Galilee
Galilee (Hebrew: הגליל,
transliteration HaGalil; Arabic: الجليل,
translit. al-Jalīl) is a region in northern Israel which overlaps with much of
the administrative Northern District and Haifa District of the country.
Traditionally divided into Upper Galilee (Hebrew: גליל עליון
Galil Elyon), Lower Galilee (Hebrew: גליל
תחתון Galil Tahton), and
Western Galilee (Hebrew: גליל
מערבי Galil Ma'aravi),
extending from Dan to the north, at the base of Mount Hermon, along Mount
Lebanon to the ridges of Mount Carmel and Mount Gilboa north of Jenin and
Tulkarm to the south, and from the Jordan Rift Valley to the east across the
plains of the Jezreel Valley and Acre to the shores of the Mediterranean Sea
and the coastal plain in the west.
Geography
Most of Galilee consists of rocky terrain, at heights of
between 500 and 700 m. Several high mountains are in the region, including
Mount Tabor and Mount Meron, which have relatively low temperatures and high
rainfall. As a result of this climate, flora and wildlife thrive in the region,
while many birds annually migrate from colder climates to Africa and back
through the Hula–Jordan corridor. The streams and waterfalls, the latter mainly
in Upper Galilee, along with vast fields of greenery and colourful wildflowers,
as well as numerous towns of biblical importance, make the region a popular
tourist destination.
Due to its high rainfall (900–1200 mm), mild temperatures
and high mountains (Mount Meron's elevation is 1,000–1,208 m), the upper
Galilee region contains some distinctive flora and fauna: prickly juniper
(Juniperus oxycedrus), Lebanese cedar (Cedrus libani), which grows in a small
grove on Mount Meron, cyclamens, paeonias, and Rhododendron ponticum which
sometimes appears on Meron.
History
Ancient and
classic antiquity
According to the Hebrew Bible, Galilee was named by the
Israelites and was the tribal region of Naphthali and Dan, at times overlapping
the Tribe of Asher's land.[1] However, Dan was dispersed among the whole people
rather than isolated to the lands of Dan, as the Tribe of Dan was the
hereditary local law enforcement and judiciary for the whole
nation.[2][non-primary source needed] Normally,[when?] Galilee is just referred
to as Nafthali.
Chapter 9 of I Kings states that Solomon rewarded his
Phoenician ally, King Hiram I of Sidon, with the Galilee for "the
nations", which would have been either the foreigners who came to settle
there during and after the reign of Hiram I, or who had been forcibly deported
there by later conquerors such as the Assyrians. Hiram, to reciprocate previous
gifts given to David, accepted the upland plain among the mountains of Naphtali
and renamed it "the land of Cabul" for a time.[citation needed]
The region's Israelite name is from the Hebrew root galil,
an ultimately unique word for "district", and usually
"circle", a noun which has standardized since antiquity in Hebrew
grammar, to be in the construct state, and requires a genitival noun. Hence,
the Biblical "Galilee of the non-Jewish Nations" is in Hebrew
"galil goyim" (verse Isaiah 8:23 or 9:1 in different numberings). It
previously had other suffixes and following the end of the Phoenecian Empire
had different suffixes to the Hebrew culture and its derivatives
interchangeably.[clarification needed]
The region in turn gave rise to the English name for the
"Sea of Galilee" referred to as such in many languages including
ancient Arabic. In the Hebrew language, the lake is referred to as Kinneret
(Numbers 34:11, etc.), from Hebrew kinnor, "harp", describing its
shape, Lake of Gennesaret (Luke 5:1, etc.), from Ginosar (Hebrew) ge,
"valley", and either netser, "branch", or natsor, "to
guard", "to watch" (the name which may have been a reference to
Nazareth city, alternatively renamed the Sea of Tiberias (John 6:1, etc.), from
the town of Tiberias at its southwestern end, named after the Greek Tiberius
following the first-century CE Roman Emperor's Greek derived name. These are
the three names used in originally internal Jewish-authored literature rather than
the "Sea of Galilee".[3] However, Jews did use "the
Galilee" to refer to the whole region (Aramaic הגלילי), including its lake.
In Roman times, the country was divided into Judea, Samaria,
the Paralia and Galilee, which comprised the whole northern section of the
country, and was the largest of the three regions under the tetrarchy. After
Iudaea became a Roman provincein 6 CE (formed by a merger of Judea, Samaria,
and Idumea), Galilee briefly became a part of it, then separated from it for
two to three centuries.
