Nahalat Yitzhak Cemetery
Nahalat Yitzhak Cemetery is a Jewish municipal burial ground in the Tel Aviv District city of Givatayim, Israel, east of the Nahalat Yitzhak neighborhood of Tel Aviv. Founded in 1932, it includes more than 30,000 graves, including those of Israeli political and cultural figures, and Rebbes of several Hasidic [List of Hasidic Judaism|Hasidic dynasties|dynasties]. The cemetery contains several tracts of military graves and mass graves of unidentified soldiers from the period of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. It also features memorials to Jewish communities destroyed in the Holocaust.
The cemetery is operated by the Chevra Kadisha of Greater Tel Aviv. The National Insurance Institute has declared it a "closed" cemetery, although burials occasionally take place here for people who pre-purchased their plots.
History
The area for the Nahalat Yitzhak Cemetery was purchased by the Chevra Kadisha of Greater Tel Aviv in response to the population growth in Tel Aviv and the increasingly limited space in the city's first municipal burial ground, the Trumpeldor Cemetery. The Chevra Kadisha acquired a field located far from the city, on the eastern side of the Ayalon River. The site could be accessed only via a dirt road leading from a wadi, whose sides were very steep. During heavy rains, when the river overflowed its banks into the wadi, the site became completely inaccessible. Consequently, the Chevra Kadisha used its own money to pay for the construction of a concrete bridge to span the river and bring people to the cemetery.Nahalat Yitzhak Cemetery was dedicated on 30 June 1932. Together with the neighborhood that grew up around it, it was named for Rabbi Yitzchak Elchanan Spektor, Chief Rabbi of Kovno, Lithuania.
Description
The cemetery consists of two sections separated by a narrow road. The eastern section has a central avenue that extends. It is lined with benches and shady corners for visitors to rest and reflect. Seventy-six tracts were demarcated astride this avenue and terraced slopes planted with trees, flowers and grassy areas were installed. In total, the cemetery contains approximately 30,000 graves, including 7,500 graves of children.Military graves
Military graves at Nahalat Yitzhak Cemetery include a mass grave for Haganah soldiers killed between 1934 and 1936, graves and memorials for members of Jewish underground groups, and several tracts of graves for soldiers killed in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.During that war, military burials were often performed hurriedly and full documentation was not performed. Re-identification of bodies was subsequently carried out decades later. In one case, a soldier listed as missing in action was discovered to be buried in one of the mass graves at Nahalat Yitzhak Cemetery; in 2013 his name was added to the monument to fallen soldiers in the cemetery.
Notable burials
Political and paramilitary figures
- Abba Ahimeir, ideologue of Revisionist Zionism
- Moshe Avigdor Amiel, Chief Rabbi of Tel Aviv, 1936–1945
- Hansi Brand, Hungarian Zionist activist
- Joel Brand, Hungarian Zionist activist
- Avraham Cholodenko, Liberal Zionist activist.
- Isaiah Jarcho, Russian-American Zionist and first Director of Ahuza Aleph Raanana and owner of Gan Rena outdoor theater in Tel Aviv.
- Rudolf Kastner, Hungarian Zionist activist
- Ya'akov Meridor, Revisionist Zionist activist, Irgun commander and Israeli politician
- Ya'akov Rusonik, Polish Jew and Zionist, member of the "Lechi".
- Avraham Stern, head of the "Stern Gang" paramilitary organization
- Eliyahu Tamler, Irgun commander
Cultural figures
- Jiří Langer, Hebrew poet
- Moshe Schnitzer, President of the Israel Diamond Exchange
Hasidic rebbes
Nahalat Yitzhak Cemetery is the resting place of Rebbes from the Sadigura, Shtefanesht, Bohush, Sassov, and Strozinitz Hasidic dynasties. They include:- Rabbi Avrohom Mattisyohu Friedman, second Shtefaneshter Rebbe. Though Friedman died and was buried in Romania, his gravesite was threatened with demolition in the 1960s and his Hasidim paid to reinter his remains in Israel. He was reburied in the Nahalat Yitzhak Cemetery in 1968 in a funeral attended by thousands. Every year on his yahrtzeit, thousands of Jews come to pray at his grave.
- Rabbi [Avrohom Yaakov Friedman (third Sadigura (Hasidic dynasty)|Sadigura rebbe)|Avrohom Yaakov Friedman],, third Sadigura Rebbe
- Rabbi Avrohom Yaakov Friedman,, fifth Sadigura Rebbe
- Rabbi Mordechai Sholom Yosef Friedman, fourth Sadigura Rebbe
- Rabbi Yisrael Moshe Friedman, sixth Sadigura Rebbe