One correction -- they were saying, Oh, this is free and that is free, you get it from the kibbutz. .... No, it isn't free. In reality, it is "included" if you work and contribute. The kibbutz is not meant to be a welfare community of handouts. It just means that if you get sick, and miss a few days of work, you don't have to worry about being evicted. It cushions you but you definitely have to contribute.
I think the video conveyed it pretty well already. The Kibbutz people are indeed hard-working people, and they live the ideal life most of us would like to have!
Nothing is free in this world. Someone paid for it if just indirectly. This would never work on massive like in America, who donates billions to Israel by the way.
Yes, but I have to wonder how any of this would exist without foreign aid. It probably would not. Therefore, it may just be Israel's fantasy. Don't get me wrong, I am all for Israel. The only gem in the Middle East (for decades).
This is what socialist/far-left should be doing in the USA instead of trying to turn the central government into one giant commune. It would be better, since the social programs would be more localized/efficient and all members can play an active role, rather than some far off bureaucrat trying to make some sort of one-size-fits-all solution. Social programs at the federal level are incredibly inefficient and prone to corruption.
I prefer a free market on a societal level on the basis of competition, innovation, and freedom from big governments, but I fully condone kibbutzism. Small pockets of Socialism that were created by people who are consensually involved that exist without hurting anybody don't sound like a bad idea as long as such a model isn't forced on others.
@@mv1y3eb2qs4 I don't really know much about it other than what's being covered on the news/Internet. It seems kind of forced from what I've seen, but I'm not really sure, since I haven't seen it with my own eyes and it's difficult to understand the situation through distorted lenses. If that AZ is to last, they'll probably need to figure out some sort of legal framework similar to how American Indian tribes establish reservations with the federal government. Legalese is way above my head, but maybe the Kibbutz model should be closely looked at, in how it was legally integrated into Israeli law.
I lived on Kibbutz Ramat Yochanan from 1977-78 I was a volunteer and then studied in the ulpan/language work-study program. It was a life-changing experience. I have friends on the kibbutz..43 years of friendship that I have been fortunate to keep in my life all these years. I left the kibbutz for city life, but Ramat Yochanan was my home base while living in Israel. I still visit every trip to Israel. I loved kibbutz life and the people that I know there.
I had so many life experiences on various kibbutzim that I couldn't have had elsewhere !! .Like you , I moved to the city ( a community near a couple of cities in central Israel ) , but I still carry those memories with me !!
the correct implementation of the kibbutz system in 3rd world countries would revolutionize the world! Greetings from a former kibbutz volunteer from Brazil!
@@rienavoir8250 more like communism, actually. With socialism, you still have private ownership except for means of production and have to pay for services like utilities, transportation, food, medicines, entertainment etc. True, it's not as expensive as in a capitalist system because the socialist economy is not profit oriented but many things are not free. In these kibbutz communities (if the video is true) it looks like you own nothing except clothes you were and don't pay for anything other than the contribution you make through your work. Money basically are meaningless unless you go outside the community. I grew up in USSR and that's exactly what we were told about communism at school, how our society would work in future if we manage to "build" communism. The only difference is the scale and absence of the larger state structure (communism is supposed have a stateless society of these kibbutz-like communities).
kibbutz isn't a singularity , it's part of a unified collective organisation .Some kibbutzim are financially better off than others , so the " better off " kibbutzim share their wealth with the " not so financially well off " kibbutzim , so that all may survive
It feels like bottom-up socialism / communism, but in order that it works, the whole village needs to work hard to provide. That means it has to be a small and tight community that people trust each other. It works in a small nation-state like Israel, but I doubt if it would work in America or other western countries where people are more individualistic and want more for themselves.
@@chaselee86 when population is huge, there is too many people have different value of life, it don't work. It's work ONLY small group of people totally share the same value. Also, it have to be volunteer, if anyone is not happy, should be freely to leave anytime. I think it's good idea to me, because I experience life is not easy, if a community can provide me everything, I don't need to own anything. No pressure of how to pay bill, no stress. That's why they let the young people to go out, until 30 years old, then decide what they want. If anyone experience outside world, and happy won't return. Anyone find struggling would be happy to return to less stressful life.
That didn't hurt. But the Israelis did all the grunt work themselves. Possibly America felt guilty about refusing the first wave of Jews trying to escape Hitler and sending them back to their deaths. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MS_St._Louis@@bonita392
@@bonita392 america only invest in israel about militans stuff, israel is a friend of america that have the same enemies that israel had and surrounded by, so israel for the americans are the ones who keep control of the middle east who is strong and a good allay of the usa
What a beautiful way to live , that is what you call a community , not suited for all types of people so i can understand why they would be very carefull in their selection of choosing who they would accept in living in their communities , I did not know that this type of lifestyle even existed , how envious i am..... i wish you all a happy and peaceful life .
@@priscillavelazquezs It is impossible to put civilised people amongst barbarians , i understand the response Israel has taken . Unfortunately you can not change the mentality of the Arab Nations or mindset which they want the rest of the world to live in , maybe if they loved their childrens & their future more than they hate their enemies will things change . Hoping for peace and love for all Israelies & their enemies .
We work to make money but that's a ridiculous end goal. The end goal of any financial gain is to get to this kind of life. No? What is the motivation to work any job, including a high salary job, when money is meaningless since the community has got you and your family covered? THE JOB! Like it should be.
@@lawrencefrost9063 What end goal? My question in other words: You can live in a community and not work extra hard as a high level executive. These jobs require a lot of personal sacrifice, in time and stress. Some people choose to do them in exchange for higher living standards. But if it all goes to the Kibbutz, then why are people choosing to sacrifice more of their time, compared to a normal job?
I would imagine a similar climate to Cyprus. Been to Cyprus a few times and it's pleasantly warm even in November. 5000 shekels = £1068 or $1323. At 6 shekels a meal that's just £1.28 or $1.59. No rent, no council tax. Electric? I would imagine no heating req. at any time but air con not sure about. These days I imagine a lot of the electricity requirement is satisfied by solar panels. This vid has got me seriously interested.
I'm watching this just over a week after Hamas attacked a Kibbutz in Israel. I don't know which Kibbutz this is but I wonder if the people in the video are OK!
Don't worry. They're fine. Also, lately they've been able to help families, that needed to evacuate from their homes and also to make a decent contribution to the areas that have been brutally damaged. So good for them!
This beautiful homeland is Palestine, and these beautiful houses were built on the blood of the Palestinians who were killed by Israel and expelled from their homes (these lands belong to the Palestinians and they still have the civil legal documents for their homes and lands), then they built this town and decorated it so that the Israelis who came from all over the world could enjoy it. the truth will not die, and one day the truth will emerge in spite of the evil people
@@chahrazed6143Palestine? You mean Egypt. Gaza was part of Egypt until the 6 day war. Ottoman Empire never called it Palestine and Quran never mentioned it either. Jews have lived in these lands before Arabs, Islam and Romans came around.
