Between Jaffa and Tel Aviv, 1870-1930

A Memoir

Yosef Eliyahu Chelouche, edited with an introduction by Michelle U. Campos and Or Aleksandrowicz

Born in Jaffa in 1870, Yosef Eliyahu Chelouche grew up within a notable Sephardi family in the local Jewish community. He went on to become a prominent entrepreneur; a founder of Tel Aviv; and a fierce critic of the Ashkenazi Zionist leadership, Arab nationalism, and British colonial sectarianism; before emerging, in the last decade of his life, as an anguished public figure struggling to repair Arab-Jewish relations. 

His memoir paints an intimate portrait of life in Palestine at the turn of the twentieth century, told from the perspective of a Middle Eastern Jew deeply embedded in local society. By centering on the world and experiences of a native Jew who was an eyewitness to and participant in the unfolding conflict in Palestine, this book shows how the course of Zionist politics and Jewish-Arab relations in pre-state Palestine might have taken alternative pathways. A comprehensive introduction sets the scene in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Jaffa and thoughtful annotations contextualize Chelouche’s story within the modern history of Palestine and Israel. Between Jaffa and Tel Aviv, 1870–1930 tells the fascinating story of a civic leader—and offers a complex view of the various cultural, social, and political forces that forged multilayered Jewish identities in the Middle East. The book includes a family tree and is illustrated with photographs of the family and scenes of Jaffa and early Tel Aviv. 

Paper: $40 | Cloth: $160 | E-book: $39.95
ISBN-13: 9781684582563
Pages: 400 | Size: 6 in. x 9 in.
Date Published: December 22, 2025

About the Author

Yosef Eliyahu Chelouche

(1870–1934) was a prominent builder, entrepreneur, public figure, and a founder of Tel Aviv.

Or Aleksandrowicz

Or Aleksandrowicz is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Architecture and Town Planning at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. He is an architect and architectural historian whose research on the urban history of Jaffa and Tel Aviv has produced several articles, including “The Camouflage of War: Planned Destruction in Jaffa and Tel Aviv, 1948” (Planning Perspectives, 2017) and “Spatio-Syntactical Analysis and Historical Spatial Potentials: The Case of Jaffa–Tel Aviv” (Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 2019). Since 2006, Aleksandrowicz is the editor-in-chief of Architectures book series at Babel Publishers, the leading Hebrew book series on architecture and town planning.

Michelle Ursula Campos

Michelle Campos is Associate Professor of Jewish Studies and History at Pennsylvania State University. A historian of late Ottoman Palestine, she is the author of Ottoman Brothers(SUP, 2011) and Unmixing the Holy City (in progress). Among her various scholarly articles and book chapters, she wrote about the Chelouche memoir in “Remembering Arab-Jewish Contact and Conflict” in LeVine and Sufian, eds., Reapproaching the Border: New Perspectives on the Study of Israel/Palestine (2007), which has been widely adopted in university courses.

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