Bat Yam

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Bat Yam
  • <templatestyles src="Script/styles_hebrew.css" />בַּת יָם
  • بات يام
Hebrew transcription(s)
 • ISO 259 Batt Yamm
Bat Yam Aerial View.jpg
Flag of Bat Yam
Flag
Official logo of Bat Yam
Logo
Bat Yam is located in Israel
Bat Yam
Bat Yam
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District Tel Aviv
Founded 1926
Government
 • Type City (from 1958)
 • Mayor Yossi Bachar (acting)
Area
 • Total 8,167 dunams (8.167 km2 or 3.153 sq mi)
Population (2014)[1]
 • Total 128,498
Name meaning 'Daughter of Jerusalem'. lit. 'Daughter of the sea', can also mean 'mermaid'
Website www.bat-yam.muni.il
Bat Yam beach
Defenders Square

Bat Yam (Hebrew: <templatestyles src="Script/styles_hebrew.css" />בַּת יָם<phonos file="Bat yam.ogg">(audio)</phonos>) is a city located on Israel's Mediterranean Sea coast, on the central coastal strip, just south of Tel Aviv. Part of the Gush Dan metropolitan area in Tel Aviv District, the city had a population of 128,498 in 2014.

History

Historical population
Year Pop. ±%
1948 2,300 —    
1955 16,000 +595.7%
1961 31,700 +98.1%
1972 100,100 +215.8%
1983 128,700 +28.6%
1995 138,500 +7.6%
2008 130,300 −5.9%
2010 130,400 +0.1%
2011 128,200 −1.7%
Source: CBS[2]

Bat Yam was established in 1926 as Bayit VeGan (Hebrew: <templatestyles src="Script/styles_hebrew.css" />בית וגן‎; House and Garden). During the 1929 Palestine riots, the town was attacked by Palestinian fighters from Jaffa and was evacuated by British Authorities.[citation needed]. In 1930, it was re-settled. In 1936, it was granted local council status. In 1937 it was renamed Bat Yam.[3] By 1945, 2,000 Jews were living in Bat Yam.[4] According to the Jewish National Fund, in 1947 it had a population of 4,000.[5]

Following the United Nations vote in favour of a partition plan on November 29, 1947 and the subsequent civil war, inhabitants of both Bat Yam and Jaffa reported violent incidents, including sniping.[5][6] On May 13, 1948, Jaffa surrendered to Jewish forces.

In the years following Israel's creation, Bat Yam grew dramatically due to mass immigration and gained city status in 1958. A small Hasidic enclave of Bobover Hasidim, known as Kiryat Bobov, was established in 1959. The city later gained a sizeable community of Jews from Turkey. Bat Yam again experienced a period of rapid growth in the early 1980s to the late 1990s with the mass immigration of Jews from the former Soviet Union, and Ethiopia. There is also a fairly large[not specific enough to verify] Arab community in Bat Yam, both Muslim and Christian, many of whom relocated from Jaffa. The vast majority of Vietnamese-Israelis or Vietnamese people of Israeli origin, live in Bat Yam.[7]

Local government

In the early 2000s, following financial scandals under the leadership of Yehoshua Saguy, the city was on the brink of bankruptcy. In 2003 a new mayor, Shlomo Lahiani, was elected and the city began to rejuvenate. Large investments were made in education, culture and the appearance of the city.[specify]. In the 2008 municipal elections, Shlomo Lahiani was re-elected mayor of Bat Yam with 86% of the vote.[8] In 2014, Lahiani pled guilty to three counts of breach of public trust after being charged with bribery and income tax fraud.[9]

Politics and government

Bat Yam municipality building
Type Name Years
Head of council Mintz Ben Zion 1936–37
Head of council Yisrael Ben Zion 1937–39
Head of council Yisrael Rabinovich-Teomim 1939–43
Head of council Eliav Levai 1943–50
Head of council David Ben Ari 1950–58
Mayor David Ben Ari 1958–63
Mayor Menachem Rothschild 1963–73
Mayor Yitzhak Walker 1973–77
Mayor David Mesika 1977–78
Mayor Menachem Rothschild 1978–83
Mayor Ehud Kinamon 1983–93
Mayor Yehoshua Saguy 1993–2003
Mayor Shlomo Lahiani 2003–2014
Mayor (acting) Yossi Bachar 2014-date
Source: Bat Yam's mayors on the official city website

Art and culture

"Kenyon Bat Yam" Mall

In 2008 the Bat-Yam International Biennale of Landscape Urbanism, which is devoted to re-examining urban spaces through art and architecture, was held in Bat Yam. In 2010 the second Biennale, "Timing" took place,[10] which featured site-specific installations from designers and architects from around the world.[11] The city has two shopping malls, Kanyon Bat Yam, which opened in 1993, and Kanyon Bat Yamon.

The location of Bat Yam on the Mediterranean makes it popular with beach-goers. Bat Yam has a 3.2 km (2 mi) long promenade along the ocean lined with pubs and restaurants. The city has six beaches, one of which is protected by a breakwater. The Museum of Bat Yam exhibits contemporary art.[12] Other museums include the Ben Ari Museum and Ryback Museum that houses the work of Issachar Ber Ryback. There is also a museum in the memory of the Yiddish writer Sholem Asch, who lived his last years in Bat Yam, and a small Holocaust museum.[13]

Transportation

File:Raziel st.jpg
Raziel Street view

Bat Yam-Yoseftal Railway Station and Bat Yam-Komemiyut Railway Station opened in 2011 as part of the new Tel Aviv – Rishon LeZion West line.[14] Bat Yam will also be the terminus for the red line of the Tel Aviv Light Rail.

Sports

Location of Bat Yam in the Tel Aviv District

The city's major football club, Maccabi Ironi Bat Yam, currently plays in Liga Leumit, the third level of Israeli football. The club was formed by a 2004 merger of Hapoel Bat Yam (which had spent several seasons in the second division in the 1990s) and Maccabi Bat Yam.

Bat Yam's Al Gal beach is regarded to be one of the best surfing spots in the region, having fairly consistent surf conditions, especially during the summer months.

Twin towns – Sister cities

Bat Yam is twinned with:

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Notable residents

References

  1. 2014 populations Israel Central Bureau of Statistics
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  4. Government of Palestine, Village Statistics, 1945, p52.
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  8. http://www.haaretz.co.il/news/education/1.1297119
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  13. MoBY: Museums of Bat Yam
  14. Bat Yam: New Israeli Riviera

External links