@@chahrazed6143Squeal louder. Your lies are unending as is the Arab propensity for starting wars against Jews. Jews bought their own land and formed kibbutz and other communities. They stole nothing. The Arabs have been killing Jews since even before 1919 when the Ottomans were defeated and every war in Israel has been started by Arabs. Moreover, Arab invaders have no place in Israel.
I am an Indian(hindu) and i personally find Jews best amongst all Abrahamic religions. Coz. 1. *they dont try to convert others* 2. *they practice their religion peacefully* 3. *they are very hard working* 4. *just like us* .. "live and let live attitude". 5. *people with high IQ*
Rajan A Thevar I like Israeli jews, but not international jews who don’t keep to themselves and manipulate other societies. Ethnostates are the answer - then everyone can live happily and work hard for their own people in their own land.
@@yelsavidaravskaja905 what a load of absolute rubbish. For every jew with an opinion there are 100 000 peoples with same opinion who are not jews. Since when is it sooooo easy to manupulate humanity in any area ? - stupid person you
Lol, it's not. Daniel Gavron wrote a book about his experience raised in one and the current struggles they face. While entirely sympathetic to what these communities attempt to provide, the incentive problem as well as the unavoidable economic calculation problem has dwindled these communities to a handful. And the ones currently surviving do so because they provide marketable goods to the outside world that churn out profits.
@@راديو76 The right & religious took over because they became the majority, that's called democracy. 90% of the new immigrants in the 1950's were orthodox right-wingers, but the Israeli communists used forced secularization to try & control them for political & ideological benefit. That's NOT democracy. Finally, in 1977, the right-wing arose & defeated the left-wing. The left-wing is still trying to rule the country through the Supreme Court, the leftist media & the police, yet they are STILL losing power every day.
This sounds actually nice especially consideringthe way society is going in the west especially the Nordics where individual living is very normal and loneliness amongst the youth is a growing problem.
As a quick guide, a shekel is about the same as a US quarter, so they're making $1200 a month but most everything taken care of, and most of it better than 90% of us have it in the US. Especially health care.
An excellent piece - have just seen it now. I delighted so many kibbutzim still exist. I'm not Jewish, but in 1983, I spent 3 months on Kibbutz Magen as a volunteer. It was one of the best experiences of my life. At the time, I was encouraged to think about joining and for many years thereafter I regretted my decision to leave. I still admire the philosophy of shared contribution and shared reward - a far more preferable way of life than the shallow, greedy, accumulative, corrupt societies we find ourselves part of today. Such a pity that the model hasn't taken off in other parts of the world in building meaningful communities.
was a kibbutz volunteer back in 2010 at Kibbutz Lahav. I share the exact same words you did. Fantastic personal experience and the kibbutz itself is also a great social experiment too! Greetings from Brazil!
This kind of community can only exist only if everyone knows everyone and there is a high trust society where people feel obligated to pull their own weight. Otherwise - this is just impractical. Nice concept tho.
That's why I say it will only work in small communities of like minded people and NOT as a larger and only system in a country. The people in the Kibbutz are there by choice and can leave that system anytime they want. Not so if it's the system of an entire country.
It was a great experience!! was there for 6 months back in 2005! been in two different kibbutz!love from INDIA! also not all kibbutz are the same they varies in different layouts and productions(factories) and also amenities and food!
Doesn't seem to be self sustaining. They said much of the money they need comes from wealthy members who have executive jobs on the outside and give their salaries to the Kibbutz. There are other problems as well like can I earn enough money to be a boat owner?
If they were not self-sustaining, how could there be any kibbutzim? Yes, some members do work outside the kibbutz, but the kibbutzim are very successful at running agricultural and industrial businesses.
@@jackpine4347 collectives like theses are propped up and supported by the government(tax payers). This is due to the governments has incentive to push people to become settlers to empty lands near west bank and Gaza(kinda risky way to hold on to lands).
There are assembles in which all members need to vote, it goes after the majority, once as the Labour party was in power they subsidized the Kibbuzim, since the right parties are in power that does not exsist ay more, many Kibbuzim managed to build industries inside the Kibbuz and are self authnom other are in debt versus the banks,
I came here because of the news reports of, Kibbutz homes being attacked by Hamas parasites. Ive heard of the word but did not know what it meant. Found out is was a home. What a lovely way to live. I'm so sorry for what the people of Isreal are going through. I hope you all are able to repair the Kibbutz communities you were peacefully living in. My heart to you all. Glory be to Isreal 🙌🙏🙏 Sudbury, Ontario, Canada
@@amorenew Don't think so? We've already hosted piles of garbage from your area. Unless of course you have a dung heap suitable enough for your needs? Could look around if ya wanna? Maybe learn to spell Canada before you come? May be useful down the road? Never know.. "HEY?" 💋
Well, taxation isn't a requirement for socialism, but it's the only way with how lazy socialists are 😂 There are 2 ways to generate value in the world. 1. Time 2. Money If socialists are lazy and don't want to give their time, they go after your money. The kibbutz everyone works from young so the time fuels the economy. Socialism doesn't work not because it can't work, it doesn't work because humans screw it up.
I have a stupid question about eating in a kibbutz. What is you don't feel like eating in a noisy cafeteria like setting ... do they have any smaller rooms there where a person could maybe only sit with a few people and it's much more quiet ? What if you really just want to take the food home and eat your meal and your little apartment or house ? Are you allowed to put it in containers and go eat it at home ?
@@gardensofthegods a lot of the communal living associated with kibbutz has been ditched over the years by many , but not all kibbutzim .The dining room used to be the centre of the kibbutz in so many ways ( I could go on and on , but I won't ) , but to answer your question , on some kibbutzim , some members do bring food containers to the dining room , then trot off home to eat , it all depends where one works , meal breaks are not infinite , and if you're working in the fields far from your home , you will have to manage your time carefully .
Kibbutz has government support too. The government has incentive for people to move to land near Gaza and West Bank to legitimize the government claims of those lands.
Are there armed Kibbutz's or are they unarmed? I like guns. I am a expert marksman with every kind of gun. A champion. Are there nightclubs? Are there different kinds of Kibbutz's? Is there Steak night? Is there Chinese food? Can I have a Xmas tree and Christmas? Please advise.
To answer your questions in the order you asked them: (1)Kibbutz members can own guns, if the need is justified and they are licensed to own firearms. (2)Some kibbutzim may have their own nightclubs for their members. (3)There are different kinds of kibbutzim in terms of the nature of their economies. Some are agricultural, some industrial, some a mix. (4)The kibbutz kitchens produce whatever food is favored by the members. (5)Most kibbutzim are secular, so you could put up a Xmas tree celebrate Xmas, erect a totem pole, or do whatever else you want, as long as you adhere to the rules and regulations of the kibbutz.
