The Jezreel Valley is home to some of the most
fertile farmland in Israel and it is a place with
wonderful vistas. The agricultural heartland of the
country; it is an area rich in natural springs.
While there are other valleys in Israel, in Hebrew
the Jezreel Valley is often referred to simply as
“Ha’emek - The Valley”. This is a great area for hiking,
picnicking – enjoying nature and learning about both
modern and biblical history.
For me, this land where my grandfather and grandmother first met and fell in love is as close as it gets to paradise on earth.
The valley got its name from the biblical city of
Yizre’el that served as a wintering place during the
time of the monarchy. The city flourished under the
reign of King Omri and was ultimately destroyed by
Tiglath-Pileser III, in 732 BCE.
Until the early 1920s when the first Jewish
settlements were established in the area, almost 30
years before the birth of the new nation, The Jezreel
Valley had many swamps.
In September 1921 Kibbutz Ein Harod was established near the Spring of Harod, it was the second Jewish settlement in the area. During the 1920s there were six Jewish settlements in the valley.
As early as 1891 the man who would later be known as
the “Redeemer of the Valley”, Yehoshua Hankin (see
related article Gideon’s Cave) began negotiating for the
purchase of 40,000 acres (160,000 dunam) at a price 16
Franc per dunam. The deal fell through and the sale was
delayed until 1909. The first parcel of land purchased
was 2,375 acres (9,500 dunam) and it was used to
establish Merhavia, the first settlement in the valley,
in 1911.
The Turks exiled Hankin and the major land purchase
in the valley, 17,500 acres (70,000 dunam) was only
concluded in 1920 after his return. Hankin is buried on
Mt. Gilboa overlooking the land that he liberated.
Moshav Kfar Yehoshua is named after him and serves as a
living memorial to his deeds.
While in biblical
times the primary cities mentioned in the valley were
Megiddo, Yizre’el and Beit Shean in modern times Afula
and Beit Shean are the primary towns in the area.
Yizre’el is no longer a city, but rather a kibbutz
established by demobilized Palmach soldiers in 1948. And
the Megiddo of today is a tel that is home to a hoard of
archaeological ruins.
Aside from the great battle between Saul and the
Philistines (see Mt. Gilboa, Scenic Route) the incident
involving the vineyard of Naboth the Jezreelite (I Kings
21) occurred in the area as well. King Ahab coveted
Naboth’s vineyard and asked Naboth to give the vineyard
to him (the King also said he would replace it with
another vineyard or pay for it). Naboth replied by
saying, “The LORD forbid it me, that I should give the
inheritance of my fathers unto thee.” Ahab was not
pleased, but it was his wife Jeezebel who was really
enraged. She had Naboth stoned to death and then told
her husband to go claim what was rightly his. The
intersection of the road that leads down from tel
Yizre’el (Route # 675) and connects to Route # 71, the
Afula Beit Shean road is aptly named Navot Junction
(Navot is the Hebrew pronunciation of Naboth).
It was at the Spring of Harod, at the foothills of
the Gilboa, that Gideon chose the warriors that would
help him defeat the Midianites. And according to the
Book of Revelation (the New Testament) Armageddon is
located the Jezreel Valley.
Aside from its agricultural significance the Jezreel
Valley was an important thoroughfare even in ancient
times as it presented an easy route from the ocean in
the west to the mountains east of the Jordan River and
to Egypt. It was along the route mentioned in the bible
as the Way to the Sea (Isaiah 9:1) and part of what was
later known by the Romans as the Via Maris, the ancient
route from Egypt to Mesopotamia. The importance of the
valley in terms of transportation continues to this day,
as many trucks from Amman, Jordan travel through it on
their way the port of Haifa.
Many of the kibbutzim and moshavim in the area offer
Bed & Breakfast type guestrooms. In Hebreew these are referred to as a Tzimmerim (borrowing from the German word for room). Some of these are luxurious, while others offer basic accommodations. In most cases these accomadations offer much more than the spartan image that one might think of.
In June 2000 Kibbutz Harod Ihud opened its Country Guest House, 10 log cabins (furnished right down to a jacuzzi), that command a wonderful view of the valley and Mt. Gilboa. Since opening, these cabins have consistentely ranked among the country's Top-10 cabins and reservations are often required far in advance. In addition, the kibbutz also offers 26 additional rooms on a B&B basis.
Note: Jezreel is pronounced Yizra’el in
Hebrew.
The ‘im’ suffix indicates
plural,therefore
kibbutzim is the plural of
kibbutz.