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Bat Yam

Bat Yam

FieldValue
nameBat Yam
native_name{{Script/Hebrewבת ים}}
settlement_typeCity
image_skylineCity Park Bat Yam 05.jpg
image_captionView of Bat Yam
image_flagFlag of Bat Yam.svg
image_blank_emblemCoat of arms of Bat-Yam.svg
blank_emblem_typeCoat of arms
pushpin_mapIsrael center ta#Israel
mapframeyes
mapframe-zoom12
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type2District
subdivision_name2Tel Aviv District
established_titleFounded
established_date1926
government_typeMayor–council
governing_bodyMunicipality of Bat Yam
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameTzvika Brot (Likud)
unit_prefdunam
area_total_dunam
population_footnotes
population_total
population_as_of
population_density_km2auto
demographics_type1Ethnicity
demographics1_footnotes
demographics1_title1Jews and others
demographics1_info199.1%
demographics1_title2Arabs
demographics1_info20.9%
timezone1IST
utc_offset1+2
timezone1_DSTIDT
utc_offset1_DST+3
blank_name_sec1Name meaning
blank_info_sec1Daughter of the sea
websitebat-yam.muni.il
elevation_m37

| mapframe-zoom = 12 Bat Yam ( ) is a city in the Tel Aviv District of Israel, on the Central Coastal Plain just south of Tel Aviv. It is part of the Gush Dan metropolitan area. In , it had a population of .

History

|1948|2300 |1955|16000 |1961|31700 |1972|100100 |1983|128700 |1995|138500 |2008|130300 |2010|130400 |2011|128200 |2022|128465

British Mandate

Bat Yam, originally Bayit VeGan ("House and Garden"), was founded in 1919 by the Bayit VeGan homeowners association, affiliated with the Mizrachi movement. The association was formed to establish a religious garden suburb in Jaffa. By March 1920, it had 400 members. In 1921, 1,500 dunam of land were purchased, of which 1,400 were formally registered by 1923. In September 1924, an urban blueprint was approved by the association. In early 1926, the plots were divided up and a lottery was held to determine who would build first. By October 1926, roads and water supply were complete. Six families settled on the land in cabins. According to a 1927 report, ten houses were under construction. A synagogue was dedicated in October 1928. By then there were 13 families living in Bat Yam and a total of 20 houses.

In the wake of the 1929 Arab riots, the residents were evacuated by the British army and their homes turned into barracks. The soldiers left at the end of 1931. In 1932, the residents began to return and were joined by others. In November 1933, 85 families were living in the neighborhood. By early 1936, there were 300 homes and a population of 1400. Local industry began to develop, a movie theatre opened, and a hotel was established. The first school, named after Tachkemoni, was founded in 1936. The first headmaster was Haim Baruch Friedman.

In December 1936, Bayit VeGan was declared a local council. It encompassed 3,500 dunams, 370 dunams of which were Arab-owned. In December 1937, the name was formally changed to Bat Yam (literally "daughter of the sea"). By 1945, 2,000 Jews were living in Bat Yam. In 1936–1939, the town was cut off from Tel Aviv because the road ran through Jaffa, leading to the construction of a new road via Holon. According to the Jewish National Fund, the population had risen to 4,000 by 1947.

Following the vote in favor of the United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine on November 29, 1947, and the fighting that accompanied the civil war in British Mandate, violent incidents, including sniping, were reported by the residents of Bat Yam.

State of Israel

After the independence of Israel in 1948, Bat Yam grew dramatically due to mass immigration. It gained city status in 1958.

Aftermath of Iranian strikes during the [[Iran–Israel war

On June 15, 2025, an Iranian missile strike devastated a residential area in Bat Yam, killing at least nine people, including two children aged 8 and 10, injuring nearly 200, and leaving several still missing beneath the rubble.

Demographics

A small Hasidic enclave of Bobover Hasidim, known as Kiryat Bobov, was established in 1958.

The vast majority of Israelis of Vietnamese origin live in Bat Yam.

Since the wave of immigration of Jews from the former Soviet Union began in the 1970s, many Russian speakers settled in Bat Yam and continue to live there.

