Category: Museums

  • Galleries And Artists of Safed

    In addition to its title as the city of Kabbalah, Safed is also known as a city of art. Many creative souls are attracted to and inspired b

    Galleries And Artists In Safedy the winding, narrow, cobblestone streets of Safed’s Old City, home to a bustling artists’ quarter, and feel at one with their creativity in the crisp mountain air of this city in the sky. Due to the city’s reputation as a haven for the creative soul, visitors from both near and afar frequently flock to the city to enjoy the showings of Safed’s many artists and their galleries.

    Keeping true to our goal to provide you with all of the information you will need for a visit to Safed, we at www.safed.co.il have created this extensive section on the Galleries and Artists of Safed so that you can enjoy your exploration of Safed’s inspiring art scene.

    Galleries

    In our section devoted to galleries, we provide you with the names, locations, and hours of Safed’s many multi-ar

    tist galler

    ies so that you can enjoy a day of art and culture in Safed. Some galleries worth checking out are the General Exhibition, the Dadon Gallery, the Camus Gallery, the Mikedem Gallery and the Fig Tree Courtyard.

    Artists

    Photography, painting, micro calligraphy, sculpture, ceramics, jewelry design, and Judaica: Safed is home to every medium of art imaginable. Here in our artists section, we provide the Safed visitor with a list of the many, many artists living and working in Safed as well as offer a brief biography of each artist, and a description of their work and/or inspiration. Contact information, as well as the address and hours of the artists’ private galleries, is also available.

  • The Memorial Museum Of Hungarian Speaking Jewry

    Tucked away in a small garden opposite the Yigal Allon Cultural Center, you will find one of the hidden gems of Safed. A museum dedicated to the lost communities of Hungarian Jewry.

    The Memorial Museum Of Hungarian Speaking Jewry

     

    Hungarian Jewish Life

    Jews lived in Hungary for over 1000 years until the community was devastated and destroyed in 1944 during the Holocaust. However, despite this devastation, the Museum is dedicated to the life and times of Jews in pre-war Hungary, as well as to the community

    ‘s resistance during the Occupation, and focuses very little on the destruction of the community.

    With everything from a 19C army uniform to handmade lace serviettes there is plenty to see in the display cabinets. There are albums of photographs of community life, audio and videos recordings, a beautiful model of the Dohany Great Synagogue in Budapest and a wide variety of documentation and Judaica.

    Heritage

    If you have Hungarian Jewish Heritage, or want to do research on the lost Jewish communities of Hungary, the Museum offers plenty of information and guidance from its staff. There are over 600 slides of Hungarian synagogues, and a detailed data base of what happened to individual buildings.

    There are also thousands of photos of gravestones from all over Hungary. If you can read Hebrew you can check the information about the gravestones on the Museum’s database and find out more about your family history. With details being added to the data ba

    se all the time, you can also contribute your own information and perhaps track down lost relatives.

    Other Activities

    Apart from increasing its collection of memorabilia and helping researchers, the Museum has recently finished the restoration of the Aron Kodesh (Holy Ark) from a synagogue in Tokaj (Tokai) in Eastern Hungary, which is on display.

    There is an annual conference in Safed, held during Chol Moed Sukkot (the intermediate days of the Sukkot holiday), which gives an opportunity for the older members of the Hungarian community in Israel to get together as well as for the younger generati

    on to learn more about their heritage.

    State Visit

    One very important visitor, the President of Hungary, specifically asked to see the Museum when he made his State Visit to Israel in March 2008. He was very impressed by the Museum and encouraged the staff to continue in their efforts to preserve the history of Jewish Hungary for future generations.

    Thousands of visitors come every year to learn more about Hungarian Jewry, and even if you aren’t personally connected to the community, the museum gives a moving insight into a lost world.

    Tours

    Personal and group tours available in Hebrew, Hungarian and English.

    Groups are asked to book in advance.

    Opening Hours

    The museum is open Sunday to Friday between 9.00am and 1.00pm.

    Cost for individuals is 15nis

    Tel no 04 692 5881 fax 04 692 3880

    Email museum@hjm.org.il

    www.hjm.org.il

  • Unlock Safed’s History at the Hameiri House

    If you are planning to travel to Safed, one of the locations that you will definitely want to visit is the Hameiri House. This

    Beit Hameiri

    historical museum takes you through the history of the community of Safed over the past 200 years and gives a great overview of the struggle

    s, accomplishments and founders of Safed.

    The Hameiri House

    The Hameiri House was founded by Yehezkel Hameiri who lived from 1934-1989 and was a fifth generation native of Safed. He spent thirty years restoring the building where the museum is housed and he worked to create a museum that would tell the story of this important city as part of Israel’s history.

    Beit Hameiri’s Set Up

    The museum tells a different story about Safed life on each floor. The rooms at street level are said to be more than 400 years old. There is a 16th century mikveh next to the living quarters which used rainwater, as is traditionally necessary for a mikveh. On this level there is also a synagogue that served the Persian community and that was originally built by Hameiri’s family. It is partially restored and serves to commemorate its founders.

    The Main Features

    There are two large vaulted halls at the heart of the museum. They are 150 years old and were part of Safed’s rabbinical court. This location actually was home to hundreds of orphaned children during the First World War. Today, this area has paintings that tell the story of some of the more recent generations of Safed and of the elders of Safed who made up its history.

    Higher Levels

    The top levels of the museum show more of the images from the Safed elders, and also contain utensils, implements and craftsmen’s tools. During the restoration of the building, a top level was found, leading to what used to be a schoolyard. Over 100 years ago, this was a school for Jewish children during the Baron Rothschild’s days. During World War I, the school closed because of both hunger and disease. Later, some local families lived in this space, and the balcony that overlooks much of Safed became a strategic outpost overlooking the Arab quarter. The fighters in the War of Independence in 1948 used this important balcony as a military base.

