Kiryat Menachem (Hebrew: קרית מנחם) is a neighborhood in southwest Jerusalem, Israel, bordering Kiryat Hayovel. Kiryat Menachem was founded in 1956 to provide housing for the masses of new immigrants who arrived after the establishment of the State of Israel. The neighborhood is named for American Zionist leader Max (Menachem) Bressler.[1] It is located on the road to Hadassah Hospital, Ein Karem.
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Kiryat Menachem is a neighborhood in southwest Jerusalem. The neighborhood, which was built in 1956 for new immigrants and immigrants being moved out of the transit camp in Kiryat Yovel, was named after the president of the Jewish National Fund in the U.S., Menachem (Max) Bressler, who was one of the main promoters of the neighborhood's construction. The neighborhood was named after him during his lifetime.
To the south and the east, the neighborhood is bordered by Ir Ganim, with these two neighborhoods essentially forming a single urban unit. Mt. Ora and Moshav Ora are to the west, and the forests of the Jerusalem Hills are to the north, adjacent to the Kiryat Yovel neighborhood. To the west are steep hills that descend toward streams that flow into Nahal Sorek to the north of Hadassah Ein Karem Hospital. The magnificent view from the neighborhood includes Ein Karem, Nahal Sorek and Sataf.
The streets in Kiryat Menachem are named after countries, mainly those for South America that voted in the UN in favor of the establishment of the State of Israel.
Kiryat Menachem has many educational institutions, including the Henrietta Szold Institute, National Institute for Research in the Behavioral Sciences, Guatemala School, Chabad School and Reishit state religious school built by the urban kibbutz located in the neighborhood. The local Amit high school is for both religious and non-religious students, with the vast majority of the students coming from outside the neighborhood. Kiryat Menachem's youth belong to chapters of three youth movements: Scouts, Ezra and Acharai.
Various community organizations operate in Kiryat Menachem, such as:
• Ganim Community Council • Food Cooperative (Established by the Community Advocacy organization) • Yad Marlene (Support center for elementary school children) • Urban Kibbutz "Reishit" • Tzeva (Center for mentoring immigrant children) • Educational welfare (a branch of the government project for investing in education) • Social neighborhood renewal. • Kidum Noar (youth guidance organization). • Garin Dvash (An ecological group for community environment developing) • Shachen Tov (Good Neighbor- Distribution of food for families in need). • Machshava Tova (Accessing computers to the community). • The National Program for Children and Youth at Risk • "Rachel" Child Development Center.
There are many active volunteer groups in Kiryat Menachem, joined each year by graduates of the "Scouts" and "Acharai" youth movements. Further more there is also a group of national service girls from the "Bat Ami" organization.
Kiryat Menachem and Ir Ganim are a single geographic unit with a population of about 15,000. The neighborhood's population is quite heterogeneous, with veteran residents and new immigrants from Ethiopia and the former Soviet Union. There are various types of housing in the neighborhood, in keeping with the population's mixture of socioeconomic levels. There are low-rise buildings and homes with gardens, mainly in Ir Ganim A and Ir Ganim B, and high-rise buildings of 4-8 stories with very small apartments throughout most of the rest of the neighborhood. Some of these buildings, particularly in Ir Ganim C and parts of Kiryat Menachem, were erected in the 1950s as temporary housing for immigrants, and are now in serious disrepair. In the 1990s urban renewal projects were carried out in these neighborhoods and some of the buildings were renovated and expanded.
Since this neighborhood is on the outskirts of Jerusalem and has a unique mixture of populations that have no easy access to the cultural and leisure activities in the city center, the Kiryat Menachem-Ir Ganim neighborhood has developed social solidarity and community institutions that make this area a pleasant place to live.
Ganim Community Council serves the Kiryat Menachem, Ir Ganim and Givat Massuah neighborhoods.
The Community Council was established in the 1980s as part of the organization of Community Council throughout the city. The Community Council is administered by publicly elected leaders who serve as mediators between the community and the authorities. Ganim Community Council provides services in the areas of education, social services and leisure to a mixed population of various ages.
The vision of Gamin Community Council is to transform the neighborhoods served by the council into places that are pleasant to live in; to improve the quality of life in the neighborhoods and to provide for the social needs of the local residents; to enable residents of different backgrounds to live together in harmony; and to build a community that is supportive, caring and involved.
Once a year the neighborhoods' residents and organizations, led by the Community Council, hold a "Neighborhood festival" to celebrate the good works of the many organizations and increase the residents' sense of belonging to a caring community.