Health

The Yehuda Abarbanel Mental Health Center is a psychiatric hospital founded in 1944 by the British Mandate authorities. Since the establishment of the state, it had been administered by the Israeli Ministry of Health. The hospital, named for Judah Abravanel, a Portuguese rabbi, Jewish philosopher and physician in the Middle Ages, provides hospitalization and ambulatory services to residents of Tel Aviv, Jaffa, Holon and Bat Yam coping with mental illness.

Education

In 2008, the Weitzman-Albert Education Initiative headed by Jane Gershon, wife of fashion shoe designer Stuart Weitzman invested over $2 million in Bat Yam's Harel Elementary School, which received a top Education Ministry award for academic achievement and immigrant integration.

In 2017, the percentage of high school students eligible for a bagrut matriculation certificate reached 86.3%, compared to the 68.2% national average. The number of high school students doing a five-point exam in mathematics is also on the rise thanks to a program inaugurated in 2015 in cooperation with the Donald J. Trump Foundation and Alliance Israélite Universelle to encourage excellence in math.

Main neighborhoods

Ramat Yosef

Named after Yosef Sprinzak, and one of the oldest in Bat Yam, with most of its houses built in the fifties and sixties.

Shikun Amidar

A religious-traditional neighborhood. The Defenders' Square, the main commercial center of the neighborhood and the city, is in its northwest.

Kiryat Bobov

An ultra-orthodox-Chassidic neighborhood of the Bobover Hasidism, led by Rabbi Meizlish, brother-in-law of the Rebbe of Bobov. In the neighborhood there is a synagogue, a Talmud Torah, a small yeshiva, and a large yeshiva all in one building as well as Bat Yam's largest mikveh.

Orot HaTorah

Mainly home to Orot HaTorah Congregation, a religious Zionist community led by Rabbi David Chai HaCohen, among the neighborhood's institutions of the Orot HaTorah Congregation: the synagogue, the high yeshiva "Yishiva Nativot Yisrael", and Talmud Torah Orot HaTorah.

Chabad

Home to the Chabad community, which has five synagogues, a central Chabad house, a boys' kindergarten, a girls' kindergarten, Talmud Torah, a seminary for women and girls, and a Mikveh.

Main sites

HaMeginim (the Defenders') Square

HaMeginim Square

A monument in the memory of the defenders of the city who fell in battle. Located at the entrance to Bat Yam from Tel Aviv. In the War of Independence, there was a defense post in this place called "Hashdera" or "King George's Position" (the previous name of the Independence Boulevard).

Bat Yam Heritage Museum

The museum is located in the municipal library building. The museum has photographs, documents and various exhibits on the history of Bat Yam in the years 1926–1948, including a detailed description of the city's standing in the War of Independence.

HaSela (the Rock) Beach

Main article: Bat Yam Seafront

HaSela Beach

A popular beach, surrounded by a breakwater, suitable for all ages. The beach is very active and sports activities are held there in the early morning hours. In the summer season there are summer events such as street stalls, clowns and shows. The tiny island of Adam's Rock is located here.

Bat Yam City Hall

The Bat Yam City Hall was designed by the architects Zvi Hecker, Eldar Sharon and Alfred Neumann. When it was built between 1960 and 1963, the building stood alone in the heart of the dunes and was exposed to the coastline of Bat Yam. The building of reinforced concrete was designed in the form of an inverted ziggurat, in Brutalist architecture style. The design was chosen in a competition in 1959 which drew entries from the leading architectural firms in Israel.

Government

Bat Yam City Hall

In the early 2000s, after financial scandals under the leadership of Yehoshua Sagi, the city was on the brink of bankruptcy. In 2003, he was replaced by Shlomo Lahiani, founder of the Bat Yam Berosh Muram (Bat Yam Heads-Up) party. In 2008, he was re-elected with 86% of the vote. In 2014, Lahiani pleaded guilty to three counts of breach of public trust after being charged with bribery and income tax fraud. He was replaced by Yossi Bachar.

