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HAIFA

(Redirected from Haifa, Israel)

View of Haifa from atop Mt. Carmel.

'Haifa' ( ''Ḥefa''; [1]) is the largest city in northern Israel and the third-largest city in the country, with a population of about 267,800.[2][3] The city is a seaport located on Israel's Mediterranean coastline in the Haifa Bay, about 90 km north of Tel Aviv, and is one of the country's major industrial centers.[4]
The city is built on a hill, below and on the historic Mount Carmel, and is first mentioned in the 3rd century CE as a dye making center. Today, the city is home to a mixed population of Jews and Muslim and Christian Arabs, who are mostly secular. As such, Haifa is unique in Israel because its public transport runs on Saturdays, the Jewish Sabbath. The city is also home to the Bahá'í World Centre (including the Bahá'í Gardens), a centre of the Bahá'í Faith. Haifa also hosts two world-class academic institutions, the University of Haifa, and the Technion - Israel Institute of Technology. Recently, hi-tech industry has started to invest in the city with the likes of Intel, IBM and Microsoft locating Research and Development facilities here.

Contents
Etymology
History
Religion
Demographics
Politics
Mayors of Haifa since 1873
Economy
Transportation
Education
Tourism
Climate
Sports
Sister cities
Neighborhoods
Famous residents
References
External links
City and universities
Bahá'í
Monastery
Travel

Etymology


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The city's sole official romanization ''Haifa'' and the common English pronunciation are based on the Arabic name ''Ḥayfā'', although the unused Standard Hebrew name is actually ''Ḥefa''. The local Hebrew pronunciation of the city's name is .[5]
The origin of the name Haifa is unclear and whilst some tie it to the Hebrew word חוף (''hof'', meaning "beach"), or חוף יפה (''hof yafe'', meaning "Beautiful beach"), some also tie it to the Hebrew verb root חפה (''hafa'', meaning "to cover or hide"). Christian pilgrims of the Middle Ages (and later the Crusaders) called the town 'Caiphas' or 'Caifa'. The Christians believe the name derives from Caiaphas, the High Priest of Jerusalem during the time of Jesus, or from the Aramaic name of Saint Peter, 'Cephas' or 'Kepah' (כפא). Additionally, the name 'Sycaminon' or 'Sykaminos', meaning "wild strawberry", is also used. Some also believe the name originates from the words חי-פה ("hai-po", meaning "living-here") presuming God resides in the city.

History


Haifa is first mentioned in Talmudic literature around the 3rd century CE, as a small town near Shikmona, the main Jewish town in the area at that time and a center for making the traditional Tekhelet dye used for Jewish Priests' temple cloth. The archaeological site of Shikmona lies southwest of the modern Bat Galim neighborhood. The Byzantine ruled there until the 7th century, when the city was conquered — first by the Persians, then by the Arabs. In 1100, it was conquered again by the crusaders, after a fierce battle with its Jewish and Muslim inhabitants.[6] Under crusader rule, the city was a part of the Principality of Galilee until the Muslim Mameluks captured it in 1265.
In 1761 Daher El-Omar, Bedouin ruler of Acre and Galilee, destroyed and rebuilt the town in a new location, surrounding it with a wall. This event is marked as the beginning of the town's modern era. After El-Omar's death in 1775, the town remained under Ottoman rule until 1918, except for two brief periods: in 1799, Napoleon Bonaparte conquered Haifa as part of his unsuccessful campaign to conquer Palestine and Syria, but withdrew the same year ; and between 1831 and 1840, the Egyptian viceroy Mehemet Ali governed, after his son Ibrahim Pasha wrested control from the Ottomans.
In the years following the Egyptian occupation, Haifa grew in population and importance while Acre suffered a decline. The arrival of the German Templers in 1868, who settled in what is now known as the German Colony of Haifa, was a turning point in Haifa's development. The Templers played a major role in commerce and industry, and helped to modernize the city.
Haifa's population increased from 1,000 in 1800 to 2,000 by 1840, 6000 in 1880, 20,000 in 1914 and 24,600 in 1922.[7].
At the beginning of the 20th Century, Haifa had emerged as an industrial port city and growing population center, reflected by the establishment of facilities like the Hejaz railway and Technion. At that time Haifa District (which included a number of Arab locales surrounding the city of Haifa itself) was home to approximately 20,000 inhabitants, comprised of 82% Muslim Arab, 14% Christian Arabs, and 4% Jewish residents. Jewish population increased steadily with immigration primarily from Europe, so that by 1945 the population had shifted to 33% Muslim, 20% Christian and 47% Jewish.[8]
. In 1947 its population was estimated to consist of 41,000 Muslims, 74,230 Jews and 29,910 Christians. The Christian community was composed mostly of Greek-Orthodox(Arab Orthodox).
Haifa is located in the northernmost reach of the coastal plain designated as Jewish territory in the 1947 UN Partition Plan dividing mandatory Palestine, and was not excepted to that plan and culminating in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. On 30 December, 1947 members of the Jewish militant group Irgun hurled two bombs into a crowd of Arabs who were waiting for construction jobs outside the gates of the Consolidated Refineries in Haifa, killing 6 and injuring 42, whereupon 2,000 Arab employees rioted and killed 39 Jewish employees in what has become known as the Haifa Oil Refinery massacre. Jewish forces retaliated by raiding the Arab village of Balad al-Shaykh on December 31, 1947. Jewish forces deemed control of Haifa a critical objective in the ensuing 1948 Arab-Israeli War, as it was the major industrial and oil refinery port in Palestine.
The British withdrew from Haifa on the 21st of April, 1948. The city was captured on April 23, 1948 by the Units of the Carmeli Brigade of the Haganah who were ordered into action by Mordechai Maklef at 10:30am on the 21st of April following three months of unsuccessful attacks by Arab forces. The majority of the Muslim population fled through the British-controlled port. However as many as 2,000 Christians remained in the city by June of 1948 and there were an additional 1,300 Muslims remaining as well.
Haifa was the target of many Hezbollah rockets during the 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict, which caused suffering for Jews and Arabs alike.

