Kfar Vradim, human settlement in Israel
Kfar Vradim is a small town in northern Israel, in the Acre Subdistrict, set among agricultural land and wooded hillsides. The residential area consists mainly of private homes with gardens along quiet streets.
Kfar Vradim was founded in 1984, starting as a small community of a few families in a largely agricultural area of the Galilee. Over the following decades it grew into a town with its own municipal services.
The name Kfar Vradim means Village of Roses in Hebrew, and flowers are still a visible part of daily life here. Many residents grow roses and other plants in their front gardens, giving the streets a noticeably green and colorful appearance.
The town is easy to reach by road from Karmiel and Nahariya, which are the nearest larger cities in the area. Having your own car is useful, as public transport in this part of the Galilee is limited.
Kfar Vradim has a partnership with Castrillo Mota de Judios, a small village in Spain whose name translates as Castle of the Hill of the Jews. That Spanish village has a medieval Jewish history, which makes the connection between the two places especially meaningful.
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