My parents met as teens in Montreal after immigrating to Canada from Eastern Europe with their families. Attracted to the Labor Zionist ideologies that were common at that time they went to Palestine and joined a kibbutz in the Jordan Valley in 1932.

The kibbutz that my parents joined was a temporary kibbutz called Gesher (not to be confused with the current kibbutz of the same name). Today its name is Ashdot Yaakov. The kibbutz, founded in 1924, mainly by Latvian Jews, was on land owned by an organization founded by one of the Rothschilds to assist Jewish settlement in Palestine. It was located close to the point where the Yarmuk River, the Jordan River’s largest tributary, meets the Jordan, a location referred to in Hebrew as Naharayim (two rivers). This was the focal point of the Rutenberg hydroelectric project and some of the men of the kibbutz, including, for a time, my father, found employment there during its construction.

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