Hubbry Logo
List of moshavimList of moshavimMain
Open search
List of moshavim
Community hub
List of moshavim
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
List of moshavim
List of moshavim
from Wikipedia

The following is a list of moshavim (Hebrew: מושבים) in Israel, which includes those that exist today, those that have been relocated and those that have been dismantled. As of 2018 there are a total of 451 moshavim in Israel. [1] About 7.5% of them (34 moshavim) are considered "Moshavim Shitufiim" (מושבים שיתופיים). [2]

Moshavim considered "Moshav Ovdim"

[edit]
Name Hebrew Founding year Council District
Adanim עֲדָנִים 1950 Drom HaSharon Central District
Aderet, Israel אַדֶּרֶת 1961 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Adirim אַדִּירִים 1956 Gilboa Northern District
Agur, Israel עָגוּר 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Ahi'ezer אֲחִיעֶזֶר 1950 Lod Valley Central District
Ahihud אֲחִיהוּד 1950 Mateh Asher Northern District
Ahisamakh, Israel אֲחִיסָמָךְ 1950 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Ahituv אֲחִיטוּב 1951 Emek Chefer Central District
Ahuzam אֲחֻזָּם 1950 Lachish Southern District
Alma, Israel עַלְמָה 1949 Merom HaGalil Northern District
Almagor אַלְמָגוֹר 1961 Emek HaYarden Northern District
Amikam עַמִּיקָם 1950 Alona Haifa District
Aminadav עַמִּינָדָב 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Ami'oz עַמִּיעוֹז 1956 Eshkol Southern District
Amirim אֲמִירִים 1958 Merom HaGalil Northern District
Amka עַמְקָה 1949 Mateh Asher Northern District
Amnun אַמְנוּן 1983 Mevo'ot HaHermon Northern District
Ani'am אֲנִיעָם 1978 Golan Northern District
Arbel אַרְבֵּל 1949 Lower Galilee Northern District
Argaman אַרְגָּמָן 1968 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Arugot עֲרוּגוֹת 1949 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Avdon עַבְדּוֹן 1952 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Aviel אֲבִיאֵל 1949 Alona Haifa District
Aviezer אֲבִיעֶזֶר‬ 1958 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Avigdor אֲבִיגְדוֹר 1950 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Avihayil אֲבִיחַיִל 1932 Emek Chefer Central District
Avital אֲבִיטַל 1953 Gilboa Northern District
Avivim אֲבִיבִים 1958 Merom HaGalil Northern District
Avnei Eitan אַבְנֵי אֵיתָן 1974–78 Golan Northern District
Azaria עֲזַרְיָה 1949 Gezer Central District
Azri'el עַזְרִיאֵל 1951 Lev HaSharon Central District
Azrikam עַזְרִיקָם 1950 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Balfouria בַּלפוּרְיָה 1922 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Bar Giora בַּר גִּיּוֹרָא 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Barak, Israel בָּרָק‬ 1956 Gilboa Northern District
Bareket בַּרֶקֶת 1952 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Bat Shlomo בָּת שְׁלֹמֹה 1951 Hof HaCarmel Haifa District
Batzra בָּצְרָה 1946 Hof HaSharon Central District
Be'er Milka בְּאֵר מִלְכָּה 2006 Ramat HaNegev Southern District
Be'er Tuvia בְּאֵר טוֹבִיָּה 1930 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Be'erotayim בְּאֵרוֹתַיִם 1949 Emek Chefer Central District
Beit Arif בֵּית עָרִיף 1949 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Beit Elazari בֵּית אֶלְעָזָרִי 1948 Brenner Central District
Beit Ezra בֵּית עֶזְרָא 1950 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Beit Gamliel בֵּית גַּמְלִיאֵל 1949 Hevel Yavne Central District
Beit HaGadi בֵּית הַגָּדִי 1951 Sdot Negev Southern District
Beit HaLevi בֵּית הַלֵּוִי 1945 Emek Chefer Central District
Beit Hanan בֵּית חָנָן 1929 Gan Raveh Central District
Beit Hanania בֵּית חֲנַנְיָה 1950 Hof HaCarmel Haifa District
Beit Herut בֵּית חֵרוּת 1933 Emek Chefer Central District
Beit Hilkia בֵּית חִלְקִיָּה 1953 Nahal Sorek Central District
Beit Hillel בֵּית הִלֵּל 1940 Mevo'ot HaHermon Northern District
Beit Meir בֵּית מֵאִיר 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Beit Nehemia בֵּית נְחֶמְיָה 1950 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Beit Nekofa בֵּית נְקוֹפָה 1949 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Beit Oved בֵּית עוֹבֵד 1933 Gan Raveh Central District
Beit She'arim (moshav) בֵּית שְׁעָרִים 1926 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Beit Shikma בֵּית שִׁקְמָה 1950 Hof Ashkelon Southern District
Beit Uziel בֵּית עוּזִיאֵל 1956 Gezer Central District
Beit Yanai בֵּית יַנַּאי 1933 Emek Chefer Central District
Beit Yehoshua בֵּית יְהוֹשֻעַ 1938 Hof HaSharon Central District
Beit Yitzhak-Sha'ar Hefer בֵּית יִצְחָק-שַׁעַר חֵפֶר 1963 Emek Chefer Central District
Beit Yosef, Israel בֵּית יוֹסֵף 1937 Valley of Springs Northern District
Beit Zaid בֵּית זַיְד 1951 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Beit Zayit בֵּית זַיִת 1949 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Beka'ot בְּקָעוֹת 1972 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Beko'a בְּקוֹעַ 1952 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Ben Ami בֶּן עַמִּי 1949 Mateh Asher Northern District
Ben Shemen בֶּן שֶׁמֶן 1952 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Ben Zakai בֶּן זַכַּאי 1950 Hevel Yavne Central District
Berekhya בֶּרֶכְיָה 1950 Hof Ashkelon Southern District
Bethlehem of Galilee בֵּית לֶחֶם הַגְּלִילִית 1948 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Betzet בֶּצֶת 1951 Mateh Asher Northern District
Bitan Aharon בִּיתַן אַהֲרֹן 1936 Emek Chefer Central District
Bitkha בִּטְחָה 1950 Merhavim Southern District
Bitzaron בִּצָּרוֹן 1935 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Bnaya בְּנַיָה 1949 Brenner Central District
Bnei Atarot בְּנֵי עֲטָרוֹת 1948 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Bnei Dror בְּנֵי דְּרוֹר 1946 Lev HaSharon Central District
Bnei Netzarim בני נצרים 2008 Eshkol Southern District
Bnei Re'em בְּנֵי רְאֵ"ם 1947 Hof HaSharon Central District
Bnei Zion בְּנֵי צִיּוֹן 1949 Nahal Sorek Central District
Brosh, Israel בְּרוֹשׁ 1953 Bnei Shimon Southern District
Burgata בּוּרְגְתָא 1949 Emek Chefer Central District
Bustan HaGalil בֻּסְתַּן הַגָּלִיל 1948 Mateh Asher Northern District
Dalton, Israel דַּלְתּוֹן 1982 Eshkol Southern District
Dekel דֶּקֶל 1956 Gilboa Northern District
Dishon דִּישׁוֹן 1949 Hof HaCarmel Haifa District
Dor, Israel דּוֹר 1963 Merom HaGalil Northern District
Dovev דּוֹבֵ"ב 1955 Shafir Southern District
Dvora, Israel דְּבוֹרָה 1953 Mevo'ot HaHermon Northern District
Ein Ayala עֵין אַיָּלָה 1949 Hof HaCarmel Haifa District
Ein HaBesor עֵין הַבְּשׂוֹר‬ 1982 Eshkol Southern District
Ein Hatzeva עֵין חֲצֵבָה 1960 Tamar Southern District
Ein Iron עֵין עִירוֹן 1934 Menashe Haifa District
Ein Sarid עֵין שָׂרִיד 1950 Lev HaSharon Central District
Ein Tamar עֵין תָּמָר 1982 Tamar Southern District
Ein Vered עֵין וֶרֶד 1930 Lev HaSharon Central District
Ein Ya'akov עֵין יַעֲקֹב 1953 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Ein Yahav עֵין יַהַב 1962 Central Arava Southern District
Eitan, Israel אֵיתָן 1960 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Eliad, Golan Heights אֵלִי-עַד 1968 Golan Northern District
Eliakim אליקים 1949 Megiddo Northern District
Elifelet אֱלִיפֶלֶט 1949 Mevo'ot HaHermon Northern District
Elishama, Israel אֱלִישָׁמָע 1950 Drom HaSharon Central District
Elkosh אֶלְקוֹשׁ 1949 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Elyashiv אֶלְיָשִׁיב 1933 Emek Chefer Central District
Emunim אֱמוּנִים 1950 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Eshbol אֶשְׁבּוֹל 1954 Merhavim Southern District
Eshtaol אֶשְׁתָאוֹל 1949 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Even Menachem אֶבֶן מְנַחֵם 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Even Sapir אֶבֶן סַפִּיר 1956 Gilboa Northern District
Gadish גָּדִישׁ 1935 Drom HaSharon Central District
Gan HaDarom גַּן הַדָּרוֹם 1934 Menashe Haifa District
Gan Haim גַּן חַיִּים 1953 Gederot Central District
Gan HaShomron גַּן השׁוֹמְרוֹן 1949 Emek Chefer Central District
Gan Sorek גַּן שׂוֹרֵק 1932 Drom HaSharon Central District
Gan Yoshiya גַּן יֹאשִׁיָּה 1950 Gan Raveh Central District
Ganei Am גַּנֵּי עַם 1956 Gezer Central District
Ganei Tal גַּנֵּי טַל 1950 Lod Valley Central District
Ganei Yohanan גַּנֵּי יוֹחָנָן 1950 Nahal Sorek Central District
Ganot גַּנּוֹת 1926 Drom HaSharon Central District
Gat Rimon גַּת רִמּוֹן 1949 Hof Ashkelon Southern District
Ge'a גֵּיאָה 1948 Gan Raveh Central District
Ge'alya גְּאַלְיָה 1948 Emek Chefer Central District
Gefen גֶּפֶן 1949 Hof HaCarmel Haifa District
Geulei Teiman גְּאֻלֵי תֵּימָן 1938 Lev HaSharon Central District
Geulim גְּאֻלִים 1955 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Geva Carmel גֶּבַע כַּרְמֶל 1933 Brenner Central District
Gibton גִּבְּתוֹן 1949 Merhavim Southern District
