During the last 20 years of the 19th century, several attempts were made to settle
Russian and
Romanian Jewish refugees in Cyprus. The first attempt in 1883 was a settlement of several hundred Russians established in Orides, near
Paphos. This attempt failed with the settlers moving elsewhere. Some of these settlers had earlier (in 1882) tried to settle at
Latakia in
Syria. In 1885, 27 Romanian families from
Neamt County settled on the island, also near Paphos, as colonists and were also not successful in forming communities. Both these early settlements were led by Michael Friedland, the son of Rabbi
Natan Friedland. Romanian Jews in 1891 again bought land in Cyprus, though they did not move to the country. Under the leadership of Walter Cohen, 15 Russian families founded a colony in
Margo in 1897, with the help of the Ahawat Zion of
London and the
Jewish Colonisation Association. , a delegate to the Third Zionist Congress at Basel, attempted to get an endorsement in 1899 for Jewish immigration to Cyprus, especially for Romanian Jews. Although his proposal was refused by the council, Trietsch persisted, convincing two dozen Romanian Jews to immigrate to the land. 28 Romanian families followed these and received assistance from the Jewish Colonization Association. These settlers established farms in Margo and Asheriton. The Jewish Colonisation Association bought arable land that hadn’t been cultivated for many years because it was infested with malaria. The JCA settled 15 families in the land and mandated Jules Rosenheck, an Alsatian Jew who had previously been the JCA administrator in
Galilee, to run this colony. The Jews who moved there weren’t farmers, but they received help from local Cypriots. These Jews didn’t know Greek when they first arrived but they were however in contact with locals: they went to the doctor in Nicosia, and shopped there. Tensions arrose between
Sephardim and
Ashkenazim settlers, and had to be attenuated by Jules Rosenheck, being himself married to a Greek Sephardic woman. He wrote a 138 page-long document on this attempt to settle Jews in Cyprus, which helps us understand this attempt to populate Cyprus with Jews when there were only 65 Jews on the island in 1881. He decided to focus efforts on the Jewish settlement of Palestine because farmers there usually knew farming, and were more motivated to work the land because of their emotional attachment to
Eretz-Israel, unlike the small settlements of Cyprus which had a hard time self-sustaining. They did produce food for themselves, and also cultivated olives, which they couldn't do in their Palestinian zionist settlements because
oliviculture was a predominantly Arab sector. Jules Rosenheck motivated the JCA to quit its activity in Cyprus and to redirect those funds on the settlement of Jews in Palestine: «"As early as 1916, Rosenheck urged the JCA to eliminate direct administration in Cyprus as quickly as possible.». The Jewish Colonisation Association continued to give some support to Jewish workers in Cyprus. Most Jewish communities between 1900 and 1910 were located in Nicosia. In 1901, the Jewish population of the island was 63 men and 56 women. In 1902,
Theodor Herzl presented in a pamphlet to the Parliamentary committee on alien immigration in London, bearing the title: "The Problem of Jewish Immigration to England and the United States Solved by Furthering the Jewish Colonisation of Cyprus.". This attempt to settle Jews in Cyprus, and the Rosenheck report, provides us insight into the contemporary settlements of the Land of Israel, because its climate is similar to that of Cyprus. Hostility from local population doesn't seem to have been as bad in Cyprus as it was in Palestine. During
World War II and the
Holocaust, Cyprus played a major role for European Jews. After the rise of
Nazi Germany in 1933, hundreds of Jews escaped to the island. Following the liquidation of the
concentration camps of Europe, the British set up a
detention camp in Cyprus for
Holocaust survivors illegally trying to enter
Palestine. From 1946 until the establishment of the nearby
State of Israel in 1948, the British confined 50,000 Jewish refugees in Cyprus. Once the State of Israel was created, most of the Jewish community
moved there. About 2,000 children were born in Cyprus as families waited to enter Israel. == Today ==