Birya

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Birya
בִּירִיָּה
Hebrew transcription(s)
  standard Biriya
Entrance to Birya
Birya
Coordinates: 32°58′47.56″N 35°29′56.03″E / 32.9798778°N 35.4988972°E / 32.9798778; 35.4988972Coordinates: 32°58′47.56″N 35°29′56.03″E / 32.9798778°N 35.4988972°E / 32.9798778; 35.4988972
Council Merom HaGalil
Region Upper Galilee
Founded 1946 (original),
1971 (current)
Founded by Religious Kibbutz Movement

Birya (Hebrew: בִּירִיָּה), also Biriya, is an agricultural village near Safed, Israel, under the jurisdiction of the Merom HaGalil Regional Council in the Upper Galilee.

History

The town of Birya is mentioned in the Talmud.[1]

In 1946, a group of pioneers affiliated with the Religious Kibbutz Movement settled at a site near Birya Fortress.[2] According to the Jewish National Fund,[3]

The name is historic; there were Jewish peasants in this and several other villages in the vicinity until two or three centuries ago. It is known that the author of the Shulchan Aruch, Rabbi Joseph Caro, completed one of his works at Birya.

According to the Jewish National Fund, Biria was frequently attacked both by Syrian troops and by Kaukji's men. In February 1946, after an attack on an Arab Legion camp in the area, the British army searched the village and found arms on the land. All the kvutza members were arrested and the village was occupied by the [British] military, "whereupon thousands of young Jews from all parts of the country re-established the settlement not far from the original site." [3] The British withdrew their troops two months later, although the villagers were not released until the following summer.[3] In 1947, Birya had a population of 150.[3]

Birya forest

Modern Birya was founded in 1971. Birya was one of the settlements hit by Katyusha rockets launched by Hezbollah during the Second Lebanon War in 2006. Efforts have been made to resuscitate the forest on its outskirts, which suffered severe damage in the war.[4] The forests were planted by the Jewish National Fund in the 1940s with contributions from within Palestine, as well as the Mizrahi Organization of Great Britain, and the Mizrahi Women of Britain and America. [3]

See also

References

  1. The Territory of Asher
  2. About Kibbutz Hadati
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Jewish National Fund (1949). Jewish Villages in Israel. Jerusalem: Hamadpis Liphshitz Press. p. 191. 
  4. Making the North Green Again
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