Imgsize | 300px |
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Image3 | Safed COA.png |
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Imgsize3 | 50px |
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Name | Safed |
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Hebname | |
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Iso | Çpat |
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Arname | صفد |
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Founded | Canaanite age |
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Type | city |
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Stdheb | Tz'fat |
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Altoffsp | Tsfat, Tzefat, Zfat, |
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District | north |
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Elevation | 2,526ft (770m) |
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Population | 30,100 |
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Popyear | 2010 |
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Mayor | Ilan Shohat |
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Pushpin map | Israel north haifa |
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Pushpin mapsize | 250 |
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Safed (, ''Tzfat''; , ''Safed'',
Ashkenazi: ''Tzfas'';
Biblical: ''Ṣ'fath'',
ISO 259-3: ''Çpat''), is a city in the
Northern District of
Israel. Located at an elevation of , Safed is the highest city in the
Galilee and of Israel. Due to its high elevation, Safed experiences warm summers and cold, often snowy, winters. Since the sixteenth century, Safed has been considered one of
Judaism's
Four Holy Cities, along with
Jerusalem,
Hebron and
Tiberias; since that time, the city has remained a center of
Kabbalah, also known as Jewish mysticism.
Due to its beautiful setting surrounded by pine forests and its mild climate, Safed has become a summer holiday resort frequented by Israelis and foreign visitors alike.
History
Early documentation
According to the
Book of Judges, the area where Safed is located was assigned to the
Tribe of Naphtali. Legend has it that Safed was founded by a son of
Noah after the
Great Flood. The city first appears in Jewish sources in the late
Middle Ages. It is mentioned in the
Jerusalem Talmud as one of five elevated spots where fires were lit to announce the New Moon and festivals during the
Second Temple period. Safed has been identified with ''Sepph,'' a fortified Jewish town in the
Upper Galilee mentioned in the writings of the Roman-Jewish historian
Josephus (''Wars'' 2:573).
Within the Crusader Kingdom and Mamluk Sultanate
In the 12th century, Safed was a fortified city in the
crusader
Kingdom of Jerusalem known as ''Saphet''. The
Knights Hospitaller built a castle there. In 1266, the
Mamluk sultan
Baybars wiped out the Christian Templar population and turned it into a Muslim town called ''Safed'' or ''Safat''.
Samuel ben Samson who visited the town in the 13th-century mentions the existence of a Jewish community of at least fifty there. According to
al-Dimashqi (who died in Safed in 1327), writing around 1300, Baybars, after levelling the old fortress, built a "round tower and called it Kullah..".The tower is built in three stories. It is provided with provisions, and halls, and magazines. Under the place is a cistern for rain-water, sufficient to supply the garrison of the fortress from year´s end to year´s end. According to
Abu al-Fida, Safed "was a town of medium size". It has a very strongly built castle, which dominates the
Lake of Tabariyyah. There are underground watercourses, which bring drinking-water up to the castle-gate...Its suburbs cover three hills... Since the place was conquered by
Al Malik Adh Dhahir from the
Franks, it has been made the central station for the troops who guard all the coast-towns of that district."
As Jewish center in the Ottoman period
Safed rose to fame in the 16th century as a center of
Kabbalah, or Jewish mysticism.
Under the Ottomans, Safed was the capital of the sanjak of Safed which encompassed much of Galillee and extended to the Mediterranean coast. This sanjak was part of the
Eyalet of Damascus until 1660, when it was united with the sanjak of Sidon into
a separate eyalet, of which it was briefly the capital. Finally, from the mid-19th century it ws part of the
vilayet of
Sidon. The orthodox Sunni courts arbitrated over cases in
'Akbara,
Ein al-Zeitun and as far away as Mejdel Islim. In 1553-4, the population consisted of 1,121 Muslim households, 222 Muslim bachelors, 54 Muslim religious leaders, 716 Jewish households, 56 Jewish bachelors, and 9 disabled persons. A
Hebrew printing press was established in Safed in 1577 by
Eliezer Ashkenazi and his son,
Isaac of Prague. It was the first press in
Palestine and the whole of the
Ottoman Empire.
After the expulsion of the Islamic rule from Spain during the
reconquista which ended by 1492, many prominent
rabbis found their way to Safed, among them the Kabbalists
Isaac Luria and
Moshe Kordovero;
Joseph Caro, the author of the
Shulchan Aruch and
Shlomo Halevi Alkabetz, composer of the
Sabbath hymn "
Lecha Dodi". The influx of
Sephardi Jews—reaching its peak under the rule of Sultans
Suleiman I and
Selim II —made Safed a global center for Jewish learning and a regional center for trade throughout 15th and 16th centuries. The
Kurdish quarter was established in the Middle Ages and continued through to the 19th century.