Religion


View of the Bahá'í Gardens from above.

Haifa, home to Jews, Muslim and Christian Arabs, Ahmadis (in Kababir), Druze (in Daliyat al-Carmel), and Bahá'ís, is often portrayed as a mosaic of peaceful coexistence.
Mount Carmel (Hebrew: God's vinyard) and Kishon River are both mentioned in the Bible.
Mount Carmel is riddled with caves, and one of those near Haifa is traditionally known as the "Cave of Elijah", and considered by many Jews to have been the home of the Jewish biblical Prophet Elijah and his apprentice, Elisha. The highest peak of the Mount Carmel range is named ''El-Muhrrakah'', an Arabic term meaning ''the burning'', named on account of the belief that this was the exact spot of Elijah's biblical confrontation with hundreds of priests of a Baal; the Baal in question was probably Melqart[9].
The Carmelites were founded at, and named after, Mount Carmel, in the 12th century. Since that time, at the peak of the Mount near Haifa, there has historically been a building that has variously been a mosque, monastery, and hospital; in the 19th century it was reconstructed as a Carmelite monastery, and a cave located there, which functions as the monastery's crypt, was treated as having once been Elijah's cave. It is now a popular tourist and pilgrimage destination.
Haifa is also cherished by members of the Bahá'í Faith as it is an important site of worship, pilgrimage and administration for the members of the religion. The Bahá'í World Centre (comprising the Shrine of the Báb, terraced gardens and administrative buildings) are all on Mount Carmel's northern slope. The location of the Bahá'í holy places in Haifa has its roots to the imprisonment of the religion's founder, Bahá'u'lláh, near Haifa by the Ottoman Empire during the Ottoman Empire's rule over Palestine. The Bahá'í holy places are also the most visited tourist attraction of the city.
The ruins of Shikmona, at the foot of Mount Carmel, is also considered historically important by Jews. Shikmona is also mentioned in the Talmud as the coastal town in which the blue dye for the Jewish prayer shawl Talit (the Techelet thread) was extracted from sea-snails.
The Cave of Elijah - Elijah is considered a prophet by Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and the Baha'i Faith. The Carmelites have a tradition that they were founded by Elijah at this time. According to tradition Elijah lived in a cave on Mt. Carmel during the reign of King Ahab.
Stella Maris is a French Carmelite church, monastery and hospice. The Carmelite Order, a religious order of the Roman Catholic Church, was named after this location, where it was founded. Located atop Mount Carmel, there is a hiking trail connecting it to the Cave of Elijah below.[10]

Demographics


The city has a population of about 267,800 people. 90% of the population are Israeli-Jews with some "others". The others consist of Israelis that aren't classified by religion for various reasons. They consist of Russian non-Jews that are connected to other Jews through marriage or not at all, and partial Jews from mixed marriages. According to the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics, Israeli-Arabs constitute 9% of Haifa's population, the majority living in the Wadi Nisnas, Hadar Elyon and Halisa neighborhoods.[11]

