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Wellsprings

Tel Aviv

Israel

Tel Aviv, founded in 1909 as a Jewish garden suburb of Jaffa, grew into the first modern all-Jewish city and a major center of Israeli life. Rabbi Avraham Yitzchak HaKohen Kook served as rav of neighboring Jaffa and its surrounding settlements from 1904 (before becoming Chief Rabbi of the Land of Israel), in the years when Tel Aviv was first taking shape. Tel Aviv's own chief rabbinate was later held by Rabbi Ben-Zion Meir Hai Uziel, elected its chief rabbi in 1923 and afterward the first Sephardi Chief Rabbi of Israel, and in time by Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau.

11 teachers · 4 works

Tel Aviv through the eras

Modern Era

Tel Aviv barely existed in 1850—a stretch of Mediterranean dunes and orange groves on the outskirts of the ancient port town of Jaffa—but by the early twentieth century it had become the beating heart of Jewish national revival. Under Ottoman rule until 1917, then British Mandate authority, Tel Aviv grew from a handful of pioneering families into a bustling Hebrew-speaking city that embodied the Zionist dream of Jewish self-determination. The Jewish community here was young, secular-leaning, and intensely ideological, debating Labor Zionism, Hebrew culture, and the shape of a future Jewish state in cafés and newspapers rather than in traditional yeshivas. After Israel's founding in 1948, Tel Aviv remained the cultural and commercial capital, home to theaters, universities, and the Knesset, though its spiritual center of gravity eventually shifted to Jerusalem and the ultra-Orthodox enclaves of Bnei Brak. The city's waterfront and Dizengoff Street became symbols of modern Jewish life—cosmopolitan, forward-looking, often at odds with the religious establishment that flourished in other parts of the country. Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, though primarily based in Jerusalem, engaged deeply with Tel Aviv's modern Jewish world during his decades as a leading Sephardic authority.

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