Over the course of the seventeenth century, Jewish settlements of Galilee had declined economically and demographically, with Safed being no exception. In around 1625, Quaresmius spoke of the town being inhabited "chiefly by Hebrews, who had their synagogues and schools, and for whose sustenance contributions were made by the Jews in other parts of the world." In 1628, the city fell to the Druze and five years later was retaken by Ottomans. In 1660, in the turmoil following the death of Mulhim Ma'an, the Druze destroyed Safed and Tiberias, with only a few of the former Jewish residents returning to Safed by 1662. As nearby Tiberias remained desolate for several decades, Safed gained the key position among Galilean Jewish communities. In 1665, the Sabbatai Sevi movement is said to have arrived to the town.
An outbreak of plague decimated the population in 1742 and the Near East earthquake of 1759 left the city in ruins. An influx Russian Jews in 1776 and 1781, and of Lithuanian Jews of the Perushim in 1809 and 1810, reinvigorated the community.
In 1812, another plague killed 80% of the Jewish population, and in 1819 the remaining Jewish residents were held for ransom by Abdullah Pasha, the governor of Acre. During the period of Egyptian domination, the city experienced a severe decline, with the Jewish community hit particularly hard. In the 1834 Safed Great Plunder, much of the Jewish quarter was destroyed by rebel Arabs, who plundered the city for many weeks. The Galilee earthquake of 1837 killed 2,158 inhabitants, of which 1507 were Ottoman subjects, Muslim or Jewish. The northern, Jewish, section of the town was almost entirely destroyed, while the southern, Moslem, section suffered far less damage. In 1838, the Druze rebels robbed the city over the course of 3 days, killing many among the Jews.
In 1840, Ottoman rule was restored. In 1847, plague struck Safed again. The Jewish population increased in the last half of the 19th century by immigration from Persia, Morocco, and Algeria. Moses Montefiore visited Safed seven times and financed rebuilding of much of the town. However, virtually all the antiquities of Safed were destroyed by earthquakes.
The Qaddura family was a major political force in Safed. At the end of Ottoman rule the family owned 50,000 dunums. This included 8 villages around Safed.
Post Ottoman period
Colonial rule
Safed remained a mixed city during the
British Mandate for Palestine and ethnic tensions between Jews and Arabs rose during the 1920s. With the eruption of
1929 Palestine riots, Safed and Hebron became major clash points. In the
Safed massacre 20 Jewish residents were killed by local Arabs.
By 1948, the city was home to around 1,700 Jews, mostly religious and elderly, as well as some 12,000 Arabs. In February 1948, Muslim Arabs attacked a Jewish bus attempting to reach Safed, and the Jewish quarter of the town came under siege by the Muslims. British forces that were present did not intervene. According to Martin Gilbert, food supplies ran short.
"Even water and flour were in desperately short supply. Each day, the Arab attackers drew closer to the heart of the Jewish quarter, systematically blowing up Jewish houses as they pressed in on the central area."
On April 16, the same day that British forces evacuated Safed, 200 local Arab militiamen, supported by over 200
Arab Liberation Army soldiers, tried to take over the city's Jewish Quarter. They were repelled by the Jewish garrison, consisting of some 200
Haganah fighters, men and women, boosted by a
Palmach platoon.
The
Palmach ground attack on the Arab section of Safed took place on 6 May, as a part of
Operation Yiftah. The first phase of the Palmach plan to capture Safed, was to secure a corridor through the mountains by capturing the Arab village of
Birya. The
Arab Liberation Army had plans to take over the whole city on May 10, and in the meantime placed artillery pieces on a hill adjacent to the Jewish quarter and started its shelling.
The Third Battalion failed to take the main objective, the "citadel", but "terrified" the Arab population sufficiently to prompt further flight, as well as urgent appeals for outside help and an effort to obtain a truce.
According to Benny Morris, Azzam Pasha accurately described the aim of Plan Dalet, of which Operation Yiftah was a part, when he said:
The Jews were following a perfectly clear and ruthless plan... They are now drawing [driving?] out the inhabitants of Arab villagers along the Syrian and Lebanese frontiers, particularly places on the roads by which Arab regular forces could enter the country. In particular, Acre and Safed were in very great danger of Jewish occupation. It was obvious that if this continued, the Arab armies would have great difficulty in even entering Palestine after May 15.
