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Nesher
View on WikipediaNesher (Hebrew: נֶשֶׁר) is a city in the Haifa District of Israel. In 2023 it had a population of 22,760.[1] It was founded in 1923 as a workers town for the Nesher Cement factory, the first cement factory in the country.
Key Information
History
[edit]Nesher was founded in 1923 as a workers town for the Nesher Cement factory, established in September 1923 by Michael Pollack, a Jewish industrialist from Russia. The area was swampy and malaria-infested, but employees of the factory gradually moved there with their families, bringing the population to 1,500.[2] Nesher was floated as a public company in 1925.[3] During the 1929 Palestine riots, Arabs from neighbouring Balad al-Sheikh attacked the factory and burned down a farm.[4]
By the mid-1930s, Nesher Cement had 700 employees, both Jewish and Arab.[3]
In 1948, thousands of Jewish immigrants from Europe, Iraq and North Africa settled in Nesher. The town also expanded over the Palestinian village of Balad al-Sheikh, immediately north-west of Old Nesher, after it was depopulated during the 1947–1948 civil war in Mandatory Palestine. A portion of the Tel Hanan neighborhood of the city was built over the village. In 1952, a local council was formed comprising four neighborhoods – Nesher, Giv'at Nesher, Ben-Dor and Tel Hanan. The first mayor was Yehuda Shimroni.[5]
Demographics
[edit]CBS statistics for 2005 show Nesher's ethnic makeup as 99.5% Jewish and other non-Arabs. 30.7% of the population in 2005 were immigrants who came to Israel after 1990.[6]
Education
[edit]The city's education system comprises six elementary schools, one comprehensive high school, two middle schools and 36 kindergartens and day care centers with an enrollment of 4,000 pupils. Over 70% of Nesher's high school students take the Bagrut matriculation exams, with a pass rate of 98%, one of the highest rates in Israel. Nesher's high school won the Israeli Education Prize twice in the span of a decade.[5]
Twinning and cultural exchange
[edit]In 2005, the Broward County Jewish Federation established a partnership with Nesher in an effort to create a people-to-people cultural exchange program that includes high school and college student exchanges and video conferencing for events such as school celebrations and concerts.[7]
Nesher Israel Cement Enterprises Ltd
[edit]A city-forming enterprise, The Portland Cement Company "Nesher" Limited was founded in 1923 with a founding capital of £250,000. Its head office was at 7 Queen Square Southamptom Row, London, W.C.1, United Kingdom. In that year, the company acquired in Yazour, located at a distance of 8 km. from Haifa, 4,000 dunams of land, out of which 1,000 on the slopes of Carmel. The factory that was built there was one of the most modern cement factories in the world and employed 250 workers. As of 1927, the factory produced 60,000-70,000 tons of superior Portland cement per year. The factory was connected by railway to the most important cities of the region, including the ones in Syria and Egypt. The enterprise also founded the workers' town that, as of 1927, counted 30 buildings with gardens.[8]
Emblem
[edit]The municipal emblem was designed by David Hollod and approved at a local committee meeting on the 24th of October 1962. It includes multiple references:
- The vulture represents the name of the city and the cement factory from its inception.
- The 4 hills represent the mountainous terrain and the four original neighborhoods that constituted the settlement–Ben Dor, Tel Hanan, Nesher, and Givat Nesher.
- The factory and chimney represent the industrial foundation the city was established upon.
- The tree represents the growth and prosperity of the city over the years.
Gallery
[edit]-
Nesher Cement factory, 1924
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Post office building in Nesher, 1938
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Nesher 1942 1:20,000
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Nesher 1945 1:250,000
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Regional Statistics". Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 11 August 2025.
- ^ "Nesher – At the heart of the region". Archived from the original on 2016-03-08. Retrieved 2011-09-16.
- ^ a b Haifa: Transformation of an Arab Society 1918-1939, May Seikaly
- ^ Eshel, Tzadok (1976). The Cement and Its Makers: Nesher's Jubilee (in Hebrew). Haifa: Nesher. p. 68.
- ^ a b "About Nesher". Archived from the original on 2016-03-08. Retrieved 2011-09-16.
- ^ "Local Authorities in Israel 2005, Publication #1295 - Municipality Profiles - Nesher" (PDF) (in Hebrew). Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 2008-09-20.
- ^ Liebermann, Randall P. (August 14, 2013). "Sharansky supports Federation-Nesher partnership". Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved April 23, 2019.
- ^ "Le Guide Sam : pour l'expansion économique française dans le Levant". Gallica (in French). 1927. p. 12. Retrieved 2025-07-14.
