The seminary building also houses the women's campus of the Herzog College, which prepares its students for teaching.
In January 2013, the Israeli Defense Forces arrested a Palestinian who admitted to firing a gun in the direction of a security post at the entrance of Migdal Oz, not hurting anyone.
[5] Within the area of the Kibbutz is the hill known as Horvat Brachot, where the remains of second temple Jewish settlement was found.
Alongside it are the remains of