Gilat גִּילַת 1950 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Gimzo גִּמְזוֹ 1949 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Ginaton גִּנָּתוֹן 1972 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Gitit, Bik'at HaYarden גִּתִּית 1933 Drom HaSharon Central District
Givat Hen גִּבְעַת חֵ"ן 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Giv'at Ko'ah גִּבְעַת כֹּ"חַ 1953 Alona Haifa District
Givat Nili גִּבְעַת נִילִ"י 1958 Emek Chefer Central District
Givat Shapira גִּבְעַת שַׁפִּירָא 1950 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Giv'at Ye'arim גִּבְעַת יְעָרִים 1958 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Givat Yeshayahu גִּבְעַת יְשַׁעְיָהוּ 1968 Golan Northern District
Givat Yoav גִּבְעַת יוֹאָב 1950 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Giv'ati גִּבְעָתִי 1952 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Givolim גִּבְעוֹלִים 1950 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Goren גֹּרֶן 1933 Emek Chefer Central District
Hadar Am הֲדַר עָם 1949 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Hadid חָדִיד 1950 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Hagor חָגוֹר 1949 Drom HaSharon Central District
Hamra, Bik'at HaYarden חַמְרָה 1971 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Haniel, Israel חַנִּיאֵל 1950 Emek Chefer Central District
Hatzav חָצָב 1949 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Hatzeva חֲצֵבָה 1965 Central Arava Southern District
Havatzelet HaSharon חֲבַצֶּלֶת הַשָּׁרוֹן 1946 Emek Chefer Central District
HaYogev הַיּוֹגֵב 1949 Emek HaYarden Northern District
Hazon, Israel חָזוֹן 1969 Merom HaGalil Northern District
HaZor'im הוֹדִיָּה 1949 Hof Ashkelon Southern District
Heletz חֶלֶץ 1950 Hof Ashkelon Southern District
Hemed חֶמֶד‬ 1950 Lod Valley Central District
Herev Le'et חֶרֶב לְאֵת 1947 Emek Chefer Central District
Herut, Israel חֵרוּת 1930 Lev HaSharon Central District
Hibat Tzion חִבַּת צִיּוֹן 1933 Emek Chefer Central District
Hodiya חוֹסֶן 1949 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Hogla, Israel חָגְלָה 1933 Emek Chefer Central District
Hosen חֹסֶן 1950 Merom HaGalil Northern District
Idan, Israel עִדָּן 1980 Central Arava Southern District
Ilaniya אִילָנִיָּה 1949 Lower Galilee Northern District
Kahal כָּחָל 1980 Mevo'ot HaHermon Northern District
Kanaf כָּנָף 1985 Golan Northern District
Kerem Ben Shemen כֶּרֶם בֶּן שֶׁמֶן 1923 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Kerem Ben Zimra כֶּרֶם בֶּן זִמְרָה 1949 Merom HaGalil Northern District
Kerem Maharal כֶּרֶם מַהֲרַ"ל 1949 Hof HaCarmel Haifa District
Kfar Ahim כְּפַר אַחִים 1949 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Kfar Aviv כְּפַר אָבִיב 1951 Gederot Central District
Kfar Baruch כְּפַר בָּרוּךְ 1926 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Kfar Bialik כְּפַר בְּיַאלִיק 1934 Zevulun Haifa District
Kfar Bilu כְּפַר בִּיל"וּ 1932 Gezer Central District
Kfar Bin Nun כְּפַר בִּן-נוּן 1952 Gezer Central District
Kfar Gidon כְּפַר גִּדְעוֹן 1923 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Kfar Haim כְּפַר חַיִּים 1933 Emek Chefer Central District
Kfar HaNagid כְּפַר הַנָּגִיד 1949 Gan Raveh Central District
Kfar HaRif כְּפַר הָרִי"ף 1956 Yoav Southern District
Kfar Haroeh כְּפַר הָרֹאֶ"ה 1933 Emek Chefer Central District
Kfar Hasidim כְּפַר חֲסִידִים 1924 Zevulun Haifa District
Kfar Hess כְּפַר הֶס 1931 Lev HaSharon Central District
Kfar Hoshen כְּפַר חוֹשֶׁן 1949 Merom HaGalil Northern District
Kfar Kisch כְּפַר קִישׁ 1946 Lower Galilee Northern District
Kfar Ma'as כְּפַר מַעַשׂ 1935 Drom HaSharon Central District
Kfar Maimon כְּפַר מַיְמוֹן 1959 Sdot Negev Southern District
Kfar Malal כְּפַר מַלָּ"ל 1922 Drom HaSharon Central District
Kfar Monash כְּפַר מוֹנַשׁ 1936 Emek Chefer Central District
Kfar Mordechai כְּפַר מָרְדְּכַי‬ 1950 Gederot Central District
Kfar Netter כְּפַר נֶטֶר 1939 Hof HaSharon Central District
Kfar Pines כְּפַר פִּינֶס 1933 Menashe Haifa District
Kfar Ruth כְּפַר רוּת 1977 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Kfar Shamai כְּפַר שַׁמַּאי 1949 Merom HaGalil Northern District
Kfar Shmuel כְּפַר שְׁמוּאֵל 1950 Gezer Central District
Kfar Sirkin כְּפַר סִירְקִין 1933 Drom HaSharon Central District
Kfar Truman כְּפַר טְרוּמַן 1949 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Kfar Uria כְּפַר אוּרִיָּה 1949 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Kfar Vitkin כְּפַר וִיתְקִין 1930 Emek Chefer Central District
Kfar Warburg כפר-וַרְבּוּרְג 1939 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Kfar Yavetz כְּפַר יַעֲבֵץ 1932 Lev HaSharon Central District
Kfar Yedidia כְּפַר יְדִידְיָה 1935 Emek Chefer Central District
Kfar Yehezkel כְּפַר יְחֶזְקֵאל 1921 Gilboa Northern District
Kfar Yehoshua כְּפַר יְהוֹשֻׁעַ 1927 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Kfar Zeitim כְּפַר זֵיתִים 1950 Lower Galilee Northern District
Kidmat Tzvi קִדְמַת צְבִי 1981 Golan Northern District
Kidron, Israel קִדְרוֹן 1949 Brenner Central District
Klahim קְלָחִים 1954 Merhavim Southern District
Kmehin כְּמֵהִין 1988 Ramat HaNegev Southern District
Kokhav Michael כּוֹכַב מִיכָאֵל 1950 Hof Ashkelon Southern District
Komemiyut קוֹמְמִיּוּת 1950 Shafir Southern District
Ksalon כְּסָלוֹן 1952 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Lakhish, Israel לָכִישׁ 1955 Lakhish Southern District
Lapidot לַפִּידוֹת 1978 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Liman, Israel לִימַן 1949 Mateh Asher Northern District
Luzit לוּזִית 1955 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Ma'ale Gamla מַעֲלֵה גַּמְלָא 1975 Golan Northern District
Magen Shaul מָגֵן שָׁאוּל 1976 Gilboa Northern District
Magshimim מַגְשִׁימִים 1949 Drom HaSharon Central District
Mahseya מַחְסֵיָה 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Manot, Israel מָנוֹת 1980 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Maor מָאוֹר 1953 Menashe Haifa District
Margaliot מַרְגָּלִיּוֹת 1951 Mevo'ot HaHermon Northern District
Mash'en מַשְׁעֵן 1949 Hof Ashkelon Southern District
Maslul מַסְלוּל 1950 Merhavim Southern District
Masua מַשּׂוּאָה 1969 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Mata, Israel מַטָּע 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Matzliah מַצְלִיחַ 1950 Gezer Central District
Mavki'im מַבְקִיעִים 1949 Hof Ashkelon Southern District
Mazor מָזוֹר 1949 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Megadim מְגָדִים 1949 Hof HaCarmel Haifa District
Mehola מחולה 1967 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Mei Ami מֵי עַמִּי 1963 Menashe Haifa District
Meishar מֵישָׁר 1950 Gederot Central District
Meitav, Israel מֵיטָב 1954 Gilboa Northern District
Mekhora מְכוֹרָה 1973 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Menuha מְנוּחָה 1953 Lachish Southern District
Me'ona מְעוֹנָה 1949 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Merhavia (moshav) מֶרְחַבְיָה 1922 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Meron, Israel מֵירוֹן 1949 Merom HaGalil Northern District
Mesilat Zion מְסִלַּת צִיּוֹן 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Mevo Modi'im מְבוֹא מוֹדִיעִים 1976 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Midrakh Oz מִדְרַךְ עֹז 1952 Megiddo Northern District
Mikhmoret מִכְמֹרֶת 1945 Emek Chefer Central District
Misgav Dov מִשְׂגַּב דֹּב 1950 Gederot Central District
Mishmar Ayalon מִשְׁמַר אַיָּלוֹן 1949 Gezer Central District
Mishmar HaShiv'a מִשְׁמַר הַשִּׁבְעָה 1949 Lod Valley Central District
Mishmar HaYarden מִשְׁמַר הַיַּרְדֵּן 1956 Mevo'ot HaHermon Northern District
Mishmeret מִשְׁמֶרֶת 1946 Lev HaSharon Central District
Mivtahim מִבְטַחִים 1950 Eshkol Southern District
Mle'a מְלֵאָה 1956 Gilboa Northern District
Mlilot מְלִילוֹת 1953 Sdot Negev Southern District
Moledet מולדת 1937 Gilboa Northern District
Nahala, Israel נַחֲלָה 1953 Yoav Southern District
Nahalal נַהֲלָל 1921 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Naham נַחַם‬ 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Na'omi נָעֳמִי 1982 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Natur, Golan Heights[a] נטור 1980 Golan Northern District
Naveh, Israel נוֹב 1974 Golan Northern District
Nehalim נְחָלִים 1952 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Neot Golan נְאוֹת גּוֹלָן 1968 Golan Northern District
Neot HaKikar נְאוֹת הַכִּכָּר 1973 Tamar Southern District
Nes Harim נֵס הָרִים 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Neta'im נְטָעִים 1932 Gan Raveh Central District
Netiv HaAsara נְתִיב הָעֲשָׂרָה 1982 Hof Ashkelon Southern District
Netiv HaGdud נְתִיב הַגְּדוּד 1975 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Netiv HaShayara נְתִיב הַשַּׁיָּרָה 1950 Mateh Asher Northern District
