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Amir, Israel

Amir
Flickr - Government Press Office (GPO) - Kibbutz Amir.jpg
Amir is located in Israel
Amir
Amir
Coordinates: 33°10′42.24″N 35°37′14.88″E / 33.1784000°N 35.6208000°E / 33.1784000; 35.6208000Coordinates: 33°10′42.24″N 35°37′14.88″E / 33.1784000°N 35.6208000°E / 33.1784000; 35.6208000
Council Upper Galilee
Affiliation Kibbutz Movement
Founded 29 October 1939
Founded by Lithuanian and Polish immigrants
Population (2015) 542

Amir (Hebrew: עָמִיר‎, lit. Sheaf) is a kibbutz in northern Israel. Located in the Finger of the Galilee near Kiryat Shmona, it falls under the jurisdiction of Upper Galilee Regional Council. In 2015 it had a population of 542. The kibbutz is on the eastern bank of the Jordan River in the Hula Valley, and has views of snow-topped Mount Hermon to the northeast, and the Ramat Naftali to the west.

Kibbutz Amir was established on 29 October 1939 on land purchased by the Jewish National Fund from the Arab village of Khiyam al-Walid. It was the last of the settlements, and the only one to be established during World War II. Its founders were immigrants from Lithuania and Poland, later joined by German and Yugoslav settlers. Initially they suffered from outbreaks of malaria, but managed to establish an intensively cultivated farm. According to a 1949 report from the Jewish National Fund, a clinic was opened at Amir for the treatment of malaria and eye diseases by a professor from Hebrew University. Until the beginning of the 1948 Arab-Israeli war treatment there for neighboring Arab villagers was free.

A photo in the June 1940 edition of Life Magazine shows a kibbutz member plowing the heavy soil with a primitive plow pulled by two water buffalo. Due to its location, the kibbutz was affected by floods every winter, and in 1942 was moved to its present location on land bought from another Arab village, al-Dawwara.

A disposable diaper factory, Tafnukim, owned by the kibbutz was privatized in 2003. On July 15, 2006, a missile fired from Lebanon hit Kibbutz Amir, setting fire to the factory, which is located about 400 meters from the kibbutz residences. The attack was on Saturday when the factory was closed. Four days later, a missile hit a cow shed, killing two dozen dairy cows.


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