In 2014, after the Bat Yam municipality petitioned the Israeli Supreme Court, Interior Minister Gideon Saar appointed a steering committee to explore the possibility of incorporating the city as part of Tel Aviv-Yafo as a way of reviving its stagnant economy. Later that year, when Gideon Sa’ar was replaced by Gilad Erdan, a decision was reached to transfer funding to Bat Yam directly from the state budget. The plan for unification was postponed until the next municipal elections in 2023. In 2019, Bat Yam's current mayor, Tzvika Brot, said he opposed the union with Tel Aviv.

Council heads and mayors

[[Tzvika Brot
TypeNameYears
Head of councilBen-Zion Mintz1936–37
Head of council1937–39
Head of council1939–43
Head of council1943–50
Head of councilDavid Ben Ari1950–58
MayorDavid Ben Ari1958–63
MayorMenachem Rothschild1963–73
MayorYitzhak Walker1973–77
MayorDavid Mesika1977–78
Mayor1978–83
MayorEhud Kinamon1983–93
MayorYehoshua Sagi1993–2003
MayorShlomo Lahiani2003–14
MayorYossi Bachar2014–18
MayorTzvika Brot2018–date
Source: Bat Yam's mayors on the official city website

Urban development

A street in Bat Yam

In 2016, the municipality approved an urban renewal plan in the Ramat HaNasi neighborhood, adding 950 high-end apartments. According to Israel Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), residents of Bat Yam have the lowest income among the largest cities in Israel.

According to Bat Yam mayor Tzvika Brot, the city is looking for creative solutions to rebuild the city and preserve its economic independence. The city has six beaches and a 3.2 kilometer (2 mile) long promenade along the Mediterranean coast that connects to the Tel Aviv boardwalk.

According to a report in Ynet, Bat Yam has become a countrywide leader in urban renewal. Many of the city's older buildings are undergoing construction to strengthen their foundations, add floors and improve their appearance, and dozens of parks are being beautified and made accessible to visitors with disabilities.

Culture

A neighborhood in Bat Yam

In the heart of Bat Yam is a three-museum complex known as MoBY. The main building, David Ben-Ari Museum for Contemporary art was established in 1961. The Rybak House and the Sholem Asch Museum house MoBY's permanent collections and offer educational programs. The Bat Yam Heritage Museum is adjacent to the municipal library. The city has two shopping malls, Bat Yam Mall, which opened in 1993, and Bat Yamon Mall.

The Bat Yam amphitheatre, also built in the 1960s near the beach, is a venue for concerts and public events. The International Street Theater Festival, the largest open-space performance art celebration in Israel, is an annual summer event in Bat Yam.

A park in Bat Yam

The Ryback House showcases the work of Issachar Ber Ryback. The Yiddish writer Sholom Asch, who lived in Bat Yam in his later years, willed his home to the Bat Yam municipality, which turned it into museum.

In 2008 the Bat-Yam International Biennale of Landscape Urbanism, which is devoted to re-examining urban spaces through art and architecture, was held in Bat Yam. In 2010, the second Biennale, "Timing" took place, which featured site-specific installations from designers and architects from around the world.

The Center for Urbanism and Mediterranean Culture is a research institute devoted to the creation of a new discourse in Israeli urban space. The head of the center is veteran Haaretz correspondent Avirama Golan.

Beaches

Main article: Bat Yam Seafront

Marina Beach

The location of Bat Yam on the Mediterranean makes it popular with beach-goers. Bat Yam has a 3.2 km long promenade along the ocean lined with pubs and restaurants. The city has six beaches, one of which is protected by a breakwater.

Bat Yam's Al Gal beach is a popular surfing spot with fairly consistent surf conditions, especially during the summer months. Both Al Gal and Hagolshim are straight, exposed dune-backed beaches.

Trump Promenade

In September 2025, Bat Yam named a section of its lower seaside boardwalk the Trump Promenade (Hebrew: טיילת טראמפ, also referred to as טיילת הנשיא). A cornerstone-laying ceremony was held on 10 September 2025, attended by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee, and Bat Yam Mayor Tzvika Brot.

Municipal and local media report that the designation applies to the “lower promenade” between Nordau Street and Tayo Beach and followed approval by the city's naming committee and council.

