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Abu Kishk

Arab villages depopulated during the 1948 Arab–Israeli WarDistrict of JaffaPages with non-numeric formatnum arguments
PikiWiki Israel 68926 the bedouin abu kishek
PikiWiki Israel 68926 the bedouin abu kishek

Abu Kishk (Arabic: أبو كشك) was a Palestinian village in the Jaffa Subdistrict located 12 km northeast of Jaffa, situated 2 km northwest of the Yarkon River. The village was depopulated during the 1947–1948 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine on 30 March 1948 by the Irgun. In 1945 the population of the village was about 1,900, about 300 of them lived in the area of the future Herzliya.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Abu Kishk (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 32.136388888889 ° E 34.865277777778 °
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Address


4724226 , Taas Hasharon
Center District, Israel
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PikiWiki Israel 68926 the bedouin abu kishek
PikiWiki Israel 68926 the bedouin abu kishek
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Nearby Places

Israel Tennis Centers
Israel Tennis Centers

Israel Tennis Centers ("ITC"; Hebrew: המרכז לטניס בישראל) is the largest social service agency for children in Israel, serving more than a half million children and their families since its first center opened in Ramat Hasharon in 1976. With 16 centers across Israel, primarily in underprivileged communities, the not-for-profit Centers use tennis to promote the social, physical, and psychological well being of their students (through other programs such as their Life Skills program). Another of its goals is the development of coaches (such as Oded Yaakov), and building and maintaining courts and facilities at the highest levels.The ITC is the physical home of the Israel Children's Centers, Israel's largest social service agency for children. The Israel Children's Centers serve 10,000 children every week through a variety of programs that address development and social needs, including coexistence programs for Arab and Jewish children and customized programs for a variety of disabilities.The ITC has to date produced the following top-30 players: Andy Ram (career-high doubles ranking of No. 5); Yoni Erlich (doubles ranking of No. 5); Shahar Pe'er (doubles ranking of No. 14 and singles ranking of No. 11); Anna Smashnova (singles ranking of No. 15); Amos Mansdorf (singles ranking of No. 18); Shlomo Glickstein (singles ranking of No. 22 in 1982; No. 28 in doubles); Dudi Sela (singles ranking of No. 30 in 2009), and Harel Levy (singles ranking of No. 30 in 2001).