Netu'a נְטוּעָה 1966 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Nevatim נְבָטִים 1946 Bnei Shimon Southern District
Neve Ativ נְוֵה אַטִי"ב 1972 Golan Northern District
Neve Michael נְוֵה מִיכָאֵל 1958 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Neve Mivtah נְוֵה מִבְטַח 1950 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Neve Yamin נְוֵה יָמִין 1950 Drom HaSharon Central District
Neve Yarak נְוֵה יָרָק 1951 Drom HaSharon Central District
Nir Akiva נִיר עֲקִיבָא 1953 Merhavim Southern District
Nir Banim נִיר בָּנִים 1954 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Nir Hen נִיר חֵ"ן‬ 1955–56 Lachish Southern District
Nir Moshe נִיר מֹשֶׁה 1953 Merhavim Southern District
Nir Tzvi נִיר צְבִי 1954 Lod Valley Central District
Nir Yafeh ניר יפה 1956 Gilboa Northern District
Nir Yisrael נִיר יִשְׂרָאֵל 1949 Hof Ashkelon Southern District
Nitzanei Oz נִצָּנֵי עֹז 1951 Lev HaSharon Central District
No'am נֹעַם 1955 Shafir Southern District
Noga, Israel נֹגַהּ 1955 Lachish Southern District
Nov, Golan Heights נוֹב 1955 Lachish Southern District
Ofer עֹפֶר 1950 Hof HaCarmel Haifa District
Ohad, Israel אֹהַד 1969 Eshkol Southern District
Olesh עוֹלֵש 1951 Emek Chefer Central District
Ometz, Israel אוֹמֶץ 1949 Emek Chefer Central District
Ora, Israel אוֹרָה‬ 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Orot אוֹרוֹת 1952 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Otzem עוֹצֶם 1955 Lachish Southern District
Pa'amei Tashaz פַעֲמֵי תַּשַ"ז 1953 Merhavim Southern District
Paran, Israel פָארָן 1971 Central Arava Southern District
Patish פַּטִּישׁ 1950 Merhavim Southern District
Pedaya פְּדָיָה‬ 1951 Gezer Central District
Peduim פְּדוּיִים 1950 Merhavim Southern District
Peki'in HaHadasha פְּקִיעִין החֲדָשָׁה 1955 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Petahya פְּתַחְיָה 1951 Gezer Central District
Petza'el פְּצָאֵל 1970 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Porat פּוֹרָת 1950 Lev HaSharon Central District
Prazon פְּרָזוֹן 1953 Gilboa Northern District
Pri Gan פְּרִי גַּן 1981 Eshkol Southern District
Ramat Raziel רָמַת רָזִיאֵל 1942 Gilboa Northern District
Ramat Tzvi רָמַת צְבִי 1953 Gilboa Northern District
Ram-On רָם אוֹן 1948 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Ramot Meir רָמוֹת מֵאִיר‬ 1945 Mevo'ot HaHermon Northern District
Ramot Naftali רָמוֹת נַפְתָּלִי 1969 Golan Northern District
Ramot, Golan Heights רָמוֹת‬ 1949 Gezer Central District
Ranen רַנֵּן 1950 Merhavim Southern District
Rehov רְחֹוב 1951 Valley of Springs Northern District
Reihan רֵיחָן 1981 Shomron Judea and Samaria Area
Revaha רְוָחָה 1953 Shafir Southern District
Revaya רְוָיָה‬ 1952 Valley of Springs Northern District
Rinatya רִנַּתְיָה 1949 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Rishpon רִשְׁפּוֹן 1936 Hof HaSharon Central District
Ro'i רוֹעִ"י 1976 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Sal'it סלעית 1979 Shomron Judea and Samaria Area
Sde David שְׂדֵה דָּוִד 1955 Lachish Southern District
Sde Eliezer שְׂדֵה אֱלִיעֶזֶר 1952 Mevo'ot HaHermon Northern District
Sde Ilan שְׂדֵה אִילָן 1949 Lower Galilee Northern District
Sde Moshe שְׂדֵה מֹשֶׁה 1956 Lachish Southern District
Sde Nitzan שְׂדֵה נִצָּן 1973 Eshkol Southern District
Sde Tzvi שְׂדֵה צְבִי 1953 Merhavim Southern District
Sde Uziyahu שְׂדֵה עוֹזִיָּהוּ 1950 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Sde Warburg שְׂדֵה וַרְבּוּרְג 1938 Drom HaSharon Central District
Sde Ya'akov שְׂדֵה יַעֲקֹב 1927 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Sde Yitzhak שְׂדֵה יִצְחָק 1951 Menashe Haifa District
Sdei Avraham שְׂדֵי אַבְרָהָם‬ 1981 Eshkol Southern District
Sdei Hemed שְׂדֵי חֶמֶד 1952 Drom HaSharon Central District
Sdei Trumot שְׂדֵי תְרוּמוֹת 1951 Valley of Springs Northern District
Sdot Micha שְׂדוֹת מִיכָה 1955 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Sgula סְגֻלָּה 1950 Lod Valley Central District
Sha'al שעל 1976 Golan Northern District
Sha'ar Efraim שַׁעַר אֶפְרַיִם 1953 Lev HaSharon Central District
Shadmot Dvora שדמות דבורה 1939 Lower Galilee Northern District
Shafir שפיר 1949 Shafir Southern District
Shahar, Israel שחר 1955 Lakhish Southern District
Shalva שלווה 1952 Shafir Southern District
Sharona שרונה 1938 Lower Galilee Northern District
Sharsheret, Israel שרשרת 1951 Sdot Negev Southern District
Shdema שְׁדֵמָה 1954 Gederot Central District
She'ar Yashuv שְׁאָר יָשׁוּב 1940 Mevo'ot HaHermon Northern District
Shefer שֶׁפֶר 1950 Merom HaGalil Northern District
Shekef שֶׁקֶף 1981 Lachish Southern District
Shezor שְׁזוֹר 1953 Merom HaGalil Northern District
Shibolim שִׁבֳּלִים 1952 Sdot Negev Southern District
Shilat שִׁילָּת 1977 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Sho'eva שׁוֹאֵבָה 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Shokeda שׁוֹקֵדָה 1957 Sdot Negev Southern District
Shomera שׁוֹמֵרָה 1949 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Shtula שְׁתוּלָה 1967 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Shtulim שְׁתוּלִים‬ 1950 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Shuva שׁוּבָה 1950 Sdot Negev Southern District
Sitria סִתְרִיָה 1949 Gezer Central District
Ta'ashur תְּאַשּׁוּר 1953 Bnei Shimon Southern District
Tal Shahar טַל שַׁחַר 1948 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Talmei Bilu תַּלְמֵי בִּיל"וּ 1953 Merhavim Southern District
Talmei Elazar תַּלְמֵי אֶלְעָזָר 1952 Menashe Haifa District
Talmei Eliyahu תַּלְמֵי אֵלִיָּהוּ 1970 Eshkol Southern District
Talmei Menashe תלמי מנשה 1953 Be'er Ya'akov local council Central District
Talmei Yehiel תַּלְמֵי יְחִיאֵל 1949 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Talmei Yosef תַּלְמֵי יוֹסֵף 1982 Eshkol Southern District
Ta'oz תָּעוֹז 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Tarum תָּרוּם 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Tefahot טְפָחוֹת 1980 Merom HaGalil Northern District
Tel Adashim תֵּל עֲדָשִׁים‬ 1923 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Tidhar תִּדְהָר 1953 Bnei Shimon Southern District
Tifrah תִּפְרַח 1950 Merhavim Southern District
Tirat Yehuda טִירַת יְהוּדָה 1949 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Tirosh תִּירוֹשׁ 1955 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Tkuma, Israel תְּקוּמָה 1946 Sdot Negev Southern District
Tlamim תְּלָמִים 1950 Lakhish Southern District
Tnuvot תְּנוּבוֹת 1952 Lev HaSharon Central District
Tomer תּוֹמֶר 1976 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Tzafria צַפְרִיָּה 1949 Lod Valley Central District
Tzafririm צַפְרִירִים 1958 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Tzelafon צְלָפוֹן 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Tzofar צוֹפָר 1975 Central Arava Southern District
Tzofit צוֹפִית 1933 Drom HaSharon Central District
Tzrufa צְרוּפָה 1949 Hof HaCarmel Haifa District
Tzur Moshe צוּר מֹשֶׁה 1937 Lev HaSharon Central District
Tzuriel צוּרִיאֵל 1950 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Udim אוּדִים 1948 Hof HaSharon Central District
Uza, Israel עוּזָה 1950 Shafir Southern District
Vered Yeriho וֶרֶד יְרִיחוֹ 1979 Megilot Judea and Samaria Area
Ya'ad, Israel יַעַד 1974 Misgav Northern District
Ya'ara יַעֲרָה‬ 1950 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Yad Natan יַד נָתָן 1953 Lakhish Southern District
Yad Rambam יַד רַמְבַּ"ם 1955 Gezer Central District
Yafit יַפִית 1980 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Yagel יָגֵל 1950 Lod Valley Central District
Yakhini יָכִינִי 1950 Sha'ar HaNegev Southern District
Yanuv יָנוּב 1950 Lev HaSharon Central District
Yardena יַרְדֵּנָה 1952 Valley of Springs Northern District
Yarhiv יַרְחִיב 1949 Drom HaSharon Central District
Yarkona יַרְקוֹנָה 1932 Drom HaSharon Central District
Yashresh יַשְׁרֵשׁ 1950 Gezer Central District
Yated, Israel יָתֵד 1982 Eshkol Southern District
Yatzitz יָצִיץ 1950 Gezer Central District
Yesha, Israel יֵשַׁע 1957 Eshkol Southern District
Yevul יְבוּל 1981 Eshkol Southern District
Yinon יִנּוֹן 1952 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Yish'i יִשְׁעִי 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Yoshivia יוֹשִׁבְיָה 1950 Sdot Negev Southern District
Yuval יוּבַל 1953 Mevo'ot HaHermon Northern District
Zanoah זָנוֹחַ 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Zar'it זַרְעִית 1967 Ma'ale Yosef Northern District
Zavdiel זַבְדִיאֵל 1950 Shafir Southern District
Zeitan זֵיתָן 1953 Yoav Southern District
Zekharia זְכָרְיָּה 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Zimrat זִמְרָת 1957 Sdot Negev Southern District
Zippori צִפּוֹרִי 1949 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Zohar, Israel זוֹהַר 1956 Lachish Southern District
Zrahia זְרַחְיָה 1950 Shafir Southern District
Zru'a זְרוּעָה 1953 Shafir Southern District