External links
[edit]Nesher
View on GrokipediaGeography and Environment
Location and Topography
Nesher is located in the Haifa District of northern Israel, approximately 5 kilometers southeast of Haifa at coordinates 32°46′N 35°03′E.[5][6] It lies on the western slopes of Mount Carmel, a coastal mountain range characterized by its limestone ridges and elevations rising to over 500 meters at peaks, though Nesher itself occupies lower terrain.[7] The city's topography features hilly elevations ranging from about 100 to 200 meters above sea level, with an average of approximately 180 meters, facilitating urban development amid natural contours.[8] Nesher borders Haifa to the northwest and integrates into the broader Haifa metropolitan area, with its terrain shaped by the geological structure of Mount Carmel, primarily composed of Turonian-age limestone, chalk, and chert layers suitable for quarrying.[9][10]Climate and Environmental Concerns
Nesher features a Mediterranean climate with mild, wet winters and hot, dry summers. Average winter daytime highs range from 17–19°C, with nighttime lows around 10–12°C, while summer highs typically reach 28–30°C and lows 20–22°C. Precipitation is concentrated from November to March, averaging 550 mm annually, with January seeing the highest monthly totals of about 107 mm.[11][12][13] Industrial activities, particularly historical cement production at the Nesher works established in 1925, have posed significant environmental challenges, including air pollution from particulate matter and emissions that contributed to Haifa Bay's status as Israel's dirtiest air region since the 1920s. Quarry operations associated with raw material extraction have added concerns over dust generation and habitat disruption, prompting environmental assessments to evaluate extension plans and mitigation needs. Local air quality remains moderate, with PM2.5 concentrations averaging 15.7 μg/m³ and a US AQI of 84 reported at the start of 2022, influenced by both industrial sources and regional factors.[14][15][16] Nesher Israel Cement Enterprises, the operator linked to Nesher's industrial legacy, received a 5.99 million ILS fine in August 2022 from Israel's Ministry of Environmental Protection for repeated violations of Clean Air Law emission limits on particulates, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen oxides, based on unannounced sampling. In response, the company has invested in emissions abatement technologies, including systems to reduce nitrogen oxides and prevent dust from non-production sources, alongside regulatory permits mandating further reductions. Local sustainability efforts include green infrastructure like paths on Mount Carmel, supporting biodiversity amid urban-industrial pressures, though compliance monitoring continues due to ongoing violations documented in 22 instances since July 2022.[17][18][19]History
Pre-Establishment and Founding (1920s)
The establishment of Nesher originated from Zionist efforts to develop local industry under the British Mandate for Palestine, which began in 1920. Abundant limestone deposits near Haifa were identified as suitable for cement production, prompting Jewish entrepreneurs to pursue self-reliant manufacturing. In 1923, Michael Pollack, a Jewish industrialist born in Russian Georgia who had amassed wealth in the Baku oil fields, led the formation of the Palestine Portland Cement Syndicate in London with six other Jewish businessmen. This initiative realized aspects of Theodor Herzl's vision in Altneuland (1902) for Jewish economic independence through heavy industry.[3][20][21] Construction of the Nesher Portland Cement factory commenced in 1923 on land purchased from local Arab landowners, including the Khoury family, adjacent to the Yagur area southeast of Haifa. The site selection leveraged proximity to raw materials and the port for export. By October 1925, the first kiln became operational, producing the initial batch of cement in December of that year. Nesher itself was founded in 1924 as a modest workers' village to accommodate Jewish laborers employed at the factory, initially consisting of basic wooden huts and tents for a small community of several hundred immigrants and local workers. This settlement model reflected Mandate-era land acquisitions by Jewish organizations to support industrial development.[22][3][21] The founding unfolded amid rising intercommunal tensions, including the 1920 Nebi Musa riots and 1921 Jaffa riots, which demonstrated Arab opposition to Jewish immigration and land purchases. These events, resulting in dozens of Jewish deaths and injuries, extended to rural areas and underscored the causal link between economic initiatives and security requirements for Jewish sites. Construction at Nesher proceeded with guarded perimeters, as the broader 1920s violence, culminating in the 1929 riots, necessitated defensive measures to protect workers and infrastructure from attacks on Jewish enterprises.[23][24]Development During Mandate and Early Statehood (1930s–1950s)
