Zefat (Safed), is located
in the mountains of the Upper Galilee in the North of Israel, 900 meters
(2952 ft), above sea level. Zefat commands magnificent views: the Golan Heights in the east,
Mt. Hermon and Lebanon in the north, Mt. Meron in the west and Tiberias & the
Kinneret (sea of Galilee) in the south.
Zefat is one of the 4 holy
cities, together with Jerusalem, Hebron and Tiberias. Zefat was founded in 70 C.E. and is referred to as Tzefiya in the
Talmud. Yossef Ben Mattityahu (Josephus
Flavius) who was commander of the North of Israel during the revolt
against the Romans, fortified Zefat before he became a turncoat.
The crusaders turned it into an
administrative center, building one of the largest Frankish castles in the
Middle East. It was besieged by Saladin in 1188.
When Sultan Beibars finally took it in 1266, he
decapitated the men and sold the women and children into slavery. As the
Crusader cities along the coast fell to the Mamelukes, many Jews moved to
Zefat. The town prospered and was the capital of a province and a lively
commercial centre. Zefat took in many Jews following their expulsion from
Spain in 1492. During the 16th century it positively shone with learning.
The rabbis and the sages were all attracted by the proximity of the tomb of
Rabbi Shimon Bar-Yochai at Meron. He was the author of the "Zohar'' (
Book of Splendor), which was the basic book of the Kabbalists. It is a
mystical commentary on the Five Books of Moses and proceeds from the premise
that every letter, word and line in the scriptures is significant,
containing a higher mystical meaning and offering the key to life.
Famous Rabbis lived in Zefat. The great
Kabbalist, Rabbi Yitzhak Luria, (Ha'Ari)
(1534-1572) whose Lurianic Kabbala was influential in the development of
modern Hassidic movement; Yoseph Caro (1536-1575), who wrote the "Shulhan Arukh" (Code
of Jewish Law); Rabbi Chaim Vital (1543-1620) who was Ha'Ari's main disciple
and recorded his teachings in the book Etz Chaim (tree of Life); Rabbi
Shlomo Al-Kabetz (1508-1593), Author of the famous liturgical poem "Lecha
Dodi", sung by Jews worldwide to welcome the Shabbat; Rabbi Moshe Al-Sheich
(1508-1593), Kabbalist, student of Yosef Caro and member of his Beit Din;
Rabbi Moshe Kordovero (1522-1570) known by the acronym of his name, Ramak, considered the head of the Zefat Kabbalists until his death shortly after
the arrival of Rabbi Yitzchak Luria. Author of Pardes Rimonim ("Orchard of
Pomegranates"); Israel Najara (1555-1628) whose poems have become part of
the Sephardi synagogue ritual.
In 1563 the first Hebrew printing press in Eretz
Yisrael was established in Zefat. Its books were in much demand word wide.
A breakdown in law and order along the Galilee
highways, together with a plague in 1742 and an earthquake in 1759, account
for Zefat's decline. However, the Jewish population increased somewhat with
the arrival of some Russian Hassidim in 1776. Napoleon's troops were
garrisoned at Zefat to secure the highway to Damascus. The Crusader castle
was completely destroyed in the earthquake that shook the town in 1837, and
many of the loosened stones were used in building houses in the city
including the house built by
Rabbi
Yona Podhorzer.
From the middle of the 19th century to the
middle of the 20th century, the Pedhatzur and
Silberman families became prominent in city affairs.
Rabbi Refael
(Raful)
Silberman (Raful)
was appointed Chief Rabbi of the City (1859). His sons
and grandsons became very active in the discovery of burial places of sages
in the North of Israel.
His daughter
Rochama married
Elazar Yacov
Podhorzer who
was very active in city affairs. He purchased the
land in Mt. Meron and established a Yeshiva there. Their
son,
Moshe
Pedhatzur assumed the leadership of the Jewish community in Zefat
during the late 1920s and in 1948 became the first mayor of
the city. (That year upon the establishment of the state of Israel, Moshe
and his descendants Hebraicized their name from Podhorzer to
Pedhatzur). His first cousin, Rabbi
Avraham Leib
Silberman became the chief
rabbi of Zefat when Raful Silberman died.
Rabbi Avraham Leib Silberman died few months
before Zefat was liberated. His son-in-law, Rabbi Kaplan, succeeded him as
Chief Rabbi of Zefat.
During the Arab pogroms of 1929 and 1936 and
also during the war of independence in 1948, the British tried to evacuate the
Jewish population for "security" reasons but Moshe Pedhatzur who was the head of the Jewish
Community refused, thus ensuring that Zefat remained a Jewish stronghold in
the Galilee and was later included in the map of the young state.
When the British left Zefat in 1948, they gave
the Arabs all the key strategic positions in the city and around it on Mt.
Canaan. The Jews were poorly armed and had one small canon called Davidka.
When it was fired, it made more noise than damage, but following that the
Arabs fled the city in great panic. It was later discovered that they were
told the Jews had an Atomic bomb. It would be easy to recognize when the
Jews would use it, How? It
would make a huge sound and after that it will rain heavily, This is exactly
what happened when the
Davidka was fired...
Zefat became an Israeli city. Moshe Pedhatzur was its first mayor.
One of his major achievements in the new city was to build the Artist's
colony.