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Tel
Aviv is Israel's commercial and financial center. Headquartered there are most industrial and agricultural organizations, the stock exchange, major newspapers, periodicals and publishing houses.
Tel Aviv, the first all-Jewish city in modern times, was founded in 1909 as a suburb of Jaffa, one of the oldest urban settlements in the world. In 1934 Tel Aviv was granted municipal status, and in 1950 it was merged with Yafo, the new municipality absorbing the older town. The area around the ancient port of Yafo (Jaffa) has been developed into an artists' colony and tourist center, with galleries, restaurants and night clubs.
| Tel Aviv is
the first all-Jewish city in modern times. Originally named
Ahuzat Bayit, it was founded by 60 families in 1909 as a Jewish
neighborhood near Jaffa. In 1910, the name was changed to Tel
Aviv, meaning "hill of spring." The name was taken
from Ezekiel 3:15, "...and I came to the exiles at Tel Aviv".
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Today,
Tel Aviv is Israel's second largest city (after Jerusalem), with a
population of 360,000, and among the big city problems it shares is
traffic congestion. Things are more spread out in Tel Aviv than the
smaller cities, but it's still often easier and faster to travel by
foot. The
Shalom Tower Constructed
in 1957, the building's observation deck — 433 feet high, the tallest building in the middle east, is in Tel-Aviv.
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Jaffa
is an ancient port city - Tel Aviv grew up around it. Jaffa
has been a fortified port city overlooking the Mediterranean Sea
for more than 4,000 years. |
| It
is one of the world's most ancient towns. It has been the target
of conquerors throughout the ages because of its strategic
locations between Asia, Africa and Europe. |
Tel
Aviv is the transportation center of Israel and the main hub for bus and
rail stations. |