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   » » Wiki: Mekor Baruch
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Mekor Baruch (, lit., "blessed source"Wirth-Nesher, Hana. " Impartial Maps: Reading and writing cities" in Handbook of Urban Studies, Ronan Paddison, ed. (2001). Sage Publications, Ltd., p. 62. or "fountain of blessing"

(2025). 9780865348059, Sunstone Press. .
) also spelled Makor Baruch, is a neighborhood in . The neighborhood is bordered by Malkhei Yisrael Street to the north, Sarei Yisrael Street to the west, to the south, and the neighborhood to the east.


History
Mekor Baruch was founded in 1924
(1998). 9780873068796, Guardian Press.
on land purchased from the Schneller OrphanageChinkis, Binyamin. "A Peek Behind the Gates of the Schneller Compound". Israel News, 2 July 2009, pp. A22–A23. by the Jerusalem-American Land Company, a consortium of Jerusalem and American investors. The name of the neighborhood was based on the words Yehi mekorkha baruch ("Let your fountain be blessed") in Proverbs 5:18. Differing sources place the beneficiary of the name as Boris (Baruch) Hershenov, one of the investors, or Baruch Aharanoff, an American philanthropist.
(1994). 9789652291233, International Forum for a United Jerusalem. .
The consortium mapped out 207 lots, but due to the economic downturn of 1927–1930, construction did not get underway until the 1930s, by which time the consortium had been liquidated.
(2025). 9780814328422, Wayne State University Press. .

To the southeast lay an adjacent neighborhood called Ruchama,

(1999). 9789659004867, Ingeborg Rennet Center for Jerusalem Studies. .
founded in 1921 and named after Hosea 2:3. This neighborhood was absorbed into Mekor Baruch after 1948.


Geography
Mekor Baruch is located above . The area lies at the head of the , a -long that winds down Jaffa Road to Independence Park and until it intersects with the .
(2025). 9789652292544, Gefen Books. .

The main street of the neighborhood is Street. In the northwest quadrant, a group of streets are named after heroes of the story, , , and ; these streets intersect HaHashmonaim (The Hasmoneans) Street.

(2025). 9781932687545, Devora Publishing Co.


Demographics
Before 1948, Mekor Baruch was considered upscale and was home to Eastern European Labor Party members and survivors. In a 1938 census, the population was recorded at 2,500. After the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, large numbers of moved into the area
(2000). 9780520220928, University of California Press. .
and the buildings became rundown. In the 1960s, Jews began to move into the neighborhood. Today the neighborhood is Haredi, with a mix of and residents.

In a 2010 real estate report, Mekor Baruch logged a 26 percent increase in home prices, the largest increase in the city, with sales of three-room apartments averaging US $384,000 (NIS 1.5 million). The increase was said to be influenced by the influx of "social centers" to the neighborhood.


Health care
The neighborhood houses clinics for three out of the four Israeli health maintenance organizations: Clalit, Meuhedet, and Leumit. The Clalit clinic is part of the Mekor Baruch Health Clinic, a three-story medical center that includes an emergency room and operating theaters. The Meuhedet clinic on Haturim Street occupies one of Meuhedet's main offices in Jerusalem.


Industrial zone
Mekor Baruch is the site of an aging yet active industrial zone bordered by Yehuda Hamaccabee Street, Rashi Street, and Gesher Hachaim Street. Built in the 1950s by the Jerusalem Economic Corporation, the multi-story complex is home to about 40 companies engaged in , including manufacturers of ,
(1973). 9780465018062, Basic Books. .
pencils, and Judaica, the MA’AS Rehabilitation Center and Sheltered Workshop, and printing establishments, including the daily newspaper.


Education

Yeshivas
  • Hashalom Yeshiva
  • Hazon Yeshaya Institutions - Yeshiva and
  • Ohr Shmuel Yeshiva
  • Rinat HaTorah Yeshiva
  • Sfas Emes Yeshiva, founded in 1925, with an adjacent ohel containing the graves of the Imrei Emes and Pnei Menachem
  • Shaar Hashamayim Yeshiva, a yeshiva founded in 1906 and currently headed by Rabbi Gamliel Rabinowitz
  • Yakirei Yisrael Yeshiva
  • Ruzhin Yeshiva, combined with the main synagogue of chassidut Boyan.
  • Ateret Shlomo Yeshiva
  • Yeshivat haMekubalim and the Beit El Synagogue on Rashi Street


Schools
  • Seminary
  • Mesoras Rachel Seminary
  • Talmud Torah Hamesorah, formerly the Tachkemoni School founded here in 1929


Landmarks
  • IDF Jerusalem Recruiting Center
  • Prima Palace Hotel (formerly Central Hotel)
  • Hazon Yeshaya Humanitarian Network - food support, dental care, vocational training, now managed by Carmei Ha’Ir.
  • Miklat l’Omanut art studio and gallery


Notable residents
  • Solomon Eliezer Alfandari, former Chief Rabbi of . The street on which he lived his last years is named after him
  • Nachum Dov Brayer, the Boyaner
  • Friedland and Hecht, To Rule Jerusalem, p. 42.


Cultural references
Much of the action in 's novel takes place in Mekor Baruch.
(1990). 9780893565206, Salem Press. .
Wirth-Nesher, Impartial Maps, pp. 61–62.


External links

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