Sports

[[Bat Yam Municipal Stadium

The city's major football (soccer) club, Beitar Tel Aviv Bat Yam, currently plays in Liga Leumit, the second level of Israeli football.

Archaeology

In September 2011, an iron anchor dating to the Byzantine period was discovered off the coast of Bat Yam. According to the Israel Antiquities Authority, it was likely that of a boat that sank in a storm about 1,700 years ago and may be proof of an unknown ancient harbor on the coast.

Transportation

Komemiyut railway station

Two railway stations opened in the city in 2011 as part of the new Tel Aviv–Rishon LeZion West line: Bat Yam–Yoseftal railway station and Bat Yam–Komemiyut railway station. Bat Yam is served by the Red Line of the Tel Aviv Light Rail since August 18, 2023, and is planned to be served by the Metro line M3. The city will be the terminus for both lines and the lines will meet at the new Yoseftal Station.

The city will be served by the Ayalon Route of the Ofnidan bike path network.{{cite web|url=https://batyam.mynet.co.il/local_news/article/m_399692 | title= הדרך לגוש דן פתוחה: פרויקט אופנידן יצא לדרך וייסלל גם בבת ים| trans-title= The road to Gush Dan is open: The Ofnidan project was launched and will also be paved in Bat Yam

Twin towns – sister cities

Bat Yam is twinned with:

  • TUR Edirne, Turkey
  • GER Aurich, Germany
  • RUS Kostroma, Russia
  • SRB Kragujevac, Serbia
  • POL Kutno, Poland
  • ITA Livorno, Italy
  • GER Neukölln, Germany
  • CHL Valparaíso, Chile
  • FRA Villeurbanne, France
  • UKR Vinnytsia, Ukraine
  • USA Manhattan, United States

Notable people

[[Eli Cohen
[[Miri Ben-Ari
  • Shay Abutbul (born 1983), soccer player
  • Michael Barkai (1935–1999), Commander of the Israeli Navy
  • Miri Ben-Ari (born 1978), hip hop violinist
  • Noa (born 1969), singer, songwriter and Israeli Eurovision Song Contest 2009 entrant
  • Moshe Biton (born 1982), soccer player
  • Vered Buskila (born 1983), Olympic sailor
  • Tomer Chencinski (born 1984), Israeli–Canadian soccer player
  • Eli Cohen (1924–1965), Israeli spy
  • Meir Dagan (1945–2016), Director of the Mossad
  • David D'Or (born 1965), singer, songwriter and Israeli Eurovision Song Contest 2004 entrant.
  • Elana Eden (born 1940), actress
  • Sharon Farber (born 1965), composer
  • Haim Gozali (born 1973), mixed martial arts fighter
  • Matt Haimovitz (born 1970), cellist
  • Henryk Hechtkopf (1910–2004), illustrator
  • Rita Katz (born 1963), terrorism analyst and co-founder of the SITE Intelligence Group
  • Gili Landau (born 1958), footballer and manager
  • Sergey Richter (born 1989), Olympic sport shooter
  • Peter Roth (born 1974), singer, songwriter, guitarist and member of Monica Sex
  • Gal Shish (born 1989), soccer player
  • Itzik Zohar (born 1970), soccer player

