Giv'ot Zaid (Hebrew: גבעות זייד, lit. Hills of Zaid)[1] was a kibbutz in northern Israel.
History
The kibbutz was established in 1943,[2] to the north of the former home of Alexander Zaïd (from whom it took its name), who was murdered in 1938.[3] The founders were made up of members of the Yerushalayimi gar'in organised by Yohanan Zaïd, graduates of Mikveh Israel organised by Yiftah Zaïd, and immigrants from Poland and Romania. By 1947 it had 135 members, with 2,300 dunams being cultivated.[2]
In 1950 the kibbutz was dissolved due to disagreements between the residents. In 1951, some of them established the village of Beit Zaid on the site of Zaïd's residence. In 1960 a centre for adults with special needs, Kfar Tikvah was founded on the site of Givat Zaid.
References
- ↑ Zev Vilnay (1999) Tel Aviv, Haifa, Galilee, Golan Heights, and Northern Israel, p238
- 1 2 Abraham Turai (1947) The Emek Jezreel and the Beisan Valley, p80
- ↑ The Jerusalem Post Literary Quarterly Archived 2010-03-27 at the Wayback Machine, Fall 2003