Ma'agan Michael

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Ma'agan Michael
Founded 25 August 1949
Founded by Hebrew Scouts
Region Coastal plain
Industries Agriculture, education, plastics
Affiliation Kibbutz Movement
Website www.maaganm.com

Ma'agan Michael (Hebrew: מעגן מיכאל‎, lit. Michael Anchorage) is a kibbutz in Israel. It is currently the largest kibbutz in the country, with a population of over 1,400 residents (not including external workers),[1] and falls under the jurisdiction of Hof HaCarmel Regional Council.

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[edit] Geography

The kibbutz is located 30 km south of Haifa and 70 km north of Tel Aviv and lies east of the Mediterranean Sea, west of Mount Carmel, south of bordering kibbutz Ma'ayan Zvi, and north of the Taninim Stream. It is also north of a large Arab village called Jisr az-Zarqa.

The original site was a windswept, treeless sandstone hill. Some of this land was reclaimed from Kabarra swamp. The nearby Timsah Springs, which originates from the Taninim Stream, is one of the local sources of brackish water for the kibbutz' numerous fishponds (1,700 dunams). The Taninim Nature Reserve lies south of the kibbutz and is the site of an ancient Roman dam and aqueduct, which have been restored by the Department of Antiquities, the Drainage Authorities, and Nature and Parks Authorities.

[edit] History

Ma'agan Michael was founded on 25 August 1949 by a group consisting of 154 members and 44 children who had joined together in 1942, most of whom were members of the Hebrew Scouts. It was named Ma'agan (anchorage) due to the intent of its first settlers of using the land to make a living from the sea, and Michael in honour of Michael Polak, who donated money to the Palestine Immigrant Colonization Association (PICA).

The group was originally based in a temporary Jewish Agency camp in Pardes Hanna, where they learned the essential skills needed to create an independent settlement, including how to manage citrus groves, cows, sheep, and chickens.

The initial group was joined by a larger group of younger immigrants without their parents from Germany and Austria (Youth Aliyah), and were undergoing preparatory training at Ein Gev. The group stayed in Pardess Hanna until the end of World War II, while several members were sent abroad as emissaries; others joined the Jewish Brigade, the Palmach, worked in other kibbutzim, in the Dead Sea Works at Sdom, or in the newly established Military Industries.

In 1946, the HQ Staff of the Haganah relocated the group to a temporary settlement in Rehovot, which later was known as “Kibbutz Hill”. This settlement was to serve as cover for a secret underground factory to manufacture 9 mm bullets for “Sten” submachine guns. During all this period the kibbutz members lived a double life to keep information of the illicit underground arms factory away from the British Mandate Forces. In 1948, the factory was moved to the newly founded Military Industries (TAAS). The site at Kibbutz Hill in Rehovot was preserved as the “Ayalon Museum”. The first members began settling the present site, erecting the first buildings which consisted of wooden huts prepared by carpenters in Rehovot.

In the early years, the kibbutz took in many disadvantaged youngsters and youth groups (youth aliyah). An ulpan was opened, and many ulpan graduates later joined the ranks of the kibbutz membership. The ulpan became very popular and successful, and has completed more than 80 plus 5-month-long courses with thousands of graduates.

Most of the agricultural land of the kibbutz was reclaimed from the Kabarra swampland, which was drained in the 1920s with money from Baron Rothschild, and labor of Jewish pioneers and local Bedouin residents. A small area remains swamplike and is used for pasture for horses and as a nature reserve.

The kibbutz engaged in internal talks regarding the desire for change based on providing the members with a greater choice in their decisions and their budgets: greater privatization and less dependence on others. They adopted a decision regarding the dining room and increasing options by paying for food. All these changes are being approached slowly and deliberately in order to try and preserve the kibbutz' communal values.

The kibbutz has grown and prospered into the largest kibbutz in Israel with a population of 1,412, consisting of 791 members and candidates for membership, 383 children, plus non-member residents, soldiers, and ulpanists.

[edit] Demographics

Together with the Israel-born members, the kibbutz membership has a heterogeneity of origins. It has absorbed members with origins from all over the world. Many members came from Arab countries (Iraq, Tunisia, Morocco).

[edit] Economics

Ma'agan Michael's agricultural endeavors includes field crops and orchards. Field crops are grown on 1600 dunams of the Kabarra. Fodder is grown for the dairy cows. For many years the main crop has been cotton. Several varieties of avocado (650 dunams) are grown, especially in our orchards in Tantura, most of which is exported to Europe. The kibbutz produces 1,200 tons of bananas per year, solely for the local market. Papaya fruit is grown in 40 dunams in greenhouses (organic crop), along with several exotic fruits grown, with over 80 types of fruit trees (Abraham’s Orchard) on Mount Carmel.

The kibbutz also produces 2,000 tons of poultry per year, using free-range intensive breeding. The chick hatchery produces about 4.5 million day-old chicks per year. There is a dairy herd with about 300 cows and 200 calves, which produces over 3.2 million liters of milk per year.

MADAN is the Aquaculture Fish farming branch of kibbutz Ma’agan Michael agriculture enterprises. The aquaculture branches include about 1600 dunams of fishponds, where edible fish such as carp, gray mullet, St. Peter’s fish and silver carp are raised. There is also an area for intensive fish production in concrete ponds, which are used to raise almost 300 tons of striped bass, Musar, Lavrak.[2] The kibbutz sells over 1,000 tons of edible fish per year. The kibbutz also raises seafish, as well as decorative fish for ponds and aquaria, such as Koi and goldfish.

Since 1958, kibbutz Ma'agan Michael has run two ulpans per year. The ulpan is a central part of the identity of Ma'agan Michael. Over 25% of the members of the kibbutz are graduates.

Plasson, is the kibbutz' plastics factory. It was founded in 1963, and is the main source of income and employment for the kibbutz. Annual sales reach about $100 million, with some 85% of the products exported worldwide. The main Plasson factory at Ma'agan Michael employs over 400 workers, half of them members of the kibbutz. About 200 more workers are employed in subsidiaries around the world. Plasson is an eader in polyethylene pipe-fittings, poultry drinker systems, and also is one of the main producers of toilet flushing systems, mainly for the local market. The Company has full ownership of six marketing companies abroad and holds part ownership in several others. Plasson also holds full or part ownership of 6 production companies in Israel and abroad. In 1997, 20% of Plasson was floated as stocks on the Tel Aviv stockmarket. The public company is called Plasson Industries, Inc. In April 2000, a strategic partner, the Swiss company George Fischer, acquired for 20%.

Suron is the factory established by the kibbutz to produce precise metal parts using photochemical etching and electroforming, and also metal plating in gold and nickel. The precision metal parts produced by Suron are used in an industrial products and are used in industries involved in electronics, microelectronics, electro-optics, precise mechanics, electronic circuits and medical products. Suron also provides technical photographic service for “high-tech” industries.

Suron currently employs about 50 workers, most of them members of the kibbutz.

[edit] References

  1. ^ About/History Ma'agan Michael Agro Center
  2. ^ Profile MADAN

[edit] External links

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