References

References

  1. "Statistical Abstract of Israel 2012 – No. 63 Subject 2 – Table No. 15". .cbs.gov.il.
  2. https://www.cbs.gov.il/he/publications/doclib/2024/local_authorities22_1957/%D7%91%D7%AA%20%D7%99%D7%9D.pdf {{Bare URL PDF. (June 2025)
  3. (January 2013). "Territorial stigma formation in the Israeli city of Bat Yam, 1950-1953". Journal of Historical Geography.
  4. "Rabbi Dr. Haim Baruch Friedman, 1900-1985".
  5. W. D. Battershill. (1937). "Notice (23rd December 1937)". The Palestine Gazette.
  6. Government of Palestine, ''Village Statistics, 1945'', p52.
  7. Jewish National Fund. (1949). "Jewish Villages in Israel". Hamadpis Liphshitz Press.
  8. "Cleansing Jaffa: A detailed eye witness account, 202". Palestineremembered.com.
  9. "Britannica.com: Bat Yam".
  10. (June 15, 2025). "9 dead, including 3 children, in Iranian missile strike on Bat Yam apartment building".
  11. "OU mourns the passing of the Bobover rebbe".
  12. "In a Strange Land: Israel's Vietnamese Community – CULTURE". Worldandihomeschool.com.
  13. "About Abarbanel".
  14. [https://www.jpost.com/israel/ny-fashionista-adopts-bat-yam-school NY fashionista adopts Bat Yam school] {{Webarchive. link. (2021-05-29 , [[Jerusalem Post]])
  15. "Excellence in education".
  16. "בחזרה אל בנייניו של האדריכל המרתק והנשכח אלפרד ניומן". הארץ.
  17. "Zvi Hecker".
  18. [https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/culture/1.5282897 Bat Yam's Diamond in the Rough], [[Haaretz]]
  19. "שלומי לחיאני, ה"שריף" של בת-ים, זכה ב-86% מהקולות בבחירות". הארץ.
  20. (2014-05-09). "Bat Yam mayor plea bargain a good deal for all". [[Haaretz]].
  21. (28 January 2015). "The changing face of Bat Yam".
  22. (25 March 2019). "MK Maklev visits Bat Yam, meeting with mayor and party activists".
  23. [https://en.globes.co.il/en/article-bat-yam-urban-renewal-plan-approved-1001146712 Bat Yam urban renewal plan approved] {{Webarchive. link. (2021-05-29 , ''[[Globes (newspaper)). Globes]]''
  24. מנע, מיה. (2018-12-31). "הלמ"ס: תושבי בת ים בעלי ההכנסה הנמוכה ביותר ביחס לערים הגדולות בארץ".
  25. [https://en.globes.co.il/en/article-govt-reviews-plans-for-bat-yam-artificial-island-1001270280 Government reviews plans for Bat Yam artificial island] {{Webarchive. link. (2019-02-03 , ''[[Globes (newspaper)). Globes]]''
  26. (17 February 2015). "Bat Yam – Israel's New Riviera".
  27. (23 July 2020). "בת ים מובילה בהתחדשות עירונית". Ynet.
  28. Museums of Bat Yam
  29. "About MoBY".
  30. (25 July 2017). "Midnight East: International Street Theater Festival".
  31. "MoBY: Museums of Bat Yam".
  32. (October 20, 2010). "International Biennale of Landscape Urbanism". Metropolis Magazine.
  33. (October 19, 2010). "Innovation by the Sea". Forward.
  34. (17 November 2014). "Urban Center, Bat-Yam". Basch Interactive.
  35. (October 16, 2013). "Bat Yam | Surf Israel".
  36. (January 2025). "Stormrider Guide to surfing Israel}}{{Dead link".
  37. (2025-09-10). "Netanyahu praises Trump at ceremony for boardwalk named after US leader".
  38. (2025-09-11). "Netanyahu honors Trump at Bat Yam promenade ceremony".
  39. (2025-09-10). "PM Netanyahu participates in the cornerstone-laying ceremony for the President Trump promenade in Bat Yam".
  40. (2025-09-21). "טיילת הנשיא: בת-ים הניחה אבן פינה לטיילת חדשה על שם נשיא ארה״ב דונלד טראמפ".
  41. (2025-09-11). "שם חדש לטיילת בת ים: טיילת טראמפ".
  42. Press, Viva Sarah. (September 27, 2011). "Byzantine treasure found off Israeli coast".
  43. Adams, Bailey. (23 May 2014). "Bat Yam: The New Israeli Riviera".
  44. (2023-08-18). "'We waited a long time for this': Tel Aviv light rail sets off after years of delays". The Times of Israel.
  45. Azoulay, Yuval. (14 May 2010). "Unending agony for legendary spy Eli Cohen and his widow". [[Haaretz]].
  46. "מאיר דגן".
  47. Agassi, Tirzah. (March 25, 1994). "Going for Baroque Not!". The Jerusalem Post.
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