In the 1930s, Nesher expanded as part of the broader influx from the Fifth Aliyah, which brought over 250,000 Jewish immigrants to Mandatory Palestine between 1929 and 1939, primarily fleeing Nazi persecution in Europe.[25] The town's population grew alongside industrial needs, with the Nesher Cement Works ramping up production to support construction amid regional tensions. Despite disruptions from the 1936–1939 Arab Revolt, including strikes at the attached quarry where Arab workers demanded higher wages, the factory maintained operations, relying on its strategic importance for infrastructure like roads and buildings.[26] [27] During the 1948 War of Independence, Nesher's proximity to Haifa positioned it near key battles, but the town avoided major direct combat following Haifa's capture by Haganah forces on April 21, 1948.[1] Comprising mostly small wooden huts for cement workers until then, Nesher began absorbing displaced persons and refugees in the war's aftermath, contributing to early state resilience. By 1948, its population stood at approximately 1,500 residents.[28] The 1950s marked consolidation under Israeli statehood, with Nesher integrating into national efforts to house mass immigration waves exceeding 700,000 arrivals by 1951, often through temporary camps and new developments. Local housing projects emerged to accommodate workers and newcomers, transitioning from makeshift structures to more permanent settlements amid economic strains. The Nesher Cement factory solidified its dominant position, planning a new facility near Ramla in the early 1950s to meet surging demand for state-building; a rival plant's delays until 1955 production start preserved Nesher's near-monopoly on output.[3] [29]Post-1967 Growth and Immigration Waves
Following Israel's victory in the Six-Day War of June 1967, which secured greater territorial stability in northern Israel, Nesher underwent accelerated residential and industrial expansion to accommodate growing demand for housing and employment near Haifa.[1] The city's population increased from 9,450 residents in 1968 to approximately 16,000 by the mid-1990s, reflecting a combination of natural growth and influxes tied to national immigration policies aimed at bolstering peripheral urban areas.[1] [28] This period marked Nesher's transition from a modest industrial outpost to a key absorption hub, leveraging its proximity to Haifa's port and markets. The 1990s wave of aliyah from the former Soviet Union, which brought over 900,000 immigrants to Israel between 1989 and 2000, significantly augmented Nesher's demographics as part of broader efforts to distribute newcomers beyond major centers like Tel Aviv. Local industries, particularly Nesher Israel Cement Enterprises, facilitated integration by hiring immigrants from the Soviet Union and Ethiopia, operating at full capacity to meet construction demands spurred by population pressures.[3] Unlike remote development towns, where Soviet olim often encountered economic stagnation and social isolation due to limited job opportunities and infrastructure deficits—as documented in analyses of peripheral absorption challenges—Nesher's established cement sector and commuter links to Haifa enabled faster labor market entry and reduced unemployment among newcomers.[30] Ethiopian aliyah, peaking with Operations Moses (1984) and Solomon (1991) that airlifted over 20,000 Beta Israel to Israel, also contributed to Nesher's growth through targeted employment in manufacturing, aligning with national policies to diversify the workforce amid housing shortages.[3] By the early 2000s, these immigration surges had solidified Nesher's role in Israel's demographic expansion, with the city's working-class ethos supporting the government's direct absorption model that emphasized rapid self-sufficiency over prolonged institutional dependency.[31]Recent Developments (2000s–Present)
Nesher's population grew steadily in the 2000s and 2010s, from around 23,300 in 2008 to an estimated 23,760 by 2021, with projections reaching 24,623 by 2025, reflecting its appeal as a suburban hub integrated into the Haifa metropolitan framework.[32][33] This expansion supported urban renewal efforts, including a 2021-approved 54-floor residential tower in the former Quarry 4.5 site, transforming industrial land into mixed-use zones while preserving cement operations.[34] Local planning emphasized balanced development, with initiatives to connect Nesher to Haifa's Metronit bus rapid transit system and proposed rail extensions like the "Rabet Ha'emek" line and "Metro-Nesher" for improved commuter access.[35][36] Nesher Israel Cement Enterprises sustained high output post-2000, leveraging environmental optimizations and recycled materials in production, though a 2013 technical failure in one kiln temporarily disrupted supply chains.[37][38] The company's near-monopoly ended in 2020 amid anti-dumping measures on imports, yet it remained a key supplier for national infrastructure, exporting over one million tons in milestone years while adapting to market competition.[39] Proximity to Lebanon exposed Nesher to Hezbollah rocket barrages, as in the 2006 Second Lebanon War when strikes hit the Haifa area, causing civilian disruptions and necessitating widespread shelter use.[40] In the 2020s, renewed escalations triggered frequent alerts across northern Israel, with Iron Dome intercepting volleys targeting Haifa and adjacent locales; for instance, on September 20, 2024, sirens sounded in northern towns amid heavy interceptions, underscoring the system's role in mitigating impacts on residents.[41] These threats prompted enhanced civil defense measures, including public transport adaptations for emergency evacuations along routes like Bar Yehuda to Nesher.[42]Demographics
Population Trends and Statistics
Nesher's population expanded substantially in the decades following Israel's independence, rising from 1,500 residents in 1948 to 9,450 by 1968, reflecting broader national immigration waves and local industrial expansion. By the mid-1990s, it reached approximately 16,000, and by the end of 2002, it stood at 20,000. Growth continued into the 2000s, with the population at 23,300 in 2008, before stabilizing at 23,760 as of the 2021 estimate from Israel's Central Bureau of Statistics data.[1][33]| Year | Population |
|---|---|
| 1948 | 1,500 |
| 1968 | 9,450 |
| 1995 | ~16,000 |
| 2002 | 20,000 |
| 2008 | 23,300 |
| 2021 | 23,760 |