As a secular Protestant (non practicing) here in the Midwest (metro Cincinnati) I am impressed with how well the Kibbutz concept works for those who opt for the lifestyle & life associated with its social constructs. I don't think I could give up my suburban (Bourgeois) life as this is what I have known all my (almost) 59 years of life. But for those who want a more communal sense of life with similarly shared experiences, this is a really cool concept! Thanks for sharing with us. It was interesting and informative!
The reason it works is the people want to be there. Socialism on a country scale doesn’t work because some people don’t want to contribute or are too lazy too
Visit Kibbutz Ein Dor, near the city of Afula (Northern Israel). I lived there in 1989 and I can safely say it was the BEST time of my life. Just don't go in the summer, go in December up to March.
Can anyone from Israel tell me about the state welfare for disabled citizens? Like, does welfare pay for housing and living costs..or are there disabled homeless living on the streets...
its well worth being a volunteer. In this world where there is so much selfishness and greed some time spent living together will really make you question how the rest of the world lives...certainly other western countries/societys.
Great video!!!! Actually I live in a kibbutz-like community here in Spain. People who never lived so can't understand it. But it's great to live your God-given life not only thinking about yourSELF , but for the others too. And when the people who live there think about each other and care about each other the life is much much easier!!!! Shalom al kol am Israel!!!
I am looking for à place liké this since 30 years ..bur all that I found was communities who fonctionned with practized sectarism. Just living and work together- impossible for those
Why wouldn't anyone not want to live in this environment....it sounds perfect. It is also a brilliant idea for the people and poverty in our townships here in South Africa.
yes, it would be, but most people do not qualify, because the amount of rules are huge. not going to work is not an option unless you are genuinely ill. not everybody can do the job they want to. etc etc
the ANC government is too corrupt ( and racist ) to have such a smart idea like this come to fruition in the RSA , ESPECIALLY if it originated from Israel ( and YES I did visit a couple of townships when I visited the RSA )
This only works if everyone takes accountability and works hard. Sadly South Africans have made it a habbit to blame the government and white people for all their problems, so it's probably not going to work there.
OK please elaborate how everyone makes the same money. If someone is an executive or a surgeon and someone else farms the land...I understand how the one who farms the land lives there for free with a specific salary...but for the executive or the surgeon how is their salary the same if they work outside the kibbutz? Do they give their salary to the kibbutz and the Kibbutz gives some back (an amount is given back that is the same the one who farms the land earns)?
hipretty, you can work outside the kibutz in any profession, as a surgen for example, however still all your salary will go directly to the kibutz. it doesnt matter if you make a million dollars a month. you will still get no more than those 5,000 shekels.
@@erlich85 That's not entirely true, the amount of monthly funds you get from the Kibutz depends on the Kibutz and the method they use, in some of them indeed your entire salary will go to the Kibutz and you will get the same funds like any other member, but in others your monthly funds will depend on a calculation based on the income you give to the Kibutz, the number of children you have or some other calculation that will reflect your contribution to the Kibutz.
how does this work, when you own a property or a manufacturing plate/facility and it is making a ton of money...do the owners only 5000 a month like everyone else.
@@mes382 step 2: import a lot of people from Thailand (and some Africans) to do the heavy labor on the farms for you, paying them less than the minimum wage. and then act like you are all so hard working, building it all on your own. there is always a catch when someone tell you about a seemingly perfect community like that. always someone who is exploited.
The only reason this works is because it is Highly Discriminatory, in that they can choose who they allow and who they don’t, and also it is mutually chosen, i.e., the people choose to be there and the the people there choose who they let in. Also, the cultural homogeneity of the people is key. You can’t have something like this where a few people believe they are doing everything as to the glory of god, and the other people are doing, just good enough. Socialism as a government / complete economic system will never work because it is forced on everyone, and the majority of people will choose to be freeloaders, while the rest of the people will work to support the majority.
It works because they are careful to have people who actually want to work and contribute to both the kibbutz and the country. Kibbutzim are successful precisely because they have a motivated membership who want to cooperate for the greater good. Kibbutzim were founded by secular Jews for the most part, though there are some religious kibbutzim. This is not about discrimination. Would you call hiring the best person for a job in a company discriminatory, because they are ones most likely to not only personally succeed, but contribute to the success of the company?
It could be an example to a World fast going down the hole. It isn't Paradise and can even be a sort of Hell to some but altogether it has a lot to offer especially in a very difficult and expensive Country like Israel is. There is a saying that it is Paradise for kids and old people with the between time years more of a challenge. I just heard that a group of Israelis are establishing a Kibbutz in Portugal where vacant land is available and relatively cheap.
Would love to know where that is in Portugal. I lived in a Kibbutz back in the 90ies. Life changing exp. I think the model would be great for old people in most countries...Weird that other countries didn't try this model more.
I watched it today, and realized that Hamas has destroyed the same community. If I had a chance, would like to spend around 2-3months in Kibbutz and learn how this utopian sysytem works.
Gideon01 maybe they’ll worked already and saved up lots of money. Or maybe they make money online and what if they don’t want to share all there money.
There's very little in common. Kibbutzim have been around since 1909. They live a collective life. They are all in Israel proper, and not on disputed land. Kibbutzniks are left-wing and overwhelmingly secular. Settlements are situated on disputed land that was captured in 1967. They are not run as collectives. The inhabitants are mostly right-wing, many religious. They are quite at odds with each other.
Do I have to be Jewish to become a member of a Kibbutz ? Or do I have to marry a kibbutz member as the video suggests ? I'm non religious and have both UK and Irish nationality.
Exactly. Moral of the story: When EVERY house requires a safe room, and there are bomb shelters everywhere else - you should NOT be living there to begin with!
@@jackpine4347 Solid point! But regardless of which geographic region - it typically goes back to how/why a category of humans settled/inhabited that land to begin with. That's where things get tricky...
@@wendylpa lmao, yeah we should've kept them in the countries that had the holocaust and kept them as subhuman citizens. Why would the UN make such a decision. The state of Israel started in 1948... what could have possibly preceded such decision in Europe. 🤔
Have to say... this seems like "life perfection"... I'm a Swede (not jewish) and seems like 80's Swedish (mix between market/state economy)... In some cases it this seem a lot more state/(kibbutz) then market but in other it seems more market... Sweden changed from a lot of state own utility (tax funded) to a more free market funded utilities and maybe today it works, sort of... but it I think we pay more and get less, and it is not as safe/secure as I wanted to be... somethings should be for its citizens (tax funded) and not free market and somethings should be free market stuff... there is always a perfect balance.. I don't think Sweden has it yet... This Kibbutz seems to have a nice balance...
That very attractive hostess with a great personality is Natasha Kirtchuk --- who is also an ILTV News anchor. She's smart, witty, pretty and an engaging speaker. I read somewhere that she is an alumna of Duke University.