The Galilee region was presumably the home of Jesus during
at least 30 years of his life. Much of the first three Gospels of the New
Testament give an account of Jesus' public ministry in this province,
particularly in the towns of Nazareth and Capernaum. Galilee is also cited as
the place where Jesus performed many public miracles, including curing a blind
man. After the death of Jesus, some accounts suggest his disciples returned to
Galilee and their experience of his resurrection took place there.[4]
Many of the important Tannaim, the Rabbinic sages whose
views are recorded in the Mishnah and Talmud, claim to have also spent their
lives there, including Honi Ha-Ma'agel, Jose the Galilean, and Ishmael the
Galilean, among many others. Traditional rabbinic sources assert that the
followers of the rabbis from the Galilee were widely reputed to believe their
teachers (rabbis) were miracle workers, as opposed to those from Judea proper,
Persia, and Babylon, who rarely are credited with miracles.[citation needed]
Many are cited for their large number of students and followers throughout the
Jewish people[5] among the common people. The Galilee among the Jewish
population was known as a wellspring of miracle workers and mystical
philosophers of all types, especially just prior to the major split between
Jesus' followers and those who opposed Jesus.[citation needed] According to the
Talmud, one of the most important founders of the modern Jewish faith, Johanan
ben Zakai, was born there. Simeon bar Yochai, one of the most famed of all the
Tannaim, hid from the Romans in the Galilee, and dug tunnels there to
hide.[citation needed] Many miracles are ascribed to him during his Galilean
period after escaping Judea proper. In medieval Hebrew legend, he may have
written the Zohar while there.[6]
The archaeological discoveries of synagogues from the
Hellenistic and Roman period in the Galilee show strong Phoenecian influences,
and a high level of tolerance for other cultures,[7] relative to other Jewish
sacred sites from the period, the latter being "cleansed of
impurities". Eastern Galilee retained a Jewish majority until the seventh
century.[citation needed]
Middle Ages
After the Arab caliphate took control of the region in 638,
it became part of Jund al-Urdunn (District of Jordan). Its major towns were
Tiberias (which was capital of the district—Qadas), Baysan, Acre, Saffuriya,
and Kabul.[8]
The Shia Fatimids conquered the region in the 10th century;
a breakaway sect, venerating the Fatimid caliph al-Hakim, formed the Druze
religion, centered in Mount Lebanon and partially Galilee. During the Crusades,
Galilee was organized into the Principality of Galilee, one of the most
important Crusader seigneuries.
Ottoman era
The Jewish population of Galilee increased significantly following
their expulsion from Spain and welcome from the Ottoman Empire. The community
for a time made Safed an international center of cloth weaving and
manufacturing, as well as a key site for Jewish learning.[9] Today it remains
one of Judaism's four holy cities and a center for kabbalah.
In the mid-18th century, Galilee was caught up in a struggle
between the Arab leader Zahir al-Umar and the Ottoman authorities who were
centred in Damascus. Zahir ruled Galilee for 25 years until Ottoman loyalist
Jezzar Pasha conquered the region in 1775.
In 1831, the Galilee, a part of Ottoman Syria, switched
hands from Ottomans to Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt until 1840. During this period,
aggressive social and politic policies were introduced, which led to a violent
1834 Arab revolt. In the process of this revolt the Jewish community of Sefad
was greatly reduced, in the event of Safed Plunder by the rebels. The Arab
rebels were subsequently defeated by the Egyptian troops, though in 1838, the
Druze of Galilee led another uprising. In 1834 and 1837, major earthquakes
leveled most of the towns, resulting in great loss of life. In 1866, Galilee's
first hospital, the Nazareth Hospital, was founded under the leadership of
American-Armenian missionary Dr. Kaloost Vartan, assisted by German missionary
John Zeller.
In the early 20th century, Galilee remained part of Ottoman
Syria. It was administered as the southernmost territory of the Beirut Vilayet
(established in 1888).
British
administration and Israeli rule
Following the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in World War I,
and the Armistice of Mudros, it came under British rule, as part of the
Occupied Enemy Territory Administration. Shortly after, in 1920, the region was
included in the British Mandate territory, officially a part of Mandatory
Palestine from 1923.
After the 1948 Arab–Israeli war, nearly the whole of Galilee
came under Israel's control. A large portion of the population fled or was
forced to leave, leaving dozens of entire villages empty; however, a large
Israeli Arab community remained based in and near the cities of Nazareth, Acre,
Tamra, Sakhnin, and Shefa-'Amr, due to some extent to a successful
rapprochement with the Druze. The kibbutzim around the Sea of Galilee were
sometimes shelled by the Syrian army's artillery until Israel seized the Golan
Heights in the 1967 Six-Day War.
During the 1970s and the early 1980s, the Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO) launched several attacks on towns of the Upper
and Western Galilee from Lebanon. Israel initiated Operation Litani (1979) and
Operation Peace For Galilee (1982) with the stated objectives of destroying the
PLO infrastructure in Lebanon and protecting the citizens of the Galilee.
Israel occupied much of southern Lebanon until 1985, when it withdrew to a
narrow security buffer zone.
