natan
- Yafit
- Yanuv
- Yarhiv
- Yated
- Yesha
- Yitav
- Yodfat
- Yonatan
- Zar'it
- Zeitan
- Zohar
References
- "Kibbutz and Moshav". Chapter 2. Israel: A Country Study. Helen Chapin Metz, ed. Federal Research Division, Library of Congress. 1990.