[Avodah] Return to the Land of Israel
Prof. Levine via Avodah
avodah at lists.aishdas.org
Fri Oct 16 02:31:34 PDT 2015
There has been discussion about why the Jews when
they returned to Israel did not adopt the
practices of EY regarding the leining of the
Torah and other issues. This got me to wondering
about when the Jews did return to Israel. The
following is from
http://www.simpletoremember.com/articles/a/return_to_the_land_of_israel/
EARLY MIGRATIONS
During the time of the Muslims, life for the Jews
here was for the most part easier than under the Christians.
In 1210, following the demise of the Crusaders,
several hundred rabbis, known as the Baalei
Tosefot, re-settled in Israel. This marked the
emergence of the first Ashkenazic European community in Israel.
In 1263, the great Rabbi and scholar Nachmanides
also known as the Ramban, established a small
Sephardic community on Mount Zion which was
outside the walls. (See Part 47.) Later, in the
1400s, that community moved inside the walls and
they established the Ramban Synagogue which still exists today.
When Nachmanides came to Jerusalem there was
already a vibrant Jewish community in Hebron,
though the Muslims did not permit them entry into
the Cave of the Machpela (where the Jewish
Patriarchs and Matriarchs are buried). Indeed,
this ban continued until the 20th century.
More Jews started to migrate to Israel following
their expulsion from Spain in 1492. In the 16th
century, large numbers of Jews migrated to the
northern city of Tzfat (also known as Safed) and
it became the largest Jewish population in Israel
and the center of Jewish mysticismthe Kabbalah.
In mid-1700s a student of the Baal Shem Tov by
the name of Gershon Kitover started the first
Hassidic community in Israel. This community was
part of what was called Old Yishuv. (Today, when
in the Old City of Jerusalem, you can visit the
Old Yishuv Court Museum and learn some fascinating facts about it.)
Another very significant event in the growth of
the Jewish community of Israel took place in the
early 19th century. Between 1808 and 1812 three
groups of disciples of the great rabbi Rabbi
Eliyahu Kramer, the Vilna Gaon , numbering about
500 people, came to the land of Israel. Initially they settled in Tzfat in the
Galilee, but after several disaster including a
devastating earthquake, they settled in
Jerusalem. Their impact was tremendous. They
founded several new neighborhoods (including Mea
Shearim) and set up numerous Kollels (Yeshivot
where married men are paid a monthly stipend to
study Torah). Their arrival revived the presence
of Ashkenazi Jewry in Jerusalem, which for over
100 years had been mainly Sephardi and had a huge
impact on the customs and religious practices of
the religious community in Israel.
By 1880, there were about 40,000 Jews, living in
the land of Israel among some 400,000 Muslims
See the above URL for more.
YL
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