General06:41 · 14m ago

Moshe Smilansky Warns in 1934 About Tel Aviv's Overconcentration and Advocates Jewish Settlement in Gaza

Arutz ShevaRight
Translated & summarized from Arutz Sheva by baba
The story · English

In 1934, Moshe Smilansky published an editorial in the farmers' newspaper "Bustanai" highlighting the demographic imbalance in Jewish settlement across Mandatory Palestine. He noted that Tel Aviv then comprised half of the entire Jewish population, serving as the economic capital but demanding a much higher standard of living than other areas. Smilansky warned this concentration posed risks both to Tel Aviv and the broader Jewish community, as other cities like Jerusalem and Haifa tried to emulate Tel Aviv's lifestyle, creating a disproportionate urban center supported by smaller agricultural and industrial settlements.

He criticized Tel Aviv's self-imposed isolation and the resulting housing crisis, where land prices in Tel Aviv exceeded those in central London and housing costs on Rothschild Boulevard surpassed those in Paris's most beautiful districts. Smilansky lamented the failure to expand construction southward toward Jaffa, which could have alleviated prices by utilizing available transportation like buses. He also condemned the construction of dense, unattractive buildings blocking sunlight and sea air.

Smilansky proposed a concrete solution: developing Jewish settlement in Gaza, a coastal city connected by rail and roads to the Negev region, yet at the time devoid of any Jewish residents. He saw Gaza as a promising location for expansion and a remedy to the overcrowding and economic pressures in Tel Aviv. His article, published on June 27, 1934, in "Bustanai," called for a strategic shift in settlement policy to balance population distribution and foster growth beyond Tel Aviv.

Read the original at Arutz Sheva
Open the live terminal