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Making a Landfill Bloom

From Hiriya’s newly green foothills to its gravelly summit 200 feet above sea level a visitor can experience the heights of the beauty G-d bestowed on His land as well as the peaks and valleys of human wastefulness endeavor and ingenuity.

On a sunny Tuesday morning a Caterpillar tractor at Hiriya’s base shoves around the 3000 tons of waste brought here every day either for recycling or transfer to newly opened landfills in the Negev. White herons fly in expectantly each morning from the nearby Ramat Gan Safari Park to roost atop the trash mounds and peck away for food while hungry cats scavenge in the piles below clawing for traction. At Hiriya’s various ecological facilities 1 000 tons of industrial waste is pulverized and recycled every day into energy substitutes road and construction material and organic fertilizer. Another 200 tons of wood shavings and tree trimmings are shredded for mulch while the tree trunks are sent to local artisans who convert them into garden furniture.

At Hiriya’s peak the vista is purely G-d’s handiwork. Looking straight down the fields are as verdant as can be until they give way to the gleaming white towers of the bustling Tel Aviv-Jaffa metropolis and beyond that the deep-blue-green of the Mediterranean Sea. A look over your shoulder in the opposite direction yields a vista of the rugged grayish-brown Samarian mountain ridge as far as the eye can see.

Constructions crews are working almost around the clock to prepare this panorama for the public in time for Hiriya’s scheduled May opening at which point it will be better known by its newest name — the Ariel Sharon National Park. It has been a work in progress for the past thirteen years. 

“This mountain was created by every one of us” says Danny Sternberg the park’s former CEO and now a consultant to the park on environmental issues. “Everyone ‘contributed’ something to this mountain and now it’s time for the mountain to give something back to the people.”

 

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