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Kiryat Itri


Kiryat Itri (Hebrew: קריית איתרי‎‎) is a Haredi neighborhood in Jerusalem, Israel. It is located on the northern edge of the mountain plateau on which central Jerusalem lies.

The neighborhood was established in the late 1960s by Rabbi Mordechai Elefant in cooperation with the Jewish Agency for Israel to encourage American Jewish immigration to Israel. The small neighborhood is usually associated with the larger, adjoining neighborhoods of Kiryat Mattersdorf to the west or Unsdorf to the northeast.

Kiryat Itri was established in 1967 by the Israel Torah Research Institute (ITRI) of New York City under the leadership of Rabbi Mordechai Elefant, institute dean. Elefant established Yeshivas Itri in the southeast of the city the following year. The housing development was undertaken in cooperation with the Jewish Agency for Israel to encourage American Jewish immigration to Israel. Construction costs exceeded 30 million Israeli liras (USD$7.5 million, or $53,900,000 in current dollar terms).

The neighborhood was planned along the northern edge of the mountain plateau on which central Jerusalem lies, adjacent to the newly built neighborhood of Kiryat Mattersdorf. Its viability was threatened before construction even began when, in the spring of 1967, it was found that the site abutted a rock quarry to the south in Romema, which bombarded the area with dust and noise from explosions. Elefant and the owners of the quarry appeared before a district planning committee to discuss the relocation of the quarry.

Kiryat Itri was planned for 250 families. Three high-rise apartment buildings were erected on the south side of the street and five low-rise apartment buildings on the north side. The flats were small by American standards. A supermarket and postal agency occupy the ground floor of 14 Sorotzkin, the westernmost building. The main street, Rechov Sorotzkin, is named after Rabbi Zalman Sorotzkin.


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