I wish Finland, Karelia and Estonia became a single united ethnostate and started kibbutzim. I would LOVE to live a more traditional lifestyle, farming and producing for my people and writing in my free time.
Sounds like the communal Mennonites and the sharing farm Amish. Not unusual my family lives this way in PA Dutch country with most circling around the church. My family is Jewish and socialist but I went to a Mennonite school. The Mennonites are basically Religious Socialist. If your Mennonite your family has to give you a Job so no worries. The church pays for everything so no worries.
@@memenadekhanh3992 The wealthy have social capitalism. The federal reserve Is the bank they call when in trouble. More welfare goes to the top 10 percent then the bottom 90 percent. Working together as a group, as a tribe, as a family keeps power centered within the group. Think mafia, church, police unions, Ford, Vanderbilt, etc. A union is socialism and the police union or teacher union gives those in career protection. The Mennonites where I live are the power, and the protection. People join groups for protection. Social Security is Socialism. America has been a socialist nation since the 1930s and is certainly not democratic. American companies always get bail outs and tax credits. America is a Socialist Republic ruled by a connected ruling family organization with different rules for them. Mennonites are a mirror image of the ruling class as the Kibbutz is. If you get American Social Security you practice Socialism. Tax credits, tax breaks, bail outs for broken companies are all Socialist activities. Reasons enough.
One correction -- they were saying, Oh, this is free and that is free, you get it from the kibbutz. .... No, it isn't free. In reality, it is "included" if you work and contribute. The kibbutz is not meant to be a welfare community of handouts. It just means that if you get sick, and miss a few days of work, you don't have to worry about being evicted. It cushions you but you definitely have to contribute.
This is quiet better than the usual hostile ambition at work
I think the video conveyed it pretty well already. The Kibbutz people are indeed hard-working people, and they live the ideal life most of us would like to have!
I appreciate your distinction.
Nothing is free in this world. Someone paid for it if just indirectly. This would never work on massive like in America, who donates billions to Israel by the way.
Yes, but I have to wonder how any of this would exist without foreign aid. It probably would not. Therefore, it may just be Israel's fantasy.
Don't get me wrong, I am all for Israel. The only gem in the Middle East (for decades).
I was on Kibbutz Maabarot for nearly one year in 1977. I often wonder if i should have stayed. I loved it.
I was there as well in 2001. Lovely place and excellent food.
So you partook in a Socialist Imperial colonialist project?
This is what socialist/far-left should be doing in the USA instead of trying to turn the central government into one giant commune. It would be better, since the social programs would be more localized/efficient and all members can play an active role, rather than some far off bureaucrat trying to make some sort of one-size-fits-all solution. Social programs at the federal level are incredibly inefficient and prone to corruption.
Precisely!!!
I prefer a free market on a societal level on the basis of competition, innovation, and freedom from big governments, but I fully condone kibbutzism. Small pockets of Socialism that were created by people who are consensually involved that exist without hurting anybody don't sound like a bad idea as long as such a model isn't forced on others.
How u enjoying Seattle now? :P
@@mv1y3eb2qs4 I don't really know much about it other than what's being covered on the news/Internet. It seems kind of forced from what I've seen, but I'm not really sure, since I haven't seen it with my own eyes and it's difficult to understand the situation through distorted lenses. If that AZ is to last, they'll probably need to figure out some sort of legal framework similar to how American Indian tribes establish reservations with the federal government. Legalese is way above my head, but maybe the Kibbutz model should be closely looked at, in how it was legally integrated into Israeli law.
They want to, but are always somehow fucked over by the authorities
I lived on Kibbutz Ramat Yochanan from 1977-78 I was a volunteer and then studied in the ulpan/language work-study program. It was a life-changing experience. I have friends on the kibbutz..43 years of friendship that I have been fortunate to keep in my life all these years. I left the kibbutz for city life, but Ramat Yochanan was my home base while living in Israel. I still visit every trip to Israel. I loved kibbutz life and the people that I know there.
I had so many life experiences on various kibbutzim that I couldn't have had elsewhere !! .Like you , I moved to the city ( a community near a couple of cities in central Israel ) , but I still carry those memories with me !!
@@dovidell hi David bro can I be your friend I m from India sorry I hv to change my name first 😂😂🤚
Me too, Kibbutz Degania Alef in 1978, life changing experience!
The kibbutz was some of my best times ever!
I'm seeing this for the first time!!
if I may ask, why would anyone leave that good free Kibbutz life for the outside world??
Thank you! I've been really interested in Kibbutz, this has helped a lot :)
I grew up in a Kibbutz. She forgot to mention the working hours.... 6 days a week 🤣
The modern version of Mississippian-era Cherokee towns. That's pretty nice. Our term for working together like this is gadugi
the correct implementation of the kibbutz system in 3rd world countries would revolutionize the world! Greetings from a former kibbutz volunteer from Brazil!
Yeah, like in the North Korea, right?
@@8313m go there and see how it works before share your "wisdom"
@@8313mNorth Koreans don’t practice kibbutz. No sense of community like these people.
Only if they chose to do it themselves. Not forced on them.
@@aspiretobe...4014 thanks for the sharp answer!
Pretty clever concept ❤
this is literally socialism!! what America is completely against, but except that here it actually works and isn't corrupt.
@@rienavoir8250 more like communism, actually.
With socialism, you still have private ownership except for means of production and have to pay for services like utilities, transportation, food, medicines, entertainment etc. True, it's not as expensive as in a capitalist system because the socialist economy is not profit oriented but many things are not free.
In these kibbutz communities (if the video is true) it looks like you own nothing except clothes you were and don't pay for anything other than the contribution you make through your work. Money basically are meaningless unless you go outside the community.
I grew up in USSR and that's exactly what we were told about communism at school, how our society would work in future if we manage to "build" communism. The only difference is the scale and absence of the larger state structure (communism is supposed have a stateless society of these kibbutz-like communities).
@@aumelb yup! Well I'm happy it works for them, not a bad concept at all
I am not Jewish, but I like the concept of kibbutz.
I'm not Jewish, but I'd love to be able to form a community like this for my family. ❤️
kibbutz isn't a singularity , it's part of a unified collective organisation .Some kibbutzim are financially better off than others , so the " better off " kibbutzim share their wealth with the " not so financially well off " kibbutzim , so that all may survive
It feels like bottom-up socialism / communism, but in order that it works, the whole village needs to work hard to provide. That means it has to be a small and tight community that people trust each other. It works in a small nation-state like Israel, but I doubt if it would work in America or other western countries where people are more individualistic and want more for themselves.