Moshavim considered "Moshav Shitufi"

[edit]
Name Hebrew Founding year Council District Comments
Alonei Abba אַלּוֹנֵי אַבָּא 1948 Jezreel Valley Northern District
Alonei HaBashan אַלּוֹנֵי הַבָּשָׁן 1981 Golan Northern District
Amatzia אֲמַצְיָה 1955 Lachish Southern District privatized
Beit Yatir בֵּית יַתִּיר 1980 Har Hebron Judea and Samaria Area
Bnei Darom בְּנֵי דָּרוֹם 1949 Hevel Yavne Central District privatized in 2015
Carmel כַּרְמֶל 1980 Har Hebron Judea and Samaria Area
HaBonim הַבּוֹנִים 1949 Hof HaCarmel Haifa District
Har Amasa הַר עמשָא 1983 Tamar Southern District
Keshet קֶשֶׁת 1974 Golan Northern District
Kfar Daniel כְּפַר דָּנִיֵּאל 1949 Hevel Modi'in Central District
Kfar Hittim כְּפַר חִטִּים 1924 Lower Galilee Northern District
Ma’on מָעוֹן 1981 Har Hebron Judea and Samaria Area
Masu'ot Yitzhak מַשּׂוּאוֹת יִצְחָק 1949 Shafir Southern District
Mevo Horon מְבוֹא חוֹרוֹן 1970 Mateh Binyamin Judea and Samaria Area
Mevo Beitar מְבוֹא בֵּיתָר 1950 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Moledet מוֹלֶדֶת 1937 Gilboa Northern District
Na'ama נעמה 1982 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Neve Ilan נְוֵה אִילָן 1971 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Nir Galim נִיר גַּלִּים 1949 Hevel Yavne Central District
Nir Etzion נִיר עֶצִיוֹן 1950 Hof HaCarmel Haifa District
Nordiya נוֹרְדִיָּה 1948 Lev HaSharon Central District
Odem אֹדֶם 1981 Golan Northern District ceased to be a moshav shitufi in 2014
Ramat Magshimim רָמַת מַגְשִׁימִים 1972 Golan Northern District
Regba רֶגְבָּה 1946 Mateh Asher Northern District
Shadmot Mehola שַׁדְמוֹת מְחוֹלָה 1967 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Shavei Tzion שָׁבֵי צִיּוֹן 1938 Mateh Asher Northern District
Shoresh שׁוֹרֶשׁ 1948 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Talmei Yaffe תַּלְמֵי יָפֶה 1950 Hof Ashkelon Southern District
Timorim תִּמּוֹרִים 1954 Be'er Tuvia Southern District
Tzur Natan צוּר נָתָן 1966 Drom HaSharon Central District
Yad HaShmona יַד הַשְּׁמוֹנָה 1971 Mateh Yehuda Jerusalem District
Yitav יִיטַ"ב 1970 Bik'at HaYarden Judea and Samaria Area
Yesodot יְסוֹדוֹת 1948 Nahal Sorek Central District
Yodfat יוֹדְפַת 1960 Misgav Northern District
Yonatan יוֹנָתָן 1975–78 Golan Northern District privatized

