Yemin Moshe: The Story of a Jerusalem Neighborhood
By (Author) Eliezer D. Jaffe
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
22nd March 1988
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
956.944
Hardback
188
When the American Jewish philanthropist Judah Touro died in 1854 he entrusted $50,000 to the Englishman Sir Moses Montefiore, requesting that it be used for the poor of Jerusalem. This engrossing book, the result of twelve years of research, tells the story of the plot of land purchased by Montefiore in 1855--its changes in population, land use, and social structure. This book is no bland history, it is an argumentative presentation that convincingly presents an important point of view about urban renewal whose general applicability merits serious consideration. Judaica Book News When the American Jewish philanthropist Judah Touro died in 1854 he entrusted $50,000 to the Englishman Sir Moses Montefiore, requesting that it be used for the poor of Jerusalem. This engrossing book, the result of twelve years of research, tells the story of the plot of land purchased by Montefiore in 1855--its changes in population, land use, and social structure that existed in this neighborhood from its earliest days to the present time. Special attention is given to the rehabilitation of the neighborhood after the Six-Day War, the legal methods used to remove slum dwellers, and the final gentrification of the area with a totally different socio-economic class of residents. The lessons to be learned from this case study have relevance for other neighborhoods around the world.
Students and professionals concerned with urban problems, socal change, slum renewal, ethnic tensions, Jewish history and community organizations, as well as the interested general public will find this book compelling reading.-Jerusalem Times/Jewish Press
Then next time you visit Jerusalem, the history of the neighborhood will take on new meaning from this book.-The Kansas City Jewish Chronicle
This book is no bland history. It is an argumentative presentation that convincingly presents an important point of view about urban renewal whose general applicability merits serious consideration.-Judaica Book News
"Then next time you visit Jerusalem, the history of the neighborhood will take on new meaning from this book."-The Kansas City Jewish Chronicle
"This book is no bland history. It is an argumentative presentation that convincingly presents an important point of view about urban renewal whose general applicability merits serious consideration."-Judaica Book News
"Students and professionals concerned with urban problems, socal change, slum renewal, ethnic tensions, Jewish history and community organizations, as well as the interested general public will find this book compelling reading."-Jerusalem Times/Jewish Press
ELIEZER DAVID JAFFE has lived in Israel since 1960. He has obtained degrees in sociology, psychology, criminology, as well as a Ph.D. in social work. Since emigrating to Israel, he has taught at the Hebrew University and has been consultant to the Israel Ministry of Social Work. Jaffe has published extensively in Israel and the U.S. and is the author of Child Welfare in Israel, which won a choice book award in 1982-83. .