Politics


In the past, Haifa's docks and industrial areas have made the city a consistent stronghold for the Israeli Labor party; these Socialist tendencies led to the nickname 'Red Haifa'. This name was also earned due to the fact that prominent Arab leaders of the Israeli Communist Party such as Tewfiq Tubi, Emile Habibi, Zaki Karkabi, Bulus Farah and Emili Toma were all from Haifa.
[12][13][14] One ramification of this history is that Haifa is the only major city in Israel in which public transport operates on Shabbat.
Since then, Haifa's Labor-leanings have tipped in favor of centrist ideologies. In the 2006 legislative elections, the Kadima party received about 28.9% of the votes in Haifa, while Labor lagged behind with 16.9%.
Mayors of Haifa since 1873


Najib Effendi al-Yasin (1873-1877)

Akhmad Effendi Jalabi (1878-1881)

Mustafa Bey al-Salih (1881-1884)

Mustafa Pasha al-Khalil (1885-1903)

Jamil Sadiq (1904-1910)

Rif'at al-Salah (1910-1911)

Ibrahim al-Khalil (1911-1913)

Abd al-Rahman al-Haj (1920-1927)

Hasan Shukri (1914-1920, 1927-1940)

Shabtai Levy (1940-1951)

Abba Hushi (1951–1969)

Moshe Flimann (1969–1973)

Yosef Almogi (1974–1975)

Yeruham Zeisel (1975–1978)

Arie Gur'el (1978–1993)

Amram Mitzna (1993–2003)

Giora Fisher (interim mayor, 2003)

Yona Yahav (2003–)

Economy


View across Haifa Bay from Mt. Carmel.

The industrial region of Haifa is north of the city, near the Kishon River. Haifa is home to one of the two oil refineries in Israel (the other located in Ashdod). The refinery in Haifa is capable of processing about 9 million tons (66 million barrels) of crude oil a year and is the center of a wide array of petrochemical industries located in and around Haifa. Its twin 76-meter cooling towers, built in the 1930s, have long symbolized the city of Haifa.
Matam (Merkaz Ta'asiya v'Meida/Scientific Industries Center), the largest and oldest business park in Israel, is located at the southern entrance to the city, hosting manufacturing and R&D facilities for a large number of Israeli and international hi-tech companies, such as Intel, Elbit, Zoran, Microsoft, Philips, Google and Amdocs. The campus of the University of Haifa is also home to IBM Haifa Labs.
The Port of Haifa is the leader in passenger traffic among Israeli ports,[3] and is also a major cargo harbor, though deregulation has seen its dominance challenged by the port of Ashdod.

Transportation


Haifa at sunrise.

For international travel, Haifa Airport, located on the Gulf of Haifa, serves flights to Eilat and Cyprus. Port of Haifa, which is Israel's main international passengers seaport, is located in the city as well.
For intercity transport, there are six Israel Railways railroad stations and three "central" bus stations. The Nahariya-Tel Aviv main line railway runs along the Gulf of Haifa; stations within the municipal boundaries of Haifa, from the direction Tel Aviv, are:

Hof HaCarmel Railway Station near Haifa Hof HaCarmel Central Bus Station

Haifa Bat-Galim Railway Station near Haifa Bat Galim Central Bus Station

Haifa Merkaz (Central) near Haifa Seaport

Lev HaMifratz Railway Station near Lev HaMifratz Mall and Mifratz Central Bus Station

Hutzot HaMifratz Railway Station in the Hutzot HaMifratz Shopping Center

Kiryat Haim Railway Station
A seventh stop is in nearby Kiryat Motzkin (Kiryat Motzkin Railway Station), a Northern suburb. Haifa Mizrach (Haifa East) now out of passenger use, houses the Israel Railway Museum.
The railway lines also serve a metropolitan train with 7 stops only, called the Parvarit.
The bus stations, from Tel Aviv northwards, are: Hof HaCarmel, Bat Galim, and Merkazit HaMifratz. All of these stations are served by Egged city, suburban, and intercity buses.
Other intracity transport options include Israel's only subway system (funicular) and a cablecar.

★ The Carmelit subway runs from Kikar Paris downtown to Gan HaEm (Mother's Park) on Mount Carmel. With a single track, six stations and two trains, it is in the Guinness World Records for the world's shortest metro line.

★ The Stella Maris cablecar, consisting of 6 cabins, connects Bat Galim on the coast to the Stella Maris observation deck and monastery atop Mount Carmel; it is chiefly a tourist attraction.

★ In 2006, Haifa also implemented a trial network of neighborhood mini-buses - named "Shchunatit" run by Egged.

★ In 2008, Haifa and the Krayot region will also be linked via Metronit - a bus rapid transit/light rail system.
''See also:'' .