Former moshavim

[edit]

Moshavim that became community settlements

[edit]
Name Hebrew Founding year Council District The year in which it
ceased to be a moshav
Comments
Ashalim אֲשָׁלִים 1979 Ramat HaNegev Southern District early 2000s
Elazar אֶלְעָזָר 1975 Gush Etzion Judea and Samaria Area 1988
Nehusha נְחוּשָׁה 1955 Ramat HaNegev Jerusalem District 1994
Shorashim שָׁרָשִׁים 1985 Misgav Northern District 1992/3

Moshavim that were merged to another municipality

[edit]
Name Hebrew Founding year District The year in which it
ceased to be a moshav
Comments
Ein Ganim עין גנים 1908 Central District 1937 The moshav became part of Petah Tikva in 1937
Ganei Yehuda גני יהודה 1950 Central District 2003 The moshav became part of Savyon in 2003
Mishmar HaShlosha משמר השלושה 1937 Northern District 1953 The moshav became part of the Yavne'el local council in 1953
Kfar Avraham כפר אברהם 1932 Central District 1952 The moshav became part of Petah Tikva in 1952
Kfar Azar כפר אז"ר 1932 Central District 2008 The moshav became part of Ramat Gan in 2008

Moshavim that were dismantled

[edit]

Out of the few moshavim that were dismantled in Israel's history (listed in this section), a certain portion of them has been subsequently re-established elsewhere in Israel. For those rare instances this article includes two different items - an item for the original moshav that was dismantled (listed in this section) as well as an item for the moshav that was later on re-established with the same name and/or other name.

Name Hebrew Founding year Council District The year in which it
ceased to be a moshav
Comments
Katif קטיף 1985 Gush Katif 2005 The residents of Katif were forcibly evicted from their homes on 17 August 2005 as part of the Israel's unilateral disengagement plan and the moshav was destroyed once the evictions were complete.
Bnei Atzmon בְּנֵי עַצְמוֹן 1979 Gush Katif 2005 The residents of Bnei Atzmon were forcibly evicted from their homes on 17 August 2005 as part of the Israel's unilateral disengagement plan and the moshav was destroyed once the evictions were complete.
Gan Or גַּן אוֹר 1983 Gush Katif 2005 The residents of Gan Or were forcibly evicted from their homes on 17 August 2005 as part of the Israel's unilateral disengagement plan and the moshav was destroyed once the evictions were complete.
Gadid גָּדִיד‬ 1982 Gush Katif 2005 The residents of Gadid were forcibly evicted from their homes on 17 August 2005 as part of the Israel's unilateral disengagement plan and the moshav was destroyed once the evictions were complete.
Netzer Hazani, Hof Aza נצר חזני 1997 Gush Katif 2005 The residents of Netzer Hazani were forcibly evicted from their homes on 17 August 2005 as part of the Israel's unilateral disengagement plan and the moshav was destroyed once the evictions were complete.
Morag מורג‬ 1983 Gush Katif 2005 The residents of Morag were forcibly evicted from their homes on 17 August 2005 as part of the Israel's unilateral disengagement plan and the moshav was destroyed once the evictions were complete.
Ganei Tal, Hof Aza גַּנֵּי טַל‬ 1979 Gush Katif 2005 The residents of Ganei Tal were forcibly evicted from their homes on 17 August 2005 as part of the Israel's unilateral disengagement plan and the moshav was destroyed once the evictions were complete. A new village called Ganei Tal was later established in central Israel by the former settlers.
Netiv HaAsara, Sinai נְתִיב הָעֲשָׂרָה 1975 Sinai Peninsula 1982 The moshav was evacuated in 1982 as a result of the Egypt–Israel peace treaty. 70 families who had previously lived in the settlement founded a new moshav, also called Netiv HaAsara in the north-western Negev desert.
Pri'el, Sinai פריאל 1978 Sinai Peninsula 1982 The moshav was evacuated in 1982 as a result of the Egypt–Israel peace treaty.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

A (Hebrew: מושב; plural: moshavim) is a cooperative agricultural settlement in composed of small individual family farms that emphasize private ownership while incorporating joint purchasing of supplies, centralized marketing of produce, and shared provision of certain services such as and . The model emerged in the early as a middle path between fully collective kibbutzim and independent farming, with the inaugural , , founded in 1921 in the during the British Mandate period. hosts over 400 moshavim, primarily of the moshav ovdim subtype where families retain economic in farming but cooperate on bulk operations, alongside fewer moshav shitufi variants featuring pooled income and labor allocation. These settlements have historically contributed to , agricultural , and distribution across peripheral regions, though many have diversified into non-agricultural enterprises amid economic shifts. This list catalogs extant moshavim, typically grouped by cooperative type or geographic district.

Overview of Moshavim

Definition and Core Principles

A moshav (Hebrew: מוֹשָׁב, plural: moshavim) constitutes a form of agricultural settlement in , wherein individual families maintain private ownership of their homesteads and equal-sized, indivisible farm plots while collaborating through a shared society for joint purchasing of supplies, marketing of produce, and provision of communal services such as credit, machinery, and infrastructure. This structure, pioneered during the early 20th-century Zionist settlement efforts, balances personal economic autonomy with collective efficiency to foster rural self-sufficiency and . The core principles of the moshav revolve around mutual responsibility (arevut), whereby members guarantee each other's welfare and assume collective liability for loans and obligations, ensuring without full communalization of production. Democratic governance operates via elected committees handling affairs, emphasizing consensus and equal participation among farm families, with a focus on family labor as the unit rather than hired workers. This model prioritizes private initiative and inheritance rights to land holdings, distinguishing it from more collectivized systems, while promoting agricultural specialization and technological adoption through shared resources to achieve . Land allocation, typically 20-30 dunams per family depending on soil quality and region, underscores indivisibility to prevent fragmentation and maintain viability.

Historical Development and Founding

The concept of the arose within the , the pre-state Jewish community in , as an alternative to the fully collectivized model, prioritizing small-scale family farming supplemented by cooperative mechanisms for inputs, , and credit. This approach addressed concerns over the social and economic sustainability of pure collectivism while promoting agricultural self-sufficiency and Zionist . Early experiments predating failed to endure, but the model gained traction amid the Third Aliyah (1919–1923), when Jewish immigrants sought viable rural settlement forms amid land acquisition challenges and Arab opposition. Nahalal, established on September 11, 1921, in the , marked the inaugural successful ovdim, initiated by forty-four families under the auspices of the Zionist Organization and planned by architect Richard Kaufmann, whose radial layout of homes around central services influenced dozens of subsequent settlements. The site's selection leveraged fertile valley soils purchased from Arab landowners, enabling grain, dairy, and citrus production that demonstrated the moshav's economic viability through private plots averaging 25 dunams per family, coupled with shared machinery and marketing via organizations like . By the late 1920s, amid the , additional moshavim like and Kfar Yehezkel expanded the network, fostering a movement that by 1931 encompassed over 20 settlements supported by the Jewish Agency's settlement department. The 1930s saw accelerated development during the , driven by European Jewish flight from Nazi persecution, with moshavim absorbing immigrants through state-backed loans and infrastructure, though failures occurred due to poor soil or mismanagement, as in some attempts. The variant, blending individual holdings with collective labor and income sharing, debuted at Kfar Hittim in 1936, founded by Bulgarian immigrants as a outpost amid rising Arab violence, emphasizing fortified communal defense alongside semi-collective farming of grains and olives. This adaptation addressed labor shortages in remote areas, proliferating to about 40 shitufi moshavim by 1948. Following Israel's independence in 1948, the moshav framework exploded to accommodate mass immigration, with over 300 new moshavim founded by 1956, often on state-allocated lands in peripheral regions like the Lakhish area, subsidized via the Jewish Agency and backed by U.S. reparations funding for equipment and housing. Despite initial hardships from inexperience and water scarcity—exacerbated by events like the 1950s mildew plagues—the model's emphasis on owner-operated units proved resilient, contrasting with some kibbutz overextensions.