@@chaselee86 when population is huge, there is too many people have different value of life, it don't work. It's work ONLY small group of people totally share the same value. Also, it have to be volunteer, if anyone is not happy, should be freely to leave anytime. I think it's good idea to me, because I experience life is not easy, if a community can provide me everything, I don't need to own anything. No pressure of how to pay bill, no stress. That's why they let the young people to go out, until 30 years old, then decide what they want. If anyone experience outside world, and happy won't return. Anyone find struggling would be happy to return to less stressful life.
@@dovidelland all of that is funded by US taxpayers.
@@chaselee86it could work if done by private entities with legitimate goals of it working.
If then government tries implementing it, it'll fail 😂
I could live there. Could I? What's the catch?
We love you Israel. Rest in Peace to the lives lost.
It happened in here?
@@EIonMusk1 There is a small Town like in this video, all people in this town have been killed by Hamas. Also many of children.
@@EIonMusk1 Nah this kibbutz is next to Haifa not Gaza
So how do members contribute to the kibbutz's budget? Paying a fee? tax? How much?
goyim pays it all
I’m so sorry for what has happened there, here in 2023. May God be with you. America stands with you.🇺🇸🇳🇮
Americans stand with 🇮🇱 🇺🇸
palestine is musIim terror
Beautiful place may the Lord continue to bless and keep it safe ❤🙏🇮🇱
You are Hindu. Jews do not believe in your gods.
netanyahu sure ain't gonna keep it safe
I'm a massive fan of how the Israelis turned scrbland into a paradise. Israel is a beautiful country.
thanks to americas tax money.
That didn't hurt. But the Israelis did all the grunt work themselves. Possibly America felt guilty about refusing the first wave of Jews trying to escape Hitler and sending them back to their deaths. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MS_St._Louis@@bonita392
@@bonita392 america only invest in israel about militans stuff, israel is a friend of america that have the same enemies that israel had and surrounded by, so israel for the americans are the ones who keep control of the middle east who is strong and a good allay of the usa
Is they have Bowling in Kibbutz?
What a beautiful way to live , that is what you call a community , not suited for all types of people so i can understand why they would be very carefull in their selection of choosing who they would accept in living in their communities , I did not know that this type of lifestyle even existed , how envious i am..... i wish you all a happy and peaceful life .
Unfortunately this is exactly the neighborhoods Hamas attacked
@@priscillavelazquezs It is impossible to put civilised people amongst barbarians , i understand the response Israel has taken . Unfortunately you can not change the mentality of the Arab Nations or mindset which they want the rest of the world to live in , maybe if they loved their childrens & their future more than they hate their enemies will things change . Hoping for peace and love for all Israelies & their enemies .
@@tasspafitis848 I agree.
Why would major executives give up their high salaries to the Kibbutz, to subsidize the other members? What's their individual motivation?
We work to make money but that's a ridiculous end goal. The end goal of any financial gain is to get to this kind of life. No? What is the motivation to work any job, including a high salary job, when money is meaningless since the community has got you and your family covered? THE JOB! Like it should be.
@@lawrencefrost9063 What end goal?
My question in other words: You can live in a community and not work extra hard as a high level executive. These jobs require a lot of personal sacrifice, in time and stress. Some people choose to do them in exchange for higher living standards. But if it all goes to the Kibbutz, then why are people choosing to sacrifice more of their time, compared to a normal job?
Interesting but how is it funded. Nothing is ever “free”
The kibbutzim are self-sustaining using the proceeds of the businesses they run.
@@jackpine4347 thank you
I would imagine a similar climate to Cyprus. Been to Cyprus a few times and it's pleasantly warm even in November. 5000 shekels = £1068 or $1323. At 6 shekels a meal that's just £1.28 or $1.59. No rent, no council tax. Electric? I would imagine no heating req. at any time but air con not sure about. These days I imagine a lot of the electricity requirement is satisfied by solar panels.
This vid has got me seriously interested.
great video! im from this kibbuts and i can only say this is the best way to live!
Excellent documentary❤
I'm watching this just over a week after Hamas attacked a Kibbutz in Israel. I don't know which Kibbutz this is but I wonder if the people in the video are OK!
Don't worry. They're fine. Also, lately they've been able to help families, that needed to evacuate from their homes and also to make a decent contribution to the areas that have been brutally damaged. So good for them!
I'm watching this after the Hamas attack. I knew nothing about this.
It looks beautiful 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
Me too.... So much beauty destroyed. OMG
This beautiful homeland is Palestine, and these beautiful houses were built on the blood of the Palestinians who were killed by Israel and expelled from their homes (these lands belong to the Palestinians and they still have the civil legal documents for their homes and lands), then they built this town and decorated it so that the Israelis who came from all over the world could enjoy it.
the truth will not die, and one day the truth will emerge in spite of the evil people
@@chahrazed6143Palestine? You mean Egypt. Gaza was part of Egypt until the 6 day war. Ottoman Empire never called it Palestine and Quran never mentioned it either. Jews have lived in these lands before Arabs, Islam and Romans came around.
@@nickie2011 What has been destroyed in Israel? Is it not just Gaza and Palestina that has been bombed?
@@chahrazed6143Squeal louder. Your lies are unending as is the Arab propensity for starting wars against Jews. Jews bought their own land and formed kibbutz and other communities. They stole nothing. The Arabs have been killing Jews since even before 1919 when the Ottomans were defeated and every war in Israel has been started by Arabs. Moreover, Arab invaders have no place in Israel.
I am an Indian(hindu) and i personally find Jews best amongst all Abrahamic religions. Coz.
1. *they dont try to convert others*
2. *they practice their religion peacefully*
3. *they are very hard working*
4. *just like us* .. "live and let live attitude".
5. *people with high IQ*
true, agreed
Rajan A Thevar I like Israeli jews, but not international jews who don’t keep to themselves and manipulate other societies. Ethnostates are the answer - then everyone can live happily and work hard for their own people in their own land.
Rajan A Thevar That's why we love Indians. Always positive and objective.
❤️❤️❤️🙌🙌🙏🙏🙏🙏. A MAN THAT SPEAKS THE TRUTH GOD BLESS YOU AND YOUR FAMILY AND YOU ARE WELCOMED TO COME TOO ISRAEL. WE WELCOME YOU
@@yelsavidaravskaja905 what a load of absolute rubbish. For every jew with an opinion there are 100 000 peoples with same opinion who are not jews. Since when is it sooooo easy to manupulate humanity in any area ? - stupid person you
Great video! Now I finally know what the famous kibbutz is all about. And by the way, it sounds like a great place!
Lol, it's not. Daniel Gavron wrote a book about his experience raised in one and the current struggles they face. While entirely sympathetic to what these communities attempt to provide, the incentive problem as well as the unavoidable economic calculation problem has dwindled these communities to a handful. And the ones currently surviving do so because they provide marketable goods to the outside world that churn out profits.
