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  1. March 29, 1886 (22 Adar II 5646), Arab peasants from the village of Yahudiya attacked the new Jewish colony (mosha-vah) of Petah Tikva (founded in 1878) and injured five Jews. One of them, Rachel Halevy, died several days later, possibly from an underlying condition aggravated by shock from the attack.
    www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/jewisocistud.23.1.01
    www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/jewisocistud.23.1.01
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    In 1927, Petah Tikva concluded a local peace treaty with the Arabs living nearby; subsequently, Petah Tikva was untouched by the 1929 Palestine riots. According to the 1922 census of Palestine conducted by the British Mandate authorities, Petah Tikva had a total population of 3,032: 3,008 Jews, 22 Muslims and 2 Orthodox Christians.
    en.wikipedia.org
    Petah Tikvah was founded in **1878** by a group of religious Jews from Europe, including **Yehoshua Stampfer**, **Moshe Shmuel Raab**, **Yoel Moshe Salomon**, **Zerach Barnett**, and **David Gutmann**
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    By 1886, Petah Tikva had expanded somewhat and become one of eight similar settlements founded by Ashkenazi Jewish settlers motivated by the ideals of revitalizing Jews and productivizing them, in the parlance of the era, provoking concern and ire from the local Arab peasantry.
    Petah Tikva’s colonists, like Jews in other early colonies in Palestine, felt unease about the colony’s viability and security and also about its very claims to firstness.
  3. Petah Tikva - Wikipedia

  4. "Petah Tikva, 1886: Gender, Anonymity, and the Making of Zionist …

  5. Petah Tikva, 1886: Gender, Anonymity, and the - ProQuest

  6. Petah Tikvah - Jewish Virtual Library

  7. Petah Tikva, 1886: Gender, Anonymity, and the Making of

  8. [PDF] Petah Tikva, 1886: Gender, Anonymity, and the Making of …

  9. Project MUSE - Petah Tikva, 1886: Gender, Anonymity, and the …

  10. Petah Tikvah | Encyclopedia.com

  11. Petaḥ Tikvah | Encyclopedia.com