Hakhshara

Hakhshara

Hakhshara

Centers where Zionist youth would learn skills for their emigration to Israel and life in kibbutzim


Hakhshara (Hebrew: הַכְשָׁרָה; also transliterated Hachsharah, Hachshara or Hakhsharah) is a Hebrew word that literally means "preparation". The term is used for training programs and agricultural centres in Europe and elsewhere. At these centers Zionist youth and young adults would learn vocational skills necessary for their emigration to Israel and subsequent life in kibbutzim.[1] Such camps existed before World War II, and still exist today. Nowadays, these programs are usually based on kibbutzim in Israel for youth who are in their gap year, between finishing high-school and starting university, and include exploring Israel and studying Israeli culture. This was also true of the religious programs, that until a few decades were based based on a religious kibbutz and typically contained a period of Torah study. Nowadays, the religious programs still incorporate a period on a religious kibbutz, but are more diverse in what they offer, see at Bnei Akiva website (here).

List of Hakhshara centres

Pre-war Germany

Italy

Netherlands

Pre-war Poland

Pre-war Lithuania

Post-war Australia

See also


References

  1. Almogi, Yosef (1982). Total Commitment. Associated University Presses. p. 13. ISBN 9780845347492. The aim of such training programs— collectively called Hakhshara ("preparation") in Hebrew — was to prepare young Jews for settlement in Israel.
  2. Geschichte vor Ort: Erinnerungskultur im Land Brandenburg für die Zeit von 1933 bis 1990, Ministerium für Wissenschaft, Forschung und Kultur, Brandenburg, 2009, page 44
  3. "Jüdische Gemeinde - Grüsen (Hessen)". www.xn--jdische-gemeinden-22b.de. Retrieved 2019-05-23.
  4. U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, A young woman works in a kibbutz hachshara in Westerbork in The Netherlands. Photograph Number: 43171
  5. Skla on the River Zbrucz: A History of the Former Skala Jewish Community, Skala Research Group and Skala Benevolent Society, 2009, pp. 304, 306

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