@@راديو76 The right & religious took over because they became the majority, that's called democracy. 90% of the new immigrants in the 1950's were orthodox right-wingers, but the Israeli communists used forced secularization to try & control them for political & ideological benefit. That's NOT democracy. Finally, in 1977, the right-wing arose & defeated the left-wing. The left-wing is still trying to rule the country through the Supreme Court, the leftist media & the police, yet they are STILL losing power every day.
This sounds actually nice especially consideringthe way society is going in the west especially the Nordics where individual living is very normal and loneliness amongst the youth is a growing problem.
It is very lonley in Canada in the Winter if you have no family or wife.. very quiet and still....minus 40 centigrade.
As a quick guide, a shekel is about the same as a US quarter, so they're making $1200 a month but most everything taken care of, and most of it better than 90% of us have it in the US. Especially health care.
okay if you don't mind living in the last country on earth that allows apartheid, why don't the people from gaza get to stay there?
@@wsjacksonjr Nope violent crackheads who kill children not allowed on kibbutzim
Mr. Jackson own wow someone doesn’t know that Israel and Palestine are two different counties and israel has borders crazy thought
@@wsjacksonjrBecause Gazans don’t want to be. Most care about being religious hypocrites and hating on Jews.
@@f3mcell373Because Hamas keeps attacking Israel and the hostages are still being kept there. What a ridiculous and insolent question.
Brings back such wonderful memories for me!
Thank you for your work!
This is excellent.
An excellent piece - have just seen it now. I delighted so many kibbutzim still exist. I'm not Jewish, but in 1983, I spent 3 months on Kibbutz Magen as a volunteer. It was one of the best experiences of my life. At the time, I was encouraged to think about joining and for many years thereafter I regretted my decision to leave. I still admire the philosophy of shared contribution and shared reward - a far more preferable way of life than the shallow, greedy, accumulative, corrupt societies we find ourselves part of today. Such a pity that the model hasn't taken off in other parts of the world in building meaningful communities.
Indeed, I hope I can reply this idea in my country in a not so distant future :D
was a kibbutz volunteer back in 2010 at Kibbutz Lahav. I share the exact same words you did. Fantastic personal experience and the kibbutz itself is also a great social experiment too! Greetings from Brazil!
This kind of community can only exist only if everyone knows everyone and there is a high trust society where people feel obligated to pull their own weight. Otherwise - this is just impractical. Nice concept tho.
that's why there is a strict regulation on who can get in (like marriage or be a jew).
I was born and grew up in a dictatorship! So, the word "socialist" gives me chills! 😬
Dictatorship is opposite to democracy. Socialist is opposite to capitalist. One is a political system...the other is an economic system.
@@janettucker3196 How about social democracy? equality with respect for human rights
That's why I say it will only work in small communities of like minded people and NOT as a larger and only system in a country. The people in the Kibbutz are there by choice and can leave that system anytime they want. Not so if it's the system of an entire country.
Ya that words really scares me.
I used to work in a Kibbutz as a Swiss National in 1996 for 3 months called Revivim
Kibbutz is one of the examples that socialism (sometimes) worked
Are the Kibbutz installed in the occupied territories ?
It was a great experience!! was there for 6 months back in 2005! been in two different kibbutz!love from INDIA! also not all kibbutz are the same they varies in different layouts and productions(factories) and also amenities and food!
Can you tell us what kind of work you did there ?
@@gardensofthegods i used to work in the dining area& kitchen did a bit of work in apple packing ,also did some farming work in another kibbutz
How to apply for volunteering in a Kibbutz
Doesn't seem to be self sustaining. They said much of the money they need comes from wealthy members who have executive jobs on the outside and give their salaries to the Kibbutz. There are other problems as well like can I earn enough money to be a boat owner?
well you can share the boat with other people lol since everything is owned by everyone.
If they were not self-sustaining, how could there be any kibbutzim? Yes, some members do work outside the kibbutz, but the kibbutzim are very successful at running agricultural and industrial businesses.
@@jackpine4347 collectives like theses are propped up and supported by the government(tax payers). This is due to the governments has incentive to push people to become settlers to empty lands near west bank and Gaza(kinda risky way to hold on to lands).
Amazing !!!! I want to live like this !!!!!
Who makes the decisions? Who enforces the law? How are disputes settled? And, is this subsidized by the government? Please give us an update.
There are assembles in which all members need to vote, it goes after the majority, once as the Labour party was in power they subsidized the Kibbuzim, since the right parties are in power that does not exsist ay more, many Kibbuzim managed to build industries inside the Kibbuz and are self authnom other are in debt versus the banks,
I came here because of the news reports of, Kibbutz homes being attacked by Hamas parasites. Ive heard of the word but did not know what it meant. Found out is was a home. What a lovely way to live. I'm so sorry for what the people of Isreal are going through. I hope you all are able to repair the Kibbutz communities you were peacefully living in. My heart to you all. Glory be to Isreal 🙌🙏🙏
Sudbury, Ontario, Canada
@@amorenew Don't think so? We've already hosted piles of garbage from your area. Unless of course you have a dung heap suitable enough for your needs? Could look around if ya wanna? Maybe learn to spell Canada before you come? May be useful down the road? Never know.. "HEY?" 💋
Kibbutz are also armed and serve as a first line defence...it would make sense they would be targeted.
Please what is the name of.this kibbutz in this video ...thank u.
Socialism without taxation? That really does sound like utopia.
The kibutz I’m sure pay taxes
Well, taxation isn't a requirement for socialism, but it's the only way with how lazy socialists are 😂
There are 2 ways to generate value in the world.
1. Time
2. Money
If socialists are lazy and don't want to give their time, they go after your money.
The kibbutz everyone works from young so the time fuels the economy.
Socialism doesn't work not because it can't work, it doesn't work because humans screw it up.
The kibbutz pays the taxes on behalf of its members, i.e. not tax free
how can I apply kibbutz volunteer
KIBBUTZ FOOD IS AMAZING.
I have a stupid question about eating in a kibbutz.
What is you don't feel like eating in a noisy cafeteria like setting ... do they have any smaller rooms there where a person could maybe only sit with a few people and it's much more quiet ?
What if you really just want to take the food home and eat your meal and your little apartment or house ? Are you allowed to put it in containers and go eat it at home ?
@@gardensofthegods yes, there is no problem at all to grab the food you want in a container and bring it home or wherever you want to eat it :)
@@gardensofthegods a lot of the communal living associated with kibbutz has been ditched over the years by many , but not all kibbutzim .The dining room used to be the centre of the kibbutz in so many ways ( I could go on and on , but I won't ) , but to answer your question , on some kibbutzim , some members do bring food containers to the dining room , then trot off home to eat , it all depends where one works , meal breaks are not infinite , and if you're working in the fields far from your home , you will have to manage your time carefully .
I want to learn about Kibbutz community management. Can find the guideline? Any body can suggest?
I suspect there's much outside of Israel financial support for a Kibbutz. No way could that work without outside financial support.
