Everything about Moshav totally explained
Moshav (moshavim|settlement, village}}) is a type of
cooperative agricultural community of individual farms
pioneered by the
Labour Zionists during the second
aliyah (wave of
Jewish immigration during the early
20th Century).
The
moshavim are similar to
kibbutzim with an emphasis on community labor. They were designed as part of the Zionist state-building program following the
Yishuv ("
Jewish settlement") in the
British Mandate of Palestine during the
19th Century, but contrary to the
collective kibbutzim, farms in a moshav tended to be individually owned but of fixed and equal size. Workers produced
crops and
goods on their properties through individual and/or pooled
labour and
resources and used
profit and foodstuffs to provide for themselves. Support of the community was done through a special tax (
Mas Va'ad, lit.
Committee tax). This tax was equal for all households of the community, thus creating a system where good farmers were better off than bad ones, unlike in the communal kibbutzim where (at least theoretically) all members enjoyed the same living standard. Moshavim are governed by an elected council (
Va'ad, lit.
Committee). Many moshavim still exist today.
There are several variants, of which the most common are:
- Moshav ovdim (lit. Workers' moshav), a workers cooperative settlement,
- Moshav shitufi (lit. Collective moshav), a collective smallholder's settlement that combines the economic features of a kibbutz with the social features of a moshav. Farming is done collectively and profits are shared equally.
History
The first moshav,
Nahalal, was established in the
Jezreel Valley (also known as the Valley of Esdraelon) on
September 11,
1921. In
1986 about 156,700 Israelis lived and worked on 448 moshavim, the great majority divided among eight federations. There are two types of moshavim, the more numerous (405)
moshavei ovdim and the
moshavei shitufiym. The former relies on cooperative purchasing of supplies and marketing of produce; the family or household is, however, the basic unit of production and consumption. The moshav shitufi form is closer to the collectivity of the kibbutz: although consumption is family-or household-based, production and marketing are collective. Unlike the moshavei ovdim, land isn't allotted to households or individuals, but is collectively worked.
Because the moshav form retained the family as the center of social life and eschewed bold experiments with communal child-rearing or equality of the sexes, it was much more attractive to traditional
Mizrahi immigrants in the
1950s and early
1960s than was the more communally radical kibbutz. For this reason, the kibbutz has remained basically an
Ashkenazi institution, whereas the moshav has not. On the contrary, the so-called immigrants' moshav (
Moshav Olim) was one of the most-used and successful forms of absorption and integration of Oriental immigrants, and it allowed them a much steadier ascent into the
middle class than did life in some development towns.
Like the kibbutzim, moshavim since
1967 have relied increasingly on outside — particularly Arab — labor. Financial instabilities in the early
1980s hit many moshavim hard, as did the problem of absorbing all the children who might wish to remain in the community. By the late 1980s, more and more moshav members were employed in nonagricultural sectors outside the community, so that some moshavim were coming to resemble
suburban or
exurban villages whose residents commute to work. In general moshavim never enjoyed the elite status afforded to kibbutzim; correspondingly they've not suffered a decline in prestige in the
1970s and 1980s.
List of Moshavim
Aderet
Adirim
Amirim
Amqa
Ashalim
Aviel
Aviezer
Avigdor
Avihayil
Avital
Avivim
Avnei Eitan
Balfouria
Bedolah
Beit Gamliel
Beit Hanan
Beit Hanania
Beit Meir
Beit Yitzhak
Beit Zayit
Ben Shemen
Bitzaron
Dekel
Dishon
Even Menachem
Even Sapir
Ein Yahav
Gadid
Gan HaDarom
Gan HaShomron
Gan Or
Gilat
Gimzo
Giv'at Hen
Giv'at Ye'arim
Giv'ati
Hagor
HaOn
Hogla
Katif
Kfar Malal
Kfar Mordechai
Kfar Sirkin
Kmehin
Maor
Margaliot
Meron
Mevo Modi'im
Morag
Nahalal
Netaim
Netiv HaAsara
Netzer Hazani
Nevatim
Neve Ativ
Nir Akiva
Odem
Ofer
Ora
Otzem
Paran
Sde David
Sde Nitzan
Sde Uziyahu
Sde Ya'akov
Shadmot Devora
Telamim
Ya'ad
Yakhini
Yad Natan
Yated
Yesha
Yodfat
Yonatan
Zar'it
Zohar
Further Information
Get more info on 'Moshav'.
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