Hatikva Quarter

Hatikva Quarter (Hebrew: שכונת התקווה, Shkhunat Hatikva) is a working class neighbourhood in southeastern Tel Aviv, Israel.

A street in Hatikva

History

The quarter was founded in 1935, named for "Mount Hope" ("Har HaTikva" in Hebrew), a farm built in 1855 by Protestant Prussian and American immigrants. Almira Steinbeck, who left the farm with her family, was the grandmother of John Steinbeck.[1][2] It became part of the Tel Aviv municipal area after the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.

Beit Dani community center

Bnei Yehuda Tel Aviv football club played at the Hatikva Neighborhood Stadium until moving to Bloomfield Stadium. The headquarters of the Israeli Labor Party is located there.[3]

Duhl Center for the Performing Arts

The Shevah Mofet school is located on the site of the Steinbeck farm house.[4]

Notable residents

gollark: Which can run "server" programs fine.
gollark: Oh, like CraftOS.
gollark: It EVEN has DOCUMENTATION!
gollark: It basically just uses the regular CraftOS shell because a lot of work went into autocomplete and I'm very lazy.
gollark: Well, any screen which makes the terminal I/O not immediately crash, it needs normal filesystem and network access.

See also

References

  1. Lior Friedman (5 April 2009). "The mountain of despair". Haaretz. Retrieved 13 January 2014.
  2. ""ענבי זעם" מאת ג'ון סטיינבק | סטיינבק, שכונת התקווה". Haaretz (in Hebrew). 2011-02-09. Retrieved 2018-06-12.
  3. Akiva Eldar (26 December 2002). "People and Politics / Fenced in". Haaretz. Retrieved 13 January 2014.
  4. Tel Aviv municipality http://tel-aviv.millenium.org.il/NR/exeres/747CE319-2E55-49F6-9DED-1B9C50FF0476,frameless.htm

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