Kibbutz has government support too. The government has incentive for people to move to land near Gaza and West Bank to legitimize the government claims of those lands.
Did/do they have a forced vax policy as was the case in Isreal?
Nothing's free. Ever. Anywhere.
Are there armed Kibbutz's or are they unarmed? I like guns. I am a expert marksman with every kind of gun. A champion. Are there nightclubs? Are there different kinds of Kibbutz's? Is there Steak night? Is there Chinese food? Can I have a Xmas tree and Christmas? Please advise.
To answer your questions in the order you asked them: (1)Kibbutz members can own guns, if the need is justified and they are licensed to own firearms. (2)Some kibbutzim may have their own nightclubs for their members. (3)There are different kinds of kibbutzim in terms of the nature of their economies. Some are agricultural, some industrial, some a mix. (4)The kibbutz kitchens produce whatever food is favored by the members. (5)Most kibbutzim are secular, so you could put up a Xmas tree celebrate Xmas, erect a totem pole, or do whatever else you want, as long as you adhere to the rules and regulations of the kibbutz.
@jackpine4347
Hahahaha right on.
So many hot women there
So the members that earn a high income outside of the Kibbutz give back most of their income to the Kibbutz or?
That's right. Very idealistic people.
Or they can leave. Give up their membership. It's not a prison.
They do!
@@Gideon01 But it seems to be a real MAGNET ! Why the heck always saving millions for oneself, if sharing = caring ? Life is about LOVE !
Where is this a Kibbutz ?
In which town or City ?
Thank you.
There are kibbutzim all over Israel
They aren't in cities. They are a thing of their own
As a secular Protestant (non practicing) here in the Midwest (metro Cincinnati) I am impressed with how well the Kibbutz concept works for those who opt for the lifestyle & life associated with its social constructs. I don't think I could give up my suburban (Bourgeois) life as this is what I have known all my (almost) 59 years of life. But for those who want a more communal sense of life with similarly shared experiences, this is a really cool concept! Thanks for sharing with us. It was interesting and informative!
The reason it works is the people want to be there. Socialism on a country scale doesn’t work because some people don’t want to contribute or are too lazy too
Wondering if they take messianic believers?
There are a few on this kibbutz
Wow. That's nice. I'll visit there when I get to Israel.
Visit Kibbutz Ein Dor, near the city of Afula (Northern Israel). I lived there in 1989 and I can safely say it was the BEST time of my life. Just don't go in the summer, go in December up to March.
@@herbertbielefelder341 why not in summer?
@@TheOfficialMylo it’s hot
*Palestine
Can anyone from Israel tell me about the state welfare for disabled citizens? Like, does welfare pay for housing and living costs..or are there disabled homeless living on the streets...
Not on the streets, but the welfare for the disabled is miserable.
its well worth being a volunteer. In this world where there is so much selfishness and greed some time spent living together will really make you question how the rest of the world lives...certainly other western countries/societys.
In parts of the Congo and surrounding areas of the African continent, there is similar communities just as advanced.
What are they called?
There's a vey good one called irony.
Great video!!!! Actually I live in a kibbutz-like community here in Spain. People who never lived so can't understand it. But it's great to live your God-given life not only thinking about yourSELF , but for the others too. And when the people who live there think about each other and care about each other the life is much much easier!!!! Shalom al kol am Israel!!!
Falhawk73 Look up co-housing, there are some communities particularly in BC. Not kibbutzim, but sort of similar.
Where is your community? I would like to learn more about it
I am looking for à place liké this since 30 years ..bur all that I found was communities who fonctionned with practized sectarism. Just living and work together- impossible for those
How is this possible? So what's the downside?
Very little privacy is a huge downside. Many hate that aspect of kibbutz life.
Stds
I have lived in Israel In kibbutz I really like it very much I want to do volunteer programme again it's so beautiful I like it
Who has authority in the kibbutz?
What kibbutz did she go to again?
ramat yohanan
Can I move there please!
I’m
A Medical Doctor
Why wouldn't anyone not want to live in this environment....it sounds perfect. It is also a brilliant idea for the people and poverty in our townships here in South Africa.
yes, it would be, but most people do not qualify, because the amount of rules are huge. not going to work is not an option unless you are genuinely ill. not everybody can do the job they want to. etc etc
Because you have family and responsability elsewhere...
the ANC government is too corrupt ( and racist ) to have such a smart idea like this come to fruition in the RSA , ESPECIALLY if it originated from Israel ( and YES I did visit a couple of townships when I visited the RSA )
i want to reply but ill be accused of being racist so i wont write the truth
This only works if everyone takes accountability and works hard. Sadly South Africans have made it a habbit to blame the government and white people for all their problems, so it's probably not going to work there.
what was the name of the Kibbutz again?
Everyone pays. Someone always pays more. Someone always gets more than they contribute.
OK please elaborate how everyone makes the same money. If someone is an executive or a surgeon and someone else farms the land...I understand how the one who farms the land lives there for free with a specific salary...but for the executive or the surgeon how is their salary the same if they work outside the kibbutz? Do they give their salary to the kibbutz and the Kibbutz gives some back (an amount is given back that is the same the one who farms the land earns)?
hipretty, you can work outside the kibutz in any profession, as a surgen for example, however still all your salary will go directly to the kibutz. it doesnt matter if you make a million dollars a month. you will still get no more than those 5,000 shekels.
Correct.
@@erlich85 That's not entirely true, the amount of monthly funds you get from the Kibutz depends on the Kibutz and the method they use, in some of them indeed your entire salary will go to the Kibutz and you will get the same funds like any other member, but in others your monthly funds will depend on a calculation based on the income you give to the Kibutz, the number of children you have or some other calculation that will reflect your contribution to the Kibutz.
I'm from Malaysia, can i join the Kibbut settlement..pls advice. Tqsm
how does this work, when you own a property or a manufacturing plate/facility and it is making a ton of money...do the owners only 5000 a month like everyone else.
step 1. Steal someone else's land
@@mes382 step 2: import a lot of people from Thailand (and some Africans) to do the heavy labor on the farms for you, paying them less than the minimum wage. and then act like you are all so hard working, building it all on your own.
there is always a catch when someone tell you about a seemingly perfect community like that. always someone who is exploited.
The only reason this works is because it is Highly Discriminatory, in that they can choose who they allow and who they don’t, and also it is mutually chosen, i.e., the people choose to be there and the the people there choose who they let in. Also, the cultural homogeneity of the people is key. You can’t have something like this where a few people believe they are doing everything as to the glory of god, and the other people are doing, just good enough. Socialism as a government / complete economic system will never work because it is forced on everyone, and the majority of people will choose to be freeloaders, while the rest of the people will work to support the majority.