However, the appeals for help were ignored, and the British, now less than a week away from the end of the
British Mandate of Palestine, also did not intervene against the second -and final-
Haganah attack, which began on the evening of 9 May, with a mortar barrage on key sites in Safed. Following the barrage, Palmach infantry, in bitter fighting, took the citadel, Beit Shalva and the police fort, Safed's three dominant buildings. Through 10 May, Haganah mortars continued to pound the Arab neighbourhoods, causing fires in the marked area and in the fuel dumps, which exploded. "The Palmah 'intentionally left open the exit routes for the population to "facilitate" their exodus...' " According to Gilbert,
"The Arabs of Safed began to leave, including the commander of the Arab forces, Adib Shishakli (later Prime Minister of Syria). With the police fort on Mount Canaan isolated, its defenders withdrew without fighting. The fall of Safed was a blow to Arab morale throughout the region.....With the invasion of Palestine by regular Arab armies believed to be imminent - once the British had finally left in elven or twelve days' time - many Arabs felt that prudence dictated their departure until the Jews had been defeated and they could return to their homes.
Some 12,000 abandoned or fled (some estimate 15,000) from Safed and were a "heavy burden on the Arab war effort". Among them was the family of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. The city was fully under the control of Jewish paramilitary forces by May 11, 1948. On that day Palmach troops secured the now empty Arab quarters, and confiscated "goods that could serve the combat units".
Under the State of Israel
In 1974, 102 Israeli Jewish school children from Safed on a school trip were taken hostage by a Palestinian militant group
Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP) while sleeping in a school in Maalot. In what became known as the
Ma'alot massacre, 22 of these school children were among those killed by the hostage takers. In July 2006,
Katyusha rockets fired by
Hezbollah from Southern Lebanon hit Safed, killing one man and injuring others. Many residents fled the town. On July 22, four people were injured in a rocket attack.
Demographics
In 2008, the population of Safed was 32,000. According to
CBS figures in 2001, the ethnic makeup of the city was 99.2%
Jewish and non-Arab, with no significant
Arab population. 43.2% of the residents were 19 years of age or younger, 13.5% between 20 and 29, 17.1% between 30 and 44, 12.5% from 45 to 59, 3.1% from 60 to 64, and 10.5% 65 years of age or older.
Climate
Safed has a
Mediterranean climate with hot, dry summers and cold, rainy and occasionally snowy winters. The city receives of precipitation per year. Summers are rainless and hot with an average high temperature of and an average low temperature of . Winters are cold and wet, and precipitation is occasionally in the form of snow. Winters have an average high temperature of and an average low temperature of . Springs and autumns are pleasant and also wet, but less so than winters.
Income
In December 2001, residents of Safed earned an average of 4,476
shekels per month, compared to the national average of 6,835 shekels. In 2000, there were 6,450 salaried workers and 523 self-employed. Salaried men had a mean monthly wage of NIS 5,631 (a real change of 10.2%) versus NIS 3,330 for women (a real change of 2.3%). The mean income for the self-employed was NIS 4,843. A total of 425 residents received unemployment benefits and 3,085 received income supplements.
Education
According to CBS, the city has 25 schools and 6,292 students. There are 18 elementary schools with a student population of 3,965, and 11 high schools with a student population of 2,327. 40.8% of Safed's 12th graders were eligible for a matriculation (
bagrut) certificate in 2001.
Aous Shakra, a 20th century existential philosopher who taught at Harvard University, was born in Safed .
Culture
In the 1950s and 1960s, Safed was known as Israel's art capital. The artists colony established in Safed's Old City was a hub of creativity that drew leading artists from around the country, among them
Yosl Bergner,
Moshe Castel and
Menachem Shemi. Some of Israel's leading art galleries were located there. In honor of the opening of the Glitzenstein Art Museum in 1953, the artist
Mane Katz donated eight of his paintings to the city. During this period, Safed was home to the country's top nightclubs, hosting the debut performances of
Naomi Shemer, Aris San, and other acclaimed singers. Safed has been hailed as the
klezmer capital of the world, hosting an
annual klezmer festival that attracts top musicians from around the globe. Visitors can explore the
places of interest,
activities and
historical sites when visiting Safed. Tourists may find the
stories of legends of Safed to expand their understanding of the town and its history.
Accommodations provide boarding opportunities for people of all ages and incomes and the list of
eateries is extensive in the city.
International relations
Twin towns — Sister cities
Safed is
twinned with:
Toledo,
Castile-La Mancha,
Spain
Lille,
France
Palm Beach County, Fl USA
See also
Balady citron
Safed plunder
References
Bibliography
External links
Experience Tsfat Resource Guide (English)
Places To Visit in Safed (English)
Official English Site (English)
Official Site (English & Hebrew)
8 days forecast in Safed (English)
Israel Experience Program in Tzfat
Tourist Information Center, guides
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