Economic Model and Self-Reliance Emphasis

The economic model of moshavim integrates private ownership of family farms with cooperative mechanisms for shared services, distinguishing it from fully collectivized kibbutzim. Each member household receives an equal-sized, indivisible plot of land for independent agricultural production, typically ranging from 10 to 25 dunams depending on regional soil and water conditions, with ownership vested in the individual family rather than the community. Cooperative institutions handle collective purchasing of inputs like seeds, fertilizers, and machinery, as well as marketing of produce through centralized channels to achieve economies of scale and bargaining power. This structure promotes economic autonomy at the household level while mitigating risks through mutual aid, such as joint credit access and infrastructure maintenance, without mandating communal labor or income pooling. Self-reliance forms a core ideological pillar, rooted in Zionist principles of pioneering labor and agricultural independence to foster national and reduce urban dependency. Founders emphasized that members sustain themselves primarily through personal effort on their plots, adhering to norms against hired labor to preserve equality and prevent exploitation, though exemptions arose for seasonal needs. This approach aimed for household self-sufficiency in basic foodstuffs, with early moshavim like (established 1921) demonstrating economies—combining crops, , and —to achieve viability without external subsidies beyond initial state land allocations. Over time, economic pressures led to diversification; by the late , non-farm income from off-site employment supplemented in many moshavim, yet the model retained its focus on familial and risk-sharing to buffer against market volatility. Causal factors in this emphasis include Israel's resource constraints and imperatives post-1948, where dispersed rural settlements were engineered for self-sustaining defense and production, aligning with first-wave Zionist ideals of productive labor over speculative urban economies. Empirical data from the 1950s-1970s show moshav households deriving 70-90% of income from on-farm activities in peripheral regions, underscoring the model's initial success in promoting resilience amid import limitations. However, structural rigidities, such as indivisible holdings limiting , contributed to later adaptations, with functions partially privatized by the to enhance flexibility without eroding the self-reliant ethos.

Types of Moshavim

Moshav Ovdim

The moshav ovdim, literally "workers' moshav," represents the foundational and most common variant of the moshav settlement model in Israel, integrating private family-based farming with cooperative mechanisms for shared services. In this structure, each household holds title to its individual plot of land—typically allocated as 25 dunams for field crops or 7.5 dunams for citrus orchards—and manages its own production, thereby emphasizing personal initiative and economic independence while pooling resources for bulk purchasing of supplies, equipment rental, and joint marketing of produce. This hybrid approach aimed to mitigate the risks faced by small-scale farmers through collective support without fully collectivizing labor or income, distinguishing it from more communal forms like the kibbutz. Originating in the early 1920s amid Zionist efforts to establish agricultural communities in , the ovdim emerged as a pragmatic alternative for settlers seeking to balance ideological socialism with practical individualism. The inaugural ovdim, , was founded on September 11, 1921, in the by a group of 43 families, primarily Eastern European Jewish immigrants, under the auspices of the and with planning input from architect Richard Kaufmann, who designed its characteristic radial layout of homesteads surrounding central facilities. By the late 1940s, following Israel's independence and mass immigration, hundreds of moshavim ovdim were established, often on state-leased lands, to absorb newcomers and bolster , with settlers receiving initial credit for livestock, seeds, and infrastructure from agencies like the Jewish Agency. Core principles of the moshav ovdim include mutual aid through village-level cooperatives for credit, storage, and processing, alongside democratic governance via an elected committee handling communal affairs such as water distribution and education. Unlike the moshav shitufi, which features centralized production teams and income equalization, the ovdim model preserves family autonomy in decision-making and profit retention, fostering a ethos of "smallholder socialism" suited to diverse agricultural pursuits like dairy, poultry, and horticulture. Membership traditionally required adherence to labor Zionist ideals, with new families vetted for farming aptitude and ideological alignment, though post-1960s economic pressures led to diversification into non-agricultural employment while retaining the cooperative framework.

Moshav Shitufi

A moshav shitufi (Hebrew: מושב שיתופי, lit. "collective moshav") represents a hybrid form of Israeli cooperative agricultural settlement, blending collective production akin to the kibbutz with family-based private consumption characteristic of the moshav. In this structure, land and means of production are owned and managed collectively, with farming operations conducted as a unified enterprise and income distributed among member households according to predefined criteria. Households reside in individual homes, handle their own consumption needs, and retain a degree of personal autonomy not found in fully communal kibbutzim, where even child-rearing was historically collective. This model emerged as a compromise for groups seeking greater communal economic coordination than the standard moshav ovdim—where each family independently owns and operates its farm plot while sharing only purchasing, marketing, and services—but without the total collectivization of the . Production decisions, labor allocation, and resource distribution occur through cooperative mechanisms, fostering shared risk and in , yet preserving family units as the basic social and consumption entity. Historically, moshavim shitufiyyim appealed to ideological pioneers, religious Zionists, or immigrant cohorts whose values or circumstances precluded integration into either pure or frameworks. The inaugural moshav shitufi, Kfar Hittim, was founded on December 7, 1936, in the Lower Galilee by Bulgarian Jewish immigrants affiliated with the "Ha-Koẓer" group, marking the first permanent implementation of this settlement type under the British Mandate. Subsequent establishments included Moledet (initially Bene Berit) in 1938, also in the Lower Galilee, and later examples such as Yad Hashmona, initiated in the 1970s by non-Israeli Christian Zionists who opted for the shitufi structure due to exclusion from kibbutz movements. Shavei Tzion, near Acre, exemplifies another variant focused on cooperative farming with family autonomy. Though less prevalent than moshavim ovdim, moshavim shitufiyyim numbered around 34 as of recent counts, comprising roughly 7.5% of total moshavim, and continue to operate primarily in agricultural sectors like crop cultivation and , adapting to modern economic pressures through diversification. Their viability relies on member commitment to collective labor and equitable income sharing, distinguishing them as a niche but enduring Zionist settlement experiment.

Moshav Olim and Other Variants

Moshav olim, or immigrants' moshavim, represent a specialized variant of the moshav ovdim model tailored for the settlement of new Jewish immigrants (olim) to , particularly those arriving from Middle Eastern and North African countries following the state's establishment in 1948. These settlements emphasized gradual integration into agricultural cooperatives, with enhanced state support including , training in farming techniques, and shared resources to accommodate settlers often unfamiliar with modern . By 1954, economic development in moshavei olim had advanced sufficiently to support self-sufficiency, typically after 4-5 years of initial establishment, marking a key phase in immigrant absorption. This variant proved effective for integrating Oriental Jewish immigrants, offering a structured transition to independent family farming within a cooperative framework, contrasting with urban settlement challenges faced by some olim groups. Unlike standard moshavim ovdim, moshav olim prioritized cultural adaptation and economic stabilization, with residents primarily of African and Asian origin maintaining the core principles of private plots and mutual aid but under temporary administrative oversight. Studies of specific cases, such as Moroccan immigrant moshavim, highlight how this model facilitated community building amid culture contact, though it required balancing individual initiative with collective support. Other variants include the moshbutz, a hybrid combining elements of moshav individual farming with kibbutz-style collective management of certain operations, though less prevalent. Religious moshavim, often aligned with national-religious ideologies, adapt the ovdim structure to incorporate Orthodox Jewish practices, such as observance in cooperative activities, but retain the emphasis on private enterprise. These adaptations emerged to address diverse demographic needs, expanding the moshav framework beyond secular pioneers.

