Alphabetical           State by State
 Finance Send this page to a friend!  
 Home
 Finance
 Advice
 Banking
 Bankruptcy
 Bonds
 Chats and Forums
 Conventions and Conferences
 Corporate Profiles and Reports
 Currency
 Earnings Calendars
 Exchanges
 Financial Services
 Financing
 Futures and Options
 Hard Assets
 Information Media
 Initial Public Offerings
 Insurance
 Investing
 Investment Models
 Investment Picks
 Motley Fool
 MSN MoneyCentral
 News and Media
 Organizations
 Reference and Guides
 Retirement Planning
 Small-Cap Investing
 Socially Responsible Investing
 Technical Analysis
 Usenet
 Venture Capital
 Web Directories
Copyright © 1998-01 OpenHere
Company Information
Suggest a Site
FAQ
VirtualDesk
Login:

Password:
Israel's Oldest Kibbutz Votes to Privatize  
Tuesday, May 6, 2008 5:08 PM

Israelis are marking their 60th anniversary May 8th with parades, conferences and visits by leaders from around the world.  For...


Israelis are marking their 60th anniversary May 8th with parades, conferences and visits by leaders from around the world.  For much of Israel's history the Kibbutz movement defined the country's ideals - self reliance and socialism - but now that is changing, as VOA's Jim Teeple found out when he visited Israel's oldest and most famous Kubbutz;  Degania, founded in 1910 on the shores of the Sea of Galilee. 

These diary workers, unlike those who came before, now receive a salary, just like workers in any other business
These diary workers, unlike those who came before, now receive a salary, just like workers in any other business
The Degania dairy is one of Israel's biggest and oldest.  Cows have been milked here since 1910 when the Degania Kibbutz was established by Zionist pioneers from Russia, who believed they were building a socialist utopia. 

But these dairy workers, unlike those who came before, now receive a salary just like workers in any other business.

Degania is no longer a socialist enterprise,  but is run like a big business. 

The Kibbutz has a thriving industrial diamond business and it also grows and sells millions of dollars of agricultural products.

Recently, the 320 members of the Kibbutz met here and voted to stop putting all their wages into a collective account and start receiving individual salaries based on ability -- salaries they could spend as they wanted. The move made headlines in Israel; Degania - Israel's oldest socialist Kibbutz - had gone capitalist.

Shay Shoshani
Shay Shoshani
Shay Shoshani runs the multi-million dollar operation.   Shoshani, who has lived at Degania for nearly 30 years, says the reforms were necessary.

"I can say to you that many people say to us today after we make the reform that now they feel more commitment and more "kibbutznik" than in the past.  You know in the world things and ideas change and we decided here not to stay stuck in the past," Shoshani said.

Degania members now pay for services such as electricity and water - and also a new tax to support the elderly and those less well-off.  The changes would have shocked Degania's early pioneers - a mix of socialists, anarchists and communists who believed strongly in a collectivist ideology.  

Most members backed the changes.  The few who do not, like this woman, refuse to talk on camera about them. 

Yonah Shapiro
Yonah Shapiro
Others are like Yona Shapiro, whose parents were one of the founders of Degania. Shapiro says at first she was unsure about the reforms, but now has adapted to them, "It is different.  I can't say it is what it was before.  But it also did not change so much for me because in my life I live as I lived before.  The fact that I go to work puts me in touch with younger people.  I don't have to work but I do and I talk to them so I cannot say that I feel any different in this way."

Allen Shapiro, Yonah's husband moved to Degania in 1955 from the United States.  He says he too was reluctant to embrace the changes, but now believes they were a good idea, "There
Allen Shapiro
Allen Shapiro
were many members who were underemployed - perhaps taking advantage or at least relying on the general kibbutz rule of to each according to his needs and from each according to his abilities. People do earn more if they work more and we have a number of members who are working more than before the change and this is reflected in the economic situation of the kibbutz." 

Degania occupies a special place in Israel's history.  This Syrian tank was captured by Degania's members in Israel's war of Independence in 1948.    

This tree is known as the "tree of the country" - and it is where newly conscripted Israeli Army recruits swear their loyalty to Israel.

Now Degania is writing a new chapter in Israel's history - re-inventing itself for the 21st century. 

Finance
Get Stock Quote: Enter Symbol(s)

Symbol Lookup
My Portfolio
Our Privacy Vow 
  • Financial Home

  • Iran Says Rise in Production Will Not Affect Record Oil Prices

  • US Treasury Secretary Says Credit Markets Slowly Returning to Normal

  • Saudi Arabia Says It Has Already Increased Oil Production to Meet Demand

  • EU-Latam-Caribbean Summit Opens in Peru

  • Oil Prices Soar to New Record High Above $127 a Barrel

  • Bush in Saudi Arabia for Nuclear Deal  

  • Bush to Hold Talks With Saudi King on Oil Prices

  • High Gasoline Prices Cause Hardship in US  

  • UN Scales Down Global Growth Forecast

  • Zimbabwean Central Bank Issues Z$500 Million Note Worth About US$2  

  • Huge Congo-China Mining Deal Questioned  

  • US Imposes Sanctions on Subsidiaries of Belarusian State-Run Oil Firm

  • French Bank to Sell Billions in Assets to Deal With Subprime Losses

  • British Leader Promises to Steer Country Through Tough Economic Times  

  • Indonesia Will Raise Fuel Prices Despite Protests

  • African Countries Move to Bio-Farming to Alleviate Food Shortages  

  • New Report Says US Inflation Pressures Appear to be Easing  

  • US Commerce Secretary Encourages Chinese Investment

  • Zimbabweans Government Waives Customs Duties On Food, Other Key Goods  

  • US Senate Panel Considers Response to Global Food Crisis

  • Study Links Everyday Chemicals to Obesity  

  • High Crop Prices Squeezing US Farmland Conservation Program  

  • In Burkina Faso, One Hotel's Fight Against Sex Tourism  

  • Some Businesses Find Silver Lining in Weak US Economy  

  • African Foreigners in Equatorial Guinea Find Business, Problems  

  • South Korea Delays US Beef Imports Amid Public Protests  

  • French Parliament Blocks Bill to Allow Genetically Modified Crops

  • All-Electric Car by Nissan to Go on Sale in 2010

  • Gas Prices Soar, Americans Buy Smaller Cars  

  • Growing Indian Economy Sparks Housing Boom