Education


Haifa University, The Eshkol Tower

As a major city in Israel, Haifa also a major education center, being home to two internationally well-regarded universities and several colleges. The University of Haifa was founded in 1963,it is located at the top of Mt. Carmel, the campus was originally designed by the architect of Brasilia and UN building in New York, Oscar Niemeyer. Newer buildings were added later. The top 30th floor of the Eshkol Tower, provides an incredible view of almost the entire North of Israel. The campus is also a home of Hecht Museum with its rich archeology and art collections. Yet The Technion - Israel Institute of Technology was founded in 1924 and is Israel's oldest university.
Colleges in Haifa include:

Gordon College of Education - Education & Teaching.

★ Wizo Design Academy - Arts and Architecture.

★ Michlala Leminhal - Haifa branch.

Open University of Israel - Haifa Campus (degrees hold university status).

★ Tiltan - College of Design.

★ Nursing College - Nursing.

★ Sha'anan College - Religious Education & Teaching.

★ P.E.T Practical Engineering School - Engineering.

Tourism


Haifa, the seaport of Israel and the capital of the north, located in the northern part of Israel, eastern boarded by the Mediterranean Sea. Haifa is divided into three major topographical levels. The lower city is the commercial center of the town with modern harbor facilities. The middle level is an older residential zone and the upper level consists of modern neighborhoods, overlooking the sandy beaches of Haifa's cosmopolitan bay. Haifa is the world center for the Bahai faith.
Located on the western slopes of Mount Carmel, overlooking the Mediterranean sea shore and the Crusader castle of Atlit is the Ein Hod Artists' Village, established in 1953 by Marcel Janco, a leading artist of the Dada movement, as an artist colony. Today, ninety artists and craftsmen have studios there and exhibit their work in the main gallery and other artspaces. [15]
Haifa has a wide variety of malls and shopping centers, among them Kiryon, Kastra Center, Kanyon Haifa, Lev Hamifratz and Grand Kanyon.

Climate


Haifa has a Mediterranean climate with hot, dry summers and cool, rainy winters. The average temperature in summer is 26 °C and in winter, 12 °C. Snow is rare in Haifa, but temperatures around 6 °C can sometimes occur, usually in the early morning. The wet season is from October to April.

Sports


The city has eight football (soccer) clubs, the two first are in the major leagues in Israel:

Maccabi Haifa

Hapoel Haifa

★ Beitar Haifa

★ Akhva Haifa

★ Spartak Haifa

★ Neve Yosef

★ Bnei Kababir

★ Hapoel Neve Sha'anan
Maccabi Haifa is one of the most successful football clubs today in Israel, with 10 championships, 5 cups and 3 League cups. Both Hapoel and Maccabi have football schools in Haifa suburbs and other villages (including Arab and Druze villages) in the northern part of Israel.
Haifa also has basketball, volleyball, tennis, and handball clubs.
The city boasts some of the best surfing beaches in the country near Bat Galim, with kite surfing and sailing clubs. The Haifa Tennis Club located nearby the south-west entrance is one of the largest in Israel.
The main stadiums are Kiryat Eliezer, seating 14,000, and Kiryat Haim. The main basketball arena is Romema Sports Arena, seating 2,000; Neve Sha'anan Athletic seats 1,000. A UEFA-approved stadium is planned for south-west Haifa. It will seat 30,000 people.

Sister cities


Haifa has Sister Cities all over the world. The year in parentheses indicates the year in which the agreement was made.

★ 'Aalborg', Denmark (1973)
★ 'Antwerp', Belgium (1986)
★ 'Boston', Massachusetts, United States (1999)
★ 'Bremen', Germany (1978)
★ 'Cape Town', South Africa (1975)
★ 'Düsseldorf', Germany (1988)
★ 'Erfurt', Germany (2005)
★ 'Fort Lauderdale', Florida, United States (2002)
★ 'Hackney', London, United Kingdom (1968)
★ 'Limassol', Cyprus (2000)
★ 'Mainz', Germany (1987)

★ 'Mannheim', Germany (2005)
★ 'Manila', Philippines (1971)
★ 'Marrakech', Morocco
★ 'Marseille', France (1962)
★ 'Newcastle', United Kingdom
★ ' Odessa', Ukraine (1992)
★ 'Portsmouth', United Kingdom (1962)
★ 'Rosario', Argentina (1988)
★ 'San Fransisco', California, United States (1973)
★ 'Shanghai', China (1994)