Active Moshavim

Moshav Ovdim Listings

Moshav ovdim constitute the primary variant of settlements in , numbering approximately 405 as documented in mid-20th-century analyses, with many continuing as active agricultural cooperatives emphasizing individual farm ownership alongside shared marketing and purchasing mechanisms. These listings highlight key examples illustrating the type's geographical span, historical precedence, and demographic scale, drawn from verified settlement records.
NameFounding DateLocationNotes
NahalalSeptember 11, 1921Inaugural ovdim, pioneering the workers' cooperative model in .
YuvalNot specified in primary recordsNorthern Northernmost , exemplifying peripheral settlement expansion.
ParanNot specified in primary recordsArava regionSouthernmost , focused on arid-zone .
Tzur Moshe1949 (inferred from regional patterns)Central Among the larger by population, reflecting post-independence growth.
Avital1953Gilboa regionEstablished by immigrants from Persia and , typical of mid-century ovdim development.
Comprehensive directories of all moshav ovdim are maintained by Israeli regional councils and agricultural s, often categorized by for administrative purposes, though precise classifications require verification against current land-use and status records from bodies like the Ministry of Agriculture.

Moshav Shitufi Listings

Active represent a limited form of Israeli settlement, emphasizing collective production and marketing while maintaining private family households and consumption. These settlements, fewer in number compared to moshav ovdim, total around 40 as documented in early 21st-century records. Prominent examples include Kfar Hittim, established in 1936 northwest of in the Regional Council jurisdiction, recognized as the inaugural .
NameFounding YearLocationKey Features
Kfar Hittim1936First ; population of 330 recorded in 2002.
Yad HaShmona1971Judean FoothillsFounded by Finnish supporters for Jewish settlement; focuses on , , and guest facilities.
Odem1975Cooperative agricultural operations in northern periphery; classified as in official statistics.
Additional active moshav shitufi, such as those listed in business directories affiliated with structures, operate across districts including the and , often integrating farming with . Their persistence underscores a hybrid model balancing communal with familial , though many face challenges from and generational shifts in rural .

Former Moshavim

Conversions to Community Settlements

Several moshavim have transitioned to settlements (yishuv kehilati), a status that emphasizes residential living with selective admissions committees, communal infrastructure, and minimal agricultural obligations, often in response to declining farm profitability from factors such as poor , market competition, and residents' shift to urban . This change, facilitated by Israeli authorities, allows former moshavim to adapt to modern economic realities while preserving small-scale governance, though it typically involves of land plots and reduced purchasing or marketing. By the early 21st century, dozens of such conversions occurred, particularly in peripheral regions like the , where initial agricultural experiments proved unsustainable. Notable examples include Elikhim, established as a moshav ovdim reliant on but unable to thrive due to rocky terrain; it converted to a in 1970, later reclassified in amid further non-agricultural development. Rekefot, founded in 1981 as a , shifted to status in 1989, reflecting broader trends in dissolution. Alon HaGalil, initiated in 1980 as an agricultural under the Moshavim Movement's lookout points program, evolved into a while retaining some movement affiliations, highlighting hybrid retention of ties post-conversion. These shifts have enabled population stabilization and infrastructure upgrades but often result in higher property values and demographic selectivity compared to original ideals of egalitarian farming.

Mergers into Municipalities

Several moshavim located on the periphery of expanding urban areas in central have undergone mergers into adjacent municipalities, primarily to streamline administration, infrastructure provision, and fiscal management amid pressures. These transitions typically involve the loss of the moshav's independent cooperative status, with land use shifting from to residential and commercial development, though residents may retain some communal elements. Such incorporations are relatively rare, as moshav communities often resist dissolution of their traditional structures, prioritizing and agricultural identity. A prominent case is Ganei Yehuda, a ovdim founded in 1950 in the Ono Valley near , which comprised around 100 farming households focused on citrus and poultry production. In 2003, it was merged into the neighboring local council, expanding Savyon's jurisdiction to include Ganei Yehuda's lands and integrating its residents into the council's services while allowing smaller plots (approximately 0.5 dunams) for housing that contrasted with Savyon's larger estates. This merger followed years of urban encroachment and was facilitated by Israel's Ministry of Interior to enhance municipal efficiency in the metropolitan area. Proposals for similar mergers persist, particularly in the Sharon region, but face legal and community opposition; for instance, in 2003, Moshav Ganei Yehuda itself petitioned Israel's against the incorporation, citing threats to its rural ethos, though the merger proceeded. Overall, these events reflect broader demographic shifts, with moshav populations increasingly commuting to urban jobs and declining, prompting administrative realignments by data from Israel's Central Bureau of Statistics showing reduced farm viability in peri-urban zones.

Dismantlements and Abandonments

Several moshavim established in the after the 1967 were evacuated and dismantled between 1979 and 1982 as part of Israel's withdrawal under the and the 1979 Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty, which required the complete removal of Israeli civilian presence by April 25, 1982. Structures in these settlements, including agricultural facilities, were demolished to prevent their use, with the process overseen by the Israeli Defense Forces amid resistance from some residents. One example was Talmei Yosef, a located near , which was fully evacuated, leading to the relocation of its residents while the original site was razed. In the Gaza Strip, the 2005 Israeli disengagement plan resulted in the dismantling of all 21 settlements, including multiple in the bloc, between August 15 and September 12, 2005. This unilateral withdrawal involved the evacuation of approximately 8,000-9,000 residents and the destruction of homes, synagogues, and infrastructure to avoid leaving assets for Palestinian authorities, carried out primarily by IDF forces despite protests and some voluntary departures. Affected included Nisanit, founded in 1980 with around 115 families focused on greenhouses and citrus farming, where residents were removed amid emotional scenes documented during the operation. Ganei Tal, established in 1979 as a ovdim with about 70 families engaged in flower cultivation, was similarly demolished, leaving the site in ruins. Other dismantled Gaza encompassed Morag (founded 1979, population ~250), Netzer Hazani (1984, ~110 families), and Pe'at Sadeh (1989 , ~90 families), all of which ceased to exist as Jewish settlements post-evacuation. These dismantlements were driven by strategic and political considerations rather than economic failure or voluntary abandonment, with Sinai cases tied to territorial concessions for peace and Gaza to reducing burdens amid ongoing conflict. Post-evacuation, many former residents received compensation from the Israeli government—estimated at $2 billion total for the Gaza disengagement—but faced challenges in relocation and community rebuilding, with some Sinai evacuees resettling in the or Gaza border areas before further disruptions. Instances of internal abandonments within Israel's pre-1967 borders are rare, typically linked to early 20th-century threats like the 1929 riots rather than systemic dismantlement.

Geographical and Demographic Context

Distribution by Israeli Districts

As of the end of 2018, hosted 452 moshavim, primarily rural settlements focused on . These are unevenly distributed across the six administrative districts, with concentrations in areas historically designated for agricultural development during the pre-state and early state periods, such as the and peripheral regions. The , being predominantly urban, contains no moshavim.
DistrictApproximate Number of Moshavim (2008 data)Share of Total (2008)Share of Moshav Population (2018)
Central14533%36.8%
Northern11927%21.7%
Southern11025%22.7%
409%10.1%
Not specified (low)~6% (inferred)5.5%
00%0.0%
The Central District maintains the largest share, benefiting from fertile soils, proximity to markets, and established infrastructure, as evidenced by both settlement counts and resident populations exceeding one-third of the national moshav total. Northern and Southern Districts follow, reflecting early Zionist settlement efforts in frontier areas like the and periphery, though population densities per moshav are lower due to harsher terrains and security considerations. District's limited presence aligns with its mixed urban-rural profile, while Jerusalem's moshavim cluster in surrounding regional councils like Mateh Yehuda. Note that moshavim in and (approximately 3.3% of population share in 2018) fall outside standard district classifications under . Overall distribution patterns have shown stability since the early 2000s, with total counts fluctuating minimally amid some conversions to community settlements.