Until 2000, Hezbollah, and earlier Amal, continued to fight
the Israeli Defence Forces, sometimes shelling Upper Galilee communities with
Katyusha rockets. In May 2000, Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak unilaterally
withdrew IDF troops from southern Lebanon, maintaining a security force on the
Israeli side of the international border recognized by the United Nations.
However, clashes between Hezbollah and Israel continued along the border, and
UN observers condemned both for their attacks.
The 2006 Israel-Lebanon conflict was characterized by
round-the-clock Katyusha rocket attacks (with a greatly extended range) by
Hezbollah on the whole of Galilee, with long-range, ground-launched missiles
hitting as far south as the Sharon Plain, Jezreel Valley, and Jordan Valley
below the Sea of Galilee.
Demography
The largest cities in the region are Acre, Nahariya,
Nazareth, Safed, Karmiel, Shaghur, Shefa-'Amr, Afula, and Tiberias.[10] The
port city of Haifa serves as a commercial center for the whole region.
Because of its hilly terrain, most of the people in the
Galilee live in small villages connected by relatively few roads.[11] A
railroad runs south from Nahariya along the Mediterranean coast, and a fork to
the east is due to operate in 2015. The main sources of livelihood throughout
the area are agriculture and tourism. Industrial parks are being developed,
bringing further employment opportunities to the local population which
includes many recent immigrants. The Israeli government is contributing funding
to the private initiative, the Galilee Finance Facility, organised by the
Milken Institute and Koret Economic Development Fund.[12]
Galilee is home to a large Arab population,[13][14]
comprising a Muslim majority and two smaller populations, of Druze and Arab
Christians, of comparable sizes. Both Israeli Druze and Christians have their
majorities in the Galilee.[15][16] Other notable minorities are the Bedouin,
the Maronites and the Circassians.
The central portion of the Galilee, also known as the
"Heart of the Galilee", stretching from the border with Lebanon to
the northern edge of the Jezreel Valley, including the cities of Nazareth,
Sakhnin, Shaghur, Tamra, and Kafr Kanna, has an Arab population of 75% with
most of the Jewish population living in small hilltop towns, and cities such as
Karmiel, and Ma'alot. Meanwhile, the eastern Galilee including the Finger of
the Galilee, the Jordan River Valley, and the region around the Sea of Galilee
are nearly 100% Jewish. The southern part of the Galilee, including Jezreel
Valley, and the Gilboa region are also nearly 100% Jewish, with only a few
small Arab villages near the West Bank border. About 80% of the population of
the Western Galilee is Jewish. The region directly under the Lebanese border,
especially in the northwest, is largely Jewish, as well. The Jewish Agency has
attempted to increase the Jewish population in this area,[17] but the
non-Jewish population continues to grow. As of 2006, there were 1.2 million
residents in Galilee, of which 46.9% were Jewish.[18]
Currently, the Galilee is attracting significant internal
migration of Haredi Jews, who are increasingly moving to the Galilee and Negev
as an answer to rising housing prices in central Israel.[19]
Tourism
Galilee is a popular destination for domestic and foreign
tourists who enjoy its scenic, recreational, and gastronomic offerings. The
Galilee attracts many Christian pilgrims, as many of the miracles of Jesus
occurred, according to the New Testament, on the shores of the Sea of
Galilee—including his walking on water, calming the storm, and feeding five
thousand people in Tabgha. In addition, numerous sites of biblical importance
are located in the Galilee, such as Megiddo, Jezreel Valley, Mount Tabor,
Hazor, Horns of Hattin, and more.
A popular hiking trail known as the yam leyam, or sea-to-sea,
starts hikers at the Mediterranean. They then hike through the Galilee
mountains, Tabor, Neria, and Meron, until their final destination, the Kinneret
(Sea of Galilee).
In April 2011, Israel unveiled the "Jesus Trail",
a 40-mile (60-km) hiking trail in the Galilee for Christian pilgrims. The trail
includes a network of footpaths, roads, and bicycle paths linking sites central
to the lives of Jesus and his disciples, including Tabgha, the traditional site
of Jesus' miracle of the loaves and fishes, and the Mount of Beatitudes, where
he delivered his Sermon on the Mount. It ends at Capernaum on the shores of the
Sea of Galilee, where Jesus espoused his teachings.[20]
The Church of the Transfiguration on Mount Tabor
Many kibbutzim and moshav families operate Zimmern (German:
"rooms", the local term for a Bed and breakfasts). Numerous festivals
are held throughout the year, especially in the autumn and spring holiday
seasons. These include the Acre (Acco) Festival of Alternative Theater,[21] the
olive harvest festival, and music festivals featuring Anglo-American folk,
klezmer, Renaissance, and chamber music.








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