Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Sha'ar HaGolan

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District
  
Northern

Affiliation
  
Kibbutz Movement

Population (2015)
  
570

Council
  
Emek HaYarden

Founded
  
21 March 1937

Local time
  
Friday 2:52 AM

Sha'ar HaGolan httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Founded by
  
Czechoslovakian and Polish Hashomer Hatzair members

Weather
  
13°C, Wind SW at 3 km/h, 92% Humidity

Sha'ar HaGolan (Hebrew: שַׁעַר הַגּוֹלָן‎, lit. Gate of the Golan) is a kibbutz situated at the foot of the Golan Heights in the Jordan Valley area of north-eastern Israel. Located less than 1 km from the border with Jordan, it falls under the jurisdiction of Emek HaYarden Regional Council. In 2015 it had a population of 570.

Contents

Map of Sha'ar HaGolan, Israel

History

Sha'ar HaGolan was founded on 21 March 1937 by members of the Hashomer Hatzair youth movement from Czechoslovakia and Poland. The founders met and were organized as a team in 1930 in Rishon LeZion and were called "Ein Hakore" until 1937, when they established the kibbutz as a tower and stockade settlement.

During the Battles of the Kinarot Valley in the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, the defenders of Sha'ar HaGolan and of neighbouring kibbutz Masada, after withstanding a first Syrian attack and further aerial bombardment and shelling, retreated due to lack of reinforcement and direction. The kibbutzim were captured and briefly held by the Syrian Army, during which time they were looted and burned down. Although the members soon returned, a stigma was attached to them, and vindication in the form of released military records only arrived in recent years.

Economy

The main source of income is a plastics engineering factory. The kibbutz also grows bananas, avocado and watermelons, and has a herd of dairy cows. Another economic sector is tourism, one of the attractions on a museum of Yarmukian culture exhibiting pre-historic Neolithic findings discovered along the banks of the Yarmuk River. Established in the 1950s, it was Israel's first museum of prehistory.

Archaeology

Excavations at Sha'ar HaGolan unearthed an 8,000-year-old village and artifacts that include the first pottery cooking pots found in the Land of Israel. This Neolithic Yarmukian village was inhabited by the people who abandoned their nomadic lifestyle in favor of permanent settlement, marking the shift from hunting and gathering to agriculture.

Notable residents

  • Miriam Roth
  • References

    Sha'ar HaGolan Wikipedia