Shilo (village)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shilo (Hebrew: שילה, Šîlô) is an Israeli settlement in the northern West Bank, located 28 miles (45 km) north of Jerusalem on Route 60, next to the Palestinian town Turmus Ayya. About 1200 people live in Shilo, which is organised as a communal settlement, with about another 700 people living within its municipal boundaries [1].
Contents |
[edit] History
In January 1978, a modern community was established adjacent to the ancient biblical site, now called Tel Shilo, when a group affiliated with the Gush Emunim movement returned to the location to assert revenant rights. In 1979 the Israeli government officially authorized Shiloh's status as a recognized village. The village is administrated by the Mateh Binyamin Regional Council.
The population (2006) of the village is approximately 1500 and the community contains educational institutions, a Hesder Yeshiva (see below), medical and dental clinics, grocers, sports fields, a pool and several synagogues, one scale-modeled to the ancient Tabernacle.
Shilo is built on disputed territory, claimed by the Palestinian Authority as part of a potential independent state. In 2006, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert noted that Shilo might be one of the settlements which would be pulled out of the West Bank.[2] He claimed that its residents would have to choose whether to remain citizens of Israel, or live under foreign rule.
[edit] Tel Shilo
The city of Shilo used to hold a central place in the history of the Jewish people. During the period between capturing the Land and building the Temple, thousands of years ago in the days when Joshua divided the land among the 12 tribes, the Tabernacle resided in Shilo. Until the death of Eli the High Priest, Shilo was the place of pilgrimage for the Children of Israel. Three times a year the faithful traveled to Shilo to bring their festival offerings.
Tel Shilo is now an archaeological site, where once the spiritual life of the Jewish people was centered for 369 years in the 11th and 12th centuries B.C.E. In addition, there are artifacts from other periods, notably the end of the Second Temple (130 B.C.E. - 70 B.C.E.), the Byzantine period (350 - 618), and the early Muslim period (638-900).
The first archaeological excavations began in the years 1922-1932 by a Danish expedition. The finds were placed in the Danish National Museum in Copenhagen. In 1980, Yisrael Finkelstein, an archeologist from Bar-Ilan University, initiated four seasons of digs and many finds were revealed including coins, storage jars, and other artifacts. Many are preserved at Bar-Ilan University. In 1981-1982, Zeev Yeivin and Rabbi Yoel Bin-Nun dug out from the bedrock area of the presumed site of the Tabernacle. Ceramics and Egyptian figurines were found. [3]
[edit] Yeshivat Hesder Shilo
Yeshivat Hesder Shilo was founded in 1979 and has over 150 students including 25 Kollel members. Rabbi Aharon Harel and Rabbi Michael Brom serve as Rosh Yeshiva. As a hesder yeshiva, the students of Shilo combine intensive studies with service in the IDF. After completing the five-year program, some students opt to further their rabbinic studies in the kollel and pursue semicha from the Chief Rabbinate of Israel. Other students certify as teachers with an academic degree (B.Ed.) in the Lifshiz Teachers Seminary, with which the yeshiva is affiliated. The yeshiva contributes in many ways to Shilo, including offering private and public Torah study opportunities. Many students and teaching staff choose to stay and build their families in the village [4]. Midreshet Binat in Shvut Rachel, a midrasha headed by Rabbi Ronen Tamir, was established in 2000 as a branch of the yeshiva.
[edit] External links
- village website
- Shilo yeshiva (Hebrew)
- Pictures of Tel-Shilo
- God Israel & Shiloh, David Rubin, Mazo publishers, 2007
|