Hatzerim
Hatzerim (Hebrew: חֲצֵרִים, lit. 'courtyards' or 'enclosures') is a kibbutz in southern Israel, located in the arid northern Negev desert approximately 8 kilometers west of Beersheba.[1][2] Founded on 6 October 1946 by a group comprising members of the Israel Boy and Girl Scouts Federation and "Children of Tehran" refugees from Iran, it served as a strategic outpost during the pre-state era and later as a command post in the 1948 War of Independence.[1][2] The community, with around 1,000 residents including over 480 members, has evolved from subsistence agriculture in saline soils to a diversified economy emphasizing high-tech solutions for water-scarce environments.[1] Hatzerim gained international prominence through its agricultural innovations, most notably the commercialization of drip irrigation via Netafim, established in 1965 in collaboration with engineer Simcha Blass, who had conceptualized the technology decades earlier based on observations of water conservation from a leaking pipe.[3] Manufacturing commenced in 1966, transforming arid farming by delivering precise water and nutrients directly to plant roots, thereby boosting crop yields and efficiency in water use across 110 countries today.[3] The kibbutz also pioneered jojoba cultivation and oil production since 1990, alongside maintaining a dairy farm with 300 cows and other ventures like afforestation efforts to combat desertification.[1][2] These developments underscore Hatzerim's role in advancing sustainable agriculture in challenging desert conditions, contributing to Israel's broader technological edge in precision farming.[3] The kibbutz lies adjacent to Hatzerim Airbase, a key Israeli Air Force facility operational since 1966, which houses training squadrons and the Israeli Air Force Museum showcasing over 150 aircraft from the force's history.[2] While primarily a civilian collective upholding principles of mutual responsibility and education, Hatzerim's proximity to military infrastructure highlights its strategic position in the Negev region.[1]