Population and Agricultural Shifts

Over the decades, the population of moshavim has exhibited heterogeneous trends, with overall growth driven by the influx of urban-origin residents seeking higher and suburban amenities, particularly since the . As of 2008, approximately 440 moshavim housed 258,100 residents, representing about 4% of Israel's total population at the time. This expansion has been uneven, with peripheral moshavim in arid or conflict-prone areas experiencing stagnation or decline due to economic challenges, while those near urban centers have swelled through private home expansions and new plots. For instance, Tzur Moshe emerged as Israel's most populous moshav with 3,375 residents by 2017, reflecting consolidation in viable locations.[](./assets/%D7%A6%D7%95%D7%A8_%D7%9E%D7%A9%D7%94_(cropped)) Agriculturally, moshavim have transitioned from self-sufficient family farms reliant on cooperative marketing to diversified operations amid structural declines in viability post-1985 economic liberalization. Traditional crop and livestock production, once central, now constitutes a smaller share of income as smallholder farming proved unsustainable against rising costs, water scarcity, and global competition, prompting farm enlargement and specialization in high-value exports like flowers and dairy. Pluriactivity has become normative, with over half of moshav households deriving primary income from off-farm sources such as urban employment, agrotourism, and small industries by the early 2000s, reversing earlier trends of full-time agrarian dependence. This shift correlates with increased reliance on foreign migrant labor for fieldwork, enabling resident diversification while preserving some agricultural output. These changes have blurred the moshav's original cooperative-agricultural identity, fostering decooperativization where joint purchasing and marketing wane in favor of individualized enterprises, though core remains collective. In response to incentives like subsidies for consolidation, average sizes grew, but part-time operations proliferated, contributing to suburban sprawl and reduced communal cohesion in many settlements. Empirical data from longitudinal surveys indicate that while agricultural GDP contribution from moshavim persists, non-farm activities now dominate household economics, reflecting broader rural restructuring in .

Significance and Impact

Achievements in Settlement and Productivity

Moshavim played a pivotal role in Israel's post-independence settlement efforts, particularly in frontier areas such as the and , where they were established to secure borders, develop uncultivated lands, and integrate mass . Following the 1948 War of Independence, hundreds of moshavim were founded, making this settlement type the most prevalent form of rural community during the state's first decade, as it balanced individual family farming with cooperative support systems that facilitated rapid establishment in challenging terrains. These settlements absorbed significant numbers of new immigrants, providing them with allocated plots, technical training, and shared to transition from urban or backgrounds to agricultural self-sufficiency, thereby contributing to demographic dispersal and national resilience against peripheral vulnerabilities. By the 1980s, approximately 448 moshavim housed around 157,000 residents, underscoring their scale in populating and stabilizing remote regions. In , moshavim, in conjunction with kibbutzim, generate about 80% of Israel's output through efficient purchasing of inputs, centralized , and adoption of technologies like , enabling high yields from scarce water and arable resources. This model has driven innovations in , particularly in the Arava and Western , where moshavim produce a substantial share of fresh produce—up to 76% nationally—while supporting exports and food self-sufficiency despite comprising only a fraction of the workforce.

Criticisms and Challenges

Moshavim experienced a profound in the , driven by accumulated debts from aggressive agricultural expansion, diversification into industry, and reliance on government-backed credit amid . The economic stabilization plan hardened budget constraints by ending unlimited subsidies and mutual guarantees through regional associations, exposing overleveraged operations to market realities. Moshav debt levels nearly doubled from $600 million as of July within a year, forcing widespread foreclosures, asset sales, and shifts away from farming. This economic pressure accelerated the erosion of cooperative principles, with members prioritizing individual profitability over collective obligations. Key factors include government policies that diminished enforcement of mutual aid rules and internal divergences from agricultural specialization—such as conflicts between dairy, livestock, and crop producers—undermining joint purchasing, marketing, and risk-sharing. Consequently, participation in communal services declined, fostering polarization and heterogeneity within communities, where only a minority remained active in agriculture. Demographic challenges compound these issues, particularly the difficulty in retaining second-generation amid urban migration and limited local opportunities post-military service. Many moshavim struggle with aging populations and succession gaps, as younger residents seek higher incomes elsewhere, threatening long-term viability without adaptation to non-agricultural economies. Critics argue that historical insulation from competitive markets via state support cultivated inefficiencies, such as and poor , though empirical data shows post-crisis reforms enabled survival through and .

Controversies

Admissions Committees and Community Cohesion

In Israeli moshavim, admissions committees operate under the 2011 Admissions Committees (Amendments No. 8 and 12), which permits small rural communities of up to 400 households—expanded to 700 in 2023—in designated peripheral areas like the and to screen potential residents for compatibility with the locality's "social and cultural fabric." These committees, typically comprising local representatives, municipal officials, and Land Authority delegates, evaluate applicants based on criteria such as commitment to cooperative agricultural lifestyles, financial stability, and alignment with values, which in moshavim often emphasize shared Zionist, rural, and familial norms essential for mutual aid systems. Proponents argue that such mechanisms preserve community cohesion by ensuring homogeneity, which facilitates effective in moshavim's semi-collective frameworks, where residents rely on collective marketing, maintenance, and social trust for ; without screening, influxes of incompatible individuals could erode these bonds and undermine the original settlement ethos established since the . The Israeli upheld the law in , ruling that rejections must be non-arbitrary and that the framework does not inherently violate equality principles, provided decisions promote legitimate communal interests over exclusionary motives. Critics, including human rights organizations, contend that the discretionary power enables de facto discrimination, particularly against Arab citizens, as evidenced by cases like the 2010 rejection of an Arab Bedouin family by Moshav Nevatim's committee despite their rental of a property from Jewish owners, citing incompatibility with the moshav's character. Such practices have been challenged as fostering segregation in over 400 small communities, potentially affecting up to half of Israel's rural localities post-2023 expansions, though data shows rejections also target Jews deemed unfit for rural life, suggesting broader selectivity beyond ethnicity. Sources like Human Rights Watch and Adalah, advocacy groups focused on Palestinian rights, frequently highlight these as systemic barriers, but their analyses often prioritize discrimination narratives over empirical outcomes on cohesion, such as sustained high participation rates in moshav cooperative activities where committees are active.

Land Disputes and Security Concerns

Moshavim, particularly those situated along Israel's borders and in peripheral regions, have long been exposed to security threats from terrorist incursions and rocket barrages, stemming from their role in frontier settlement to secure . In the , infiltrators from and conducted cross- raids targeting agricultural communities, including moshavim, killing dozens of residents and destroying crops to disrupt economic viability; for example, between 1949 and 1956, over 400 civilians were murdered in such attacks across border settlements. Ongoing rocket fire from Gaza since 2001 has intermittently endangered southern moshavim, prompting the construction of reinforced shelters and community defense squads, though these measures have not eliminated vulnerabilities. The October 7, 2023, Hamas-led assault amplified these concerns, with terrorists breaching the Gaza border fence and infiltrating multiple moshavim in the Gaza envelope, such as Mivtahim, where an IDF investigation revealed critical delays in response—security teams detected breaches but awaited external reinforcements, allowing gunmen to enter homes and kill residents. In Mivtahim alone, the attack resulted in civilian deaths and abductions, highlighting systemic preparedness gaps despite prior intelligence warnings; the moshav's community subsequently demanded a state commission of inquiry to address these failures. Similar penetrations occurred at moshavim like and , contributing to the overall toll of over 1,200 Israeli deaths nationwide, with border moshavim bearing disproportionate impact due to their proximity—less than 5 kilometers from Gaza in some cases. Land disputes have compounded challenges for , often involving claims by Arab Israelis or to lands allocated to these communities post-1948 under Israeli state , which transferred absentee properties and uncultivated areas to Jewish settlement for agricultural and defensive purposes. A prominent case is Mei Ami, adjacent to the Arab city of Umm el-Fahm, where in 2007 residents petitioned courts to buy plots, asserting the land derived from a pre-1948 Arab village destroyed in the War of Independence; the , established in 1950 on state-designated terrain, resisted expansion that could alter its demographic composition and heighten internal frictions. Recent government proposals for a near Mei Ami, aimed at mitigating infiltration risks from nearby Arab areas, have reignited debates, with critics alleging discriminatory while proponents cite empirical patterns of heightened and in proximity to such zones. Internal moshav land rights disputes with state bodies, such as the Israel Land Authority, further illustrate tensions; in Moshav Meor Modi'im, residents faced eviction threats in the over unresolved leasing agreements, resolved only after legal battles and intervention amid claims of bureaucratic overreach eroding cooperative foundations. These conflicts, while rooted in legal frameworks prioritizing national land reserves for agriculture, underscore causal links between unresolved tenure and diminished resident investment in security infrastructure. Broader critiques from organizations like highlight perceived favoritism in land allocation to moshavim over non-Jewish claimants, though such analyses often overlook Israel's foundational imperative to consolidate demographically vulnerable frontiers against existential threats.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.