Neighborhoods



Bat Galim
Kiryat Eliezer
Kiryat Eliyahu
Hadar (Hadar HaCarmel)
Hadar Elyon
Ahuza (Horev)
Merkaz Ha-Carmel ("Carmel Center")
Shprintzak
Carmel Ma'aravi (Western Carmel)
Hof Hacarmel (Carmel Beach)
Carmeliya
Carmel Tzarfati (French Carmel)
Ramat HaTishbi

Stella Maris
Neve Sha'anan
Vardiya
Ramot Sapir
Ramat Chen
Ramat Almogi
Ramat Alon
Ramat Alon South
Ramat Golda
Ramat Remez
Ramat Haviv
Ramat Hadar
Ramat Denia
Ein HaYam

Ramat Begin (Soroka)
Ramat Eshkol
Halisa
Wadi Nisnas
Wadi Salib
German Colony
HaMifratz (Haifa Bay Gulf of Haifa)
Kiryat Haim
Kiryat Shmuel
Kababir
Romema
Shambur
Neve Paz
Kiryat Rabin (Government District)

Famous residents


{|style="width:80%"
|-
|width=45%|

Abed Abdi (painter, sculpturor)

Reuven Atar (footballer)

Ralph Bakshi (animator and director)

Tal Banin (footballer)

Arik Benado (footballer)

Mike Brant (pop star)

David Broza (musician)

Aaron Ciechanover (Biologist, 2004 Nobel Prize, Chemistry)

Yaakov Dorchin {painter)

Amos Gitai (film director)

Ivry Gitlis (violinist)

Amir Gutfreund (author}

Emile Habibi (Arab communist politician)

Zevulun Hammer (politician)

Abba Hushi (politician, mayor)

Moshe Kahlon (politician)

Leila Khaled (reformed Arab hijacker)[16]

Uzi Landau (politician)

Avi Lerner (movie executive)

Ari Libsker (journalist)

Uri Lupolianski (Mayor of Jerusalem)

Shiri Maimon (singer)
|width=45%|

Sami Michael (Iraqi-Jewish Writer)

Izidore Musallam (film director)

Noam Okun (tennis player)

Yehuda Poliker (singer)

Galila Ron-Feder Amit (author)

Moshe Safdie (Architect)

Simon Shaheen (Musician-Oud Player)

Ehud Shani (General)

Ahlam Shibli (Arab Israeli photographer)

Gene Simmons (musician Kiss)

Hillel Slovak (musician Red Hot Chili Peppers)

Daniel Salomon (musician)

David Tartakover (artist)

Emile Toma (politician)

Tewfik Toubi (Arab Communist politician)

Dan Tichon (politician)

Eithan Urbach (swimmer)

Delilah (fictional character from John Rain series)

Yochanan Vollach (footballer, president of Maccabi Haifa)

Yona Yahav (Mayor of Haifa)

★ [Jasmine Lee] (musician)
|}

References



The History of Haifa Under Turkish Rule, , Alex, Carmel, Pardes, 2002, ISBN 965-7171-05-9 (in Hebrew)

Haifa and its sites, Shiller, Eli & Ben-Artzi, Yossi, , , Ariel, 1985, (in Hebrew)

★ http://www.city-journal.org/html/eon_5_31_02td.html

★ Benny Morris, ''Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem''

★ Seth J. Frantzman ''The Strength of Weakness: The Arab Christians in Mandatory Palestine,'' unpublished M.A thesis, Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
1. Many Hebrew speakers, though, particularly those who come from Haifa, refer to the city by its Arab pronunciation.
2. Haifa
3. Population of Localities numbering above 1,000 residents and other rural population on 31/12/2006
4. Haifa Port
5. Behind the Name Haifa
6. The History of Haifa Under Turkish Rule, , Alex, Carmel, Pardes, 2002, ISBN 965-7171-05-9
7. Data based on Be-Arieh “Population of the Towns”, as reproduced in Ben-Arieh Jerusalem page 466
8. Supplement to a Survey of Palestine (p. 12-13) which was prepared by the British Mandate for the United Nations in 1946-7.
9. ''Peake's commentary on the Bible''
10. [1].
11. [2]
12. http://mondediplo.com/2005/12/13haifa
13. http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-20132871.html
14. http://www.islamicpluralism.org/articles/2006a/mysteriessafed.htm
15. [4].
16. http://www.city-journal.org/html/eon_5_31_02td.html

External links


City and universities


Haifa Municipality

University of Haifa

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology
Bahá'í


Bahá'í World Centre, Haifa

Photos of the Bahá'í Gardens in Haifa

More photos of the Bahá'í Gardens
Monastery


Our Lady of Mount Carmel Monastery, Haifa, Israel
Travel


The Carmelit subway and map of Haifa

Wikitravel: Haifa

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