Neve Sha'anan, Tel Aviv

View of Neve Sha'anan and old central bus station
International Style building in Neve Sha'anan

Neve Sha'anan (Hebrew: נווה שאנן, eng. "peaceful abode") is a neighborhood in Tel Aviv, Israel, founded in 1922.

History

The Neve Sha'anan neighborhood is a major transportation hub, with both the new and old Tel Aviv Central Bus Stations located there. It is named after the Bible (Isaiah 33:20: "Your eyes will see Jerusalem, a peaceful abode".)

The main street, Neve Sha'anan Street, is a pedestrian mall. Many foreign workers live or work in Neve Sha'anan. Levinsky park is the social heart of the neighborhood.[1]

The Levinsky market, which extends into numerous side streets, is a colorful market brimming with spices, herbs, and teas. Founded by Jews from Thessalonica, Greece, over 80 years ago, the Levinsky market is tucked under and between dilapidated three-story buildings.

The Greek Jews were followed by an influx of Iranian Jews and immigrants from other countries where herbal remedies and spicy foods are common. The street itself is named after Elchanan Leib Levinsky, a member of the Bilu Zionist movement in Lithuania, who emigrated to Palestine in the early 1880s.[2]

The neighborhood was the site of a number of terrorist attacks.[3][4] In July 2002, two Palestinian suicide bombers set off two explosions in rapid succession along a shopping strip in Neve Shaanan. Two of the three victims of the attack were immigrant laborers, who also made up a large portion of the 40 injured.[5] In January 2003, 23 people—15 Israelis and 8 foreign nationals—were killed, and 120 wounded when two Palestinian suicide bombers blew themselves up on the pedestrian mall adjacent to the old central bus station. The mall was packed with shoppers and laborers returning home from work.[6] In April 2006, during the Passover holiday, a Hamas suicide bomber blew himself up at the Rosh Ha'ir shwarma restaurant in Neve Sha'anan, killing 11 people and wounding 50.[7]

Levinsky Garden Library

Located in Levinsky Park, the Garden Library consists of two open-air bookshelves (one for adults and one for children).[8] The library services the whole community, but was originally designed with the refugee and migrant population of the Neve Sha'anan neighborhood in mind. The library was established in 2009 by the non-governmental organization ARTEAM.[9] In addition to the free books, the library space also offers after school programs for children[10], artistic classes and workshops, and language lessons[11] The library offers approximately 3,500 books in 16 different languages.[12] It is located at 98 Lewinsky St. (corner of Lewinsky & Har Zion).[13] The bookshelves are illuminated for easier browsing at night.[14]

Notable residents

See also

Street intersection of Levinsky St. and David Tzemach St. in Neve Sa'anan neighborhood, near the main entrance of Tel Aviv Central Bus Station, and under one of the platforms leading to the upper floors of the bus station

References

  1. Zandberg, Esther. "A library is the best welcome". Haaretz. Retrieved October 10, 2011.
  2. "A Life of Spice". jpost.com. Retrieved October 10, 2011.
  3. Double suicide attack rocks Tel Aviv. BBC News
  4. Tel Aviv suicide bomb kills nine. BBC News
  5. "Suicide bombing in Neve Sha'anan, July 2002". July 19, 2002. Retrieved October 10, 2011.
  6. "Suicide bombing in Neve Sha'anan, 2003". Mfa.gov.il. Retrieved October 10, 2011.
  7. Suicide bombing in Neve Sha'anan, 2006

Coordinates: 32°3′32.04″N 34°46′50.67″E / 32.0589000°N 34.7807417°E