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In 1996, there were 60 youth villages in Israel with a student population of 18,000. [4] A police studies track was established in 2004 at the Kanot Youth Village, and is now being offered at Nir Ha'emek Youth Village and Hodayot Youth Village. It has been shown that young people with low self-esteem thrive in such programs.
Pages in category "Youth villages in Israel" The following 27 pages are in this category, out of 27 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. * Youth village; A.
Yemin Orde. Yemin Orde Youth Village (Hebrew: ימין אורד) (Lit: "Orde Memorial") is an acclaimed youth village near Haifa, Israel for at-risk youth, that delivers an all-encompassing school and home within a 24/7 framework; providing each student with the individual, peer and familial environment and support needed to succeed.
Ben Shemen youth village, 1920s-30s. The village was established in 1927 on the land of the Hadid factory by Siegfried Lehman.Lehman had previously intended to establish the village in the Harod Valley, [2] but decided against it after learning that Anopheles mosquitoes in the marshes could pose a deadly hazard to future students. [2]
'Seedlings') is an educational institution and youth village in central Israel. Located near Gedera, it falls under the jurisdiction of Be'er Tuvia Regional Council. In 2022 it had a population of 364. [1]
The village was established in 1948 by Yehiel Harif to absorb children who had survived the Holocaust. [2] It was named after Yitzhak Gruenbaum. [2] Today the village is a boarding school that teaches 675 children (275 residential, 400 day students) from 7th to 12th grade.
On 28 August 1929, the British police ordered the evacuation of the village to protect residents as the 1929 Palestine Riots engulfed the country. [11] By the 1945 statistics the village had a population of 330, all Jews. [12] The village was used as a training base by the Haganah due to its remote location in a mountainous area. In 1957 it was ...
Goldstein Youth Village, 1950. Havat HaNoar HaTzioni was established in 1949 as a home for 40 Jewish orphans who lost their families in the Holocaust. It was named for Israel Goldstein, a prominent rabbi and Zionist leader. Today the school has over 500 students, many of them new immigrants. [2]