It works because they are careful to have people who actually want to work and contribute to both the kibbutz and the country. Kibbutzim are successful precisely because they have a motivated membership who want to cooperate for the greater good. Kibbutzim were founded by secular Jews for the most part, though there are some religious kibbutzim. This is not about discrimination. Would you call hiring the best person for a job in a company discriminatory, because they are ones most likely to not only personally succeed, but contribute to the success of the company?
Spoken like someone who has certainly never been to this particular kibbutz.
This swimming pool is in the Kibbutz ?
You have gym too ?
Thank you.
Kibbutzim have pools and gyms.
It could be an example to a World fast going down the hole.
It isn't Paradise and can even be a sort of Hell to some but altogether it has a lot to offer especially in a very difficult and expensive Country like Israel is.
There is a saying that it is Paradise for kids and old people with the between time years more of a challenge.
I just heard that a group of Israelis are establishing a Kibbutz in Portugal where vacant land is available and relatively cheap.
Would love to know where that is in Portugal. I lived in a Kibbutz back in the 90ies. Life changing exp. I think the model would be great for old people in most countries...Weird that other countries didn't try this model more.
I watched it today, and realized that Hamas has destroyed the same community. If I had a chance, would like to spend around 2-3months in Kibbutz and learn how this utopian sysytem works.
Hamas destroyed the southern kibbutzim. This one is in the north and has taken in many people from those communities.
what if someone doesnt feel life working and be a part of the kibbutz is that ok?
I don't think that would be allowed.
duhawma then it’s not such a good place. May sound nice but forcing people to work is just like slavery.
@@silverwave0018 And how do you make a living in the city if you don't feel like working?
Gideon01 maybe they’ll worked already and saved up lots of money. Or maybe they make money online and what if they don’t want to share all there money.
No!!!
What's difference between a kibbutz and a settlement?
There's very little in common. Kibbutzim have been around since 1909. They live a collective life. They are all in Israel proper, and not on disputed land. Kibbutzniks are left-wing and overwhelmingly secular.
Settlements are situated on disputed land that was captured in 1967. They are not run as collectives. The inhabitants are mostly right-wing, many religious.
They are quite at odds with each other.
@@Gideon01 thanks, appreciate
Married? A member? I'll marry you. Musician and teacher, will play and teach for food, etc.
Do I have to be Jewish to become a member of a Kibbutz ? Or do I have to marry a kibbutz member as the video suggests ? I'm non religious and have both UK and Irish nationality.
i don't think so but if you are a non-jew and you want to live in israel converting to judism will be very helpful for you. otherwise it's just harder
They forget to mention the neighbors.
Exactly. Moral of the story: When EVERY house requires a safe room, and there are bomb shelters everywhere else - you should NOT be living there to begin with!
@@wendylpa So the Ukranians should leave Ukraine, the Yemenis not dominated by Houthi rebels should leave Yemen...etc.
@@jackpine4347 Solid point! But regardless of which geographic region - it typically goes back to how/why a category of humans settled/inhabited that land to begin with. That's where things get tricky...
@@wendylpa lmao, yeah we should've kept them in the countries that had the holocaust and kept them as subhuman citizens. Why would the UN make such a decision. The state of Israel started in 1948... what could have possibly preceded such decision in Europe. 🤔
@@wendylpanon historical answer. Lacks background study.
my gosh shes beautiful...
I wish I could live in Kibbutz in Israel. It’s seems to be paradise on earth.
😢 sad to see this comment now 💕
I would love to be there and work in Kibbutz, so whats the process, I live in India, so how do I apply for and where?
will you guide me please? Thanks
This is really perfect, want go to visit
what's stopping you ?
i was on kibbutz metzer in 85/86 the most amazing people and lifestyle i miss it
Wow, what a wonderful life
I would love to live on a Kibbutz, I had no idea what a Kibbutz was
Sending Prayers and Love to Israel
Disgusting. They have these stupid town on Gaza and West bank. It is not free when it is on another people's expenses.
@@MB-we4dx Let me guess, You hate Jews?
“Sources of income (financed) by members salaries who are major executives outside.”
This needs to be the model all over the world, especially in the US. I love this concept - similar to the 15 minute community, but better!
So far, it's only applicable to homogenous (ethnically and culturally) society which require some particular "right-wing" policies to maintain.
Have to say... this seems like "life perfection"... I'm a Swede (not jewish) and seems like 80's Swedish (mix between market/state economy)... In some cases it this seem a lot more state/(kibbutz) then market but in other it seems more market...
Sweden changed from a lot of state own utility (tax funded) to a more free market funded utilities and maybe today it works, sort of... but it I think we pay more and get less, and it is not as safe/secure as I wanted to be... somethings should be for its citizens (tax funded) and not free market and somethings should be free market stuff... there is always a perfect balance.. I don't think Sweden has it yet...
This Kibbutz seems to have a nice balance...
this hostess is my crush :3
That very attractive hostess with a great personality is Natasha Kirtchuk --- who is also an ILTV News anchor. She's smart, witty, pretty and an engaging speaker. I read somewhere that she is an alumna of Duke University.
Had heard about it, would like to be a part of the community. To learn
I wish Finland, Karelia and Estonia became a single united ethnostate and started kibbutzim. I would LOVE to live a more traditional lifestyle, farming and producing for my people and writing in my free time.
Yelsä Vidaravskaja That would be awesome, I wish you Uralic fellows good luck from Poland.
Not likely. Karelia is part of Russia.
I think Kibbutz with friends would be cool I would not mind to see my friends all day
Sounds like the communal Mennonites and the sharing farm Amish. Not unusual my family lives this way in PA Dutch country with most circling around the church. My family is Jewish and socialist but I went to a Mennonite school. The Mennonites are basically Religious Socialist. If your Mennonite your family has to give you a Job so no worries. The church pays for everything so no worries.
can you explain how socialism has so much appeal to those type of people???
@@memenadekhanh3992 The wealthy have social capitalism. The federal reserve Is the bank they call when in trouble. More welfare goes to the top 10 percent then the bottom 90 percent. Working together as a group, as a tribe, as a family keeps power centered within the group. Think mafia, church, police unions, Ford, Vanderbilt, etc. A union is socialism and the police union or teacher union gives those in career protection. The Mennonites where I live are the power, and the protection. People join groups for protection. Social Security is Socialism. America has been a socialist nation since the 1930s and is certainly not democratic. American companies always get bail outs and tax credits. America is a Socialist Republic ruled by a connected ruling family organization with different rules for them. Mennonites are a mirror image of the ruling class as the Kibbutz is. If you get American Social Security you practice Socialism. Tax credits, tax breaks, bail outs for broken companies are all Socialist activities. Reasons enough.
Military installation?
Sounds a lot like catalonia during the spanish civil war
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This isn't the same as socialism or communism. This only works when everyone wants to do it, not when it is forced by the government upon people.
Socialism is an economic model, not a system of government. The kibbutzim function as socialist economies.
@@jackpine4347 No, not really.
it's when you sneeze really hard