Kfar Kisch

Kfar Kisch (Hebrew: כְּפַר קִישׁ) is a moshav in northern Israel.

Located adjacent to Mount Tabor, it falls under the jurisdiction of Lower Galilee Regional Council.

[1] It was established in 1946 by Jewish soldiers demobilised from the British Army after World War II having served under Frederick Kisch, after whom the village was named.

A water shortage which forced the residents to transport water from the Tabor stream without proper equipment added to the problems, and until 1953 a steady stream of founding residents left the village.

In that year conditions improved and Kfar Kisch began to absorb Jewish immigrants from Poland, Hungary, and the Soviet Union.