    Other Features in the Museum

    The museum helps visitors to truly understand what life was like in Safed throughout the last two centuries. There is a room called the Reconstructed Room which shows what a typical Safed home would have looked like at the turn of the century. There is a section called the Religious Life of Safed that features ritual objects used by many generations of Safed families. Finally, there is a section that pays tribute to the heroes of Safed and is called the Heroic Safed. This features documents and items from the struggle for Safed’s survival up until Safed’s liberation in 1948. The actual room that houses these artifacts was used as a forward position during the War of Independence. The windows there were sealed and firing slots were cut into the walls to defend the fighters against the Arab invasion.

    The museum is certainly an important piece of Safed history. The building helps visitors to explore Safed’s rich history, and the items in the building are also significant and interesting. It is a crucial piece of Safed history and one that should be explored by visitors who come to this historic city.

     

  • Beit Hameiri

    Beit Hameiri (Hameiri House) is a historical museum documenting the life of the Jewish community of Safed ove

    Beit Hameiri (The Hameiri House)r the past 200 years. Its founder, Yehezkel Hameiri (1934 – 1989), a fifth generation native of this town, spent thirty years restoring the ruined building he knew from his childhood. The museum tells the story of Safed and sheds light on an important chapter in the history of Eretz Israel.

    On each of the museum’s floors and levels, a different aspect of the community’s daily life is presented to the visitor. According to the elders of Safed, the rooms at street level are more than 400 years old. Next to the living quarters is a small 16th century mikveh (ritual bath) which used rainwater collected in winter. Its vaulted ceiling was covered by earth over the years and a giant fig tree struck roots in its walls. The mikveh is not open to the public.

    Across the courtyard is a synagogue that served the Persian community, originally built by the Hameiri family. It was damaged and abandoned many years ago, but is now partially restored, commemorating its founders.

    Above the ground level, which has survived almost in its entirety, is a garden that was planted on the ruins of rooms which collapsed in the earthquakes of 1759 and 1837.

    At the heart of the main museum building are two large vaulted halls. These are 150 years old and served as part of Safed’s r

    abbinical court until the turn of the century. During the First World War, hundreds of orphaned children were housed here. Safed experienced terrible hardships in that troubled period – two thirds of its population were decimated in a typhus epidemic. Today in these halls you will find a display of paintings telling the story of recent generations of Safed’s colorful elders. There’re images, documents and utensils illustrating the hardy nature of this unique community.

    Access to the next floor of the museum is through a passageway with more images of Safed’s old-timers, and then via the low vaulted rooms which served as the cellars of the house on the top floor. These contain a collection of utensils, implements and craftsmen’s tools. The final flight of stairs, discovered during the restoration work, leads to what used to be a schoolyard. More than 100 years ago, Jewish children studied here, in what was Safed’s first Hebrew school, set up in the days of Baron Rothschild. The terrace opens to a view of Mt

    . Meron. Below the museum building you can see the flat roof of the Sephardi Ari synagogue, the ancient cemetery with its blue tombs, and the Ari mikveh. To the south is the old Arab quarter, from which murderous mobs came storming into the Jewish quarter in the 1929 and 1936 uprisings.

    The school closed down during WW 1, due to the hunger and disease. Its classrooms later served as living quarters for various local families, and in 1936 the balcony became a strategic outpost overlooking the Arab quarter. This outpost was used again by the defend

    ers of Safed in the 1948 War of Independence. The rooms on this floor contain displays of different aspects of daily life in Safed traditions, struggles and faith.

    The Reconstructed Room shows a typical Safed home of the Turn of the Century. What strikes the viewer is the simplicity and meager means of its inhabitants. What also comes across is their joy of life and close-knit family structure.

    In the Religious Life of Safed, the visitor will find a collection of ritual objects used by many generations of Safed’s Jews. Their deeply rooted devoutness finds expression here in the inscribed stones, illuminated manuscripts, candlesticks and many other i

    tems on display.0

    Heroic Safed is an exhibition of documents and items from the long and sometimes seemingly hopeless struggle for survival of the Jewish Quarter, up to the liberation of Safed in May 1948. The room itself served as a forward position in the War of Independence – its windows were sealed and firing slots were cut into the walls in the defenders’ stand against the Arab onslaught.

    The room in memory of the museum’s founder documents his many achievements. All the newspaper articles, books and research papers he wrote are kept here.

    Opening hours: Sunday – Thursday 8:30 – 14:30, Friday and holiday eves 8:30 – 13:30.

    Beit Hameiri, 158 Keren Hayesod Street, Tsfat, 1320212.

    Tel. 04-6971307, 04-6921939. Fax. 04-6921902

    From a museum guide brochure

  • Museums In Safed

    Museums In Safed

    Safed MuseumsNo trip to any city would be complete without at least one or two museum visits. A Safed trip should be no different. Take a break from strolling down the back alleys of the Old City and enjoy some of the historical museums Safed has to offer.

     

    Beit Hameiri-Hameiri House

    The Hameiri House is a historical museum that documents Jewish life in Safed from the last two hundred years. Each floor of the museum represents a different activity in the life of Jewish community of Safed and daily life activities and family dwellings have been recreated to allow visitors an authentic glimpse into the past. The museum is housed among archeological ruins and these historic sites can be viewed from within the museum. Check out our article on this must see site and find out more about this wonderful little museum.

     

    And More

    Also worth stops are the Hungarian Museum, documenting the history of Hungarian Jewry, and the Frenel Museum

    .  Read on to find out more.