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  1. Like Degania Alef, which was known as the “Mother of the Kevutzot,” Petah Tikvah was known as the “Mother of the Moshavot” – or small cooperative villages. It was really the first modern agricultural settlement in Israel.

  2. article traces shifting Zionist narratives about heroism and victimhood in Petah Tikva; the construction of Petah Tikva, founded before the Zionist movement, as a locus of foundational Zionist bravery; and the gendered notions by which men and women are remembered and forgotten. Key words: First Aliyah, Zionism, collective memory, gender O

  3. 4 ott 2017 · This article traces the commemoration history of the event in Zionist sources, particularly local Petah Tikva sources, between its occurrence in 1886 and the mid-1960s. It looks at both the evolving ghostly presence of the central Jewish female victim, who…

  4. The following article summarizes our current knowledge of the history of Tell Mulabbis (in modern Petah Tikva). As a key archaeological site in the Yarkon River basin, it was inhabited during the Roman, Byzantine, Early Islamic, Crusader, Mamluk and

  5. On March 29, 1886 (22 Adar II 5646), Arab peasants from the village of Yahudiya attacked the new Jewish colony (moshavah) of Petah Tikva (founded in 1878) and injured five Jews.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Petah_TikvaPetah Tikva - Wikipedia

    Petah Tikva (Hebrew: פֶּתַח תִּקְוָה [ˈpetaχ ˈtikva], lit. ' Opening of Hope '), also known as Em HaMoshavot (lit. ' Mother of the Moshavot '), is a city in the Central District of Israel, 10.6 km (6.6 mi) east of Tel Aviv.

  7. Liora R. Halperin, "Petah Tikva, 1886: Gender, Anonymity, and the Making of Zionist Memory," Jewish Social Studies, 23:1 (Fall 2017): 1-28 View PDF (1022.15 KB) Status of Research