The Old Be’erot Yitzhak


Opening hours: The old Be’erot Yitzhak (Water Tower) site is open all year round, free of charge.
Getting there?
For those coming from road 4 or the Sa’ad Junction, drive 700 meters east on road 25 and turn south (right) to road 232. Drive 1.5 km and turn right onto a paved road following the directional signs to Be’erot Yitzhak. After about 1.5 km, turn left, drive about 800 meters next to the greenhouses and turn right to the water tower. For those coming from the south on road 232, driving North, the turn left is about 1.5 km after Kibbutz Alumin (just before the gas station).
What can one find on-site? You can see the water tower of old Be’erot Yitzhak kibbutz, the well-kept garden, the commemorative corner and the explanatory plaques placed on-site.
Difficulty level: Low
Rest Rooms on-site: None.
Possible picnic points: There is a shaded picnic table at the edge of the site.
WAZE: The Old Be’erot Yitzhak – water tower.
General Description: An observation point, monument and conservation of the first spot where Be’erot Yitzhak (today located near Yehu) broke ground as one of the first Jewish settlements in the Negev, before the establishment of the state. The site consists of a boulevard leading to the water tower that remained standing – a remnant of the settlement there. Next to the tower is a shaded corner bordered by a concrete semi-circled bench, with a picnic table.
On top of the water tower, the garden and the commemoration corner, one can review the detailed explanatory plaques that tell the story of the Be’erot Yitzhak, the heroic perseverance of its defenders in the War of Independence and the difficult decision they had to take, to leave the place and rebuild the kibbutz elsewhere.
In 1966 Kibbutz Alumim was established nearby. Kibbutz Alumim also belongs to the religious kibbutz system, and, in a way, it is a continuation of Kibbutz Be’erot Yitzhak. Today, Kibbutz Be’erot Yitzhak is a cooperative that still observes the religious lifestyle.
Every year, in the month of Tamuz, kibbutz members visit this memorial site. Most of the original kibbutz areas, which were relatively large for the time, are currently cultivated by Kibbutz Nahal Oz.
Where to go next?
● You can continue driving southwest on Road 6 and reach the Be’eri Crater, an extraordinary and spectacular nature reserve, especially when in full bloom between December and April.































