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Carmel Newsreel II-207, July 28, 1956

Coffee Plantations in Israel

1 Minute, 1956
Genre:
Moment

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Directed by: Nathan Axelrod
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When all is said and done, the clip before you is ultimately a trivial, inconsequential footnote in the history of Israeli food and drink; that being said, one can’t help but be in awe of the diehard zealots who will devote their entire lives to making their dreams come true. Dr. Israel Gindel was one such zealot who had envisioned dense coffee plantations covering the length and breadth of the land. As professed in the foreword to his 1959 book, Coffee Growing in Israel, his utopian Zionist vision was mocked and ridiculed by his colleagues and peers, both locally and internationally. But the devoted Polish-born (1908) scientist’s spirit – who studied at Warsaw’s Institute of Forestry Sciences – did not waver. In the early 1950s, Gindel started a trial plantation where he grew and cultivated a range of coffee varieties, hoping to get the plant to adapt to the local climate. At the same time, he also appealed to local farmers to pilot and plant experimental coffee lots in their fields. Gindel may have been successful in adapting a number of coffee varieties whose seeds were brough over from Brazil, Yemen, Indonesia, and other traditional coffee-growing countries – in fact, the first trees even yielded some rather impressive initial crops – however, it was in the transition to commercial growing that it all came crashing down. Whilst a tropical plant can be adapted to survive and thrive in subtropical conditions, in the country’s earliest years, finding a steady enough source of irrigation and manual labour ultimately proved too great a challenge. Interestingly, in recent years when quality coffee has become such a staple of Israeli consumption culture and the emphasis on local production that much greater, others are now trying to follow in the footsteps of the man who believed that “under the local climate conditions, the beverage [coffee] is hugely important, especially during the warm summer months when workers find themselves insanely tired and sometimes, depressed even. These feelings do lift, however marginally or considerably, after one has had a bit of the ‘brown elixir’ which some have dubbed, ‘brown gold.’”

Coffee plantations in Israel. Farmers work in a nursery for coffee plants, the seedlings are transferred for planting in plantations and in private homes. Plantation of two-year-old coffee seedlings, the seedlings are protected from wind and hail by awnings. A man and a woman handling a plantation of three-year-old coffee trees. The trees reached the flowering stage. A woman picks the coffee beans from a tree. Hand Scoops coffee beans from a large jar.

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