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Ben-Gurion's tomb at Midreshet Sde Boker

There are two places called Sde Boke, although they are only 4 km distance from each other. One is Kibbutz Sde Boker. This was where David and Paula Ben-Gurion lived for 20 years and his home can be visited. There is also an hotel and restaurant. The other is Midreshet Sde Boker. This is a hub for academic research and environmental education and is also a community settlement. The former includes research centers of the Ben Gurion University, a boarding high school that focuses on environmental issues, and the Ben‑Gurion Heritage Institute. However, most people will come here to view the tombs of the Ben-Gurions in the Ben Gurion Tomb National Park and to experience the magnificent view over the Sin Valley.

 

A covered shopping area includes several restaurants, including a kosher felafel place, an ice-cream bar, and a small supermarket. One can picnic on the green lawn adjacent to the shopping center. The Ben-Gurion Promenade overlooking the Sin Valley extends from here to the tombs of David and Paula Ben-Gurion. One can also continue along this promenade through a desert garden to a parking lot by the entrance to Midreshet Sde Boker.

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​Directions: Enter “Ben Gurion’s Tomb National Park” into Waze and click on “רחבת קבר דוד ופולה בן גוריון“ . There is no admission charge.

Admission: There is no entrance fee. This is their website:

Public transport: Enter “ צריף בן גוריון “ into Moovit. There are buses from Be’ersheva.

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Notice on the tomb stones the dates of David and Paula’s Aliyah to then Palestine. For them, their date of aliyah was as much a birth as emerging from the womb.

 

Having visited David Ben-Gurion’s former home and viewed the movies, this is an opportune time to reflect on his legacy and his insistence that the Negev be a vital part of the State of Israel. But why be buried here rather than in Mount Herzl, where other leaders of the state were buried? I heard a nice idea from a tour guide. This area, the wilderness of Zin, was a station for the Children of Israel before they entered the land of Canaan (Numbers 20:1). Ben-Gurion was very much into biblical study and engaged in weekly seminars. He may have appreciated the symbolism of his being part of Jewish history and participating in a new beginning for the Jewish people from a place where formerly, as in the biblical period, there was nothing here but desert.

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The covered shopping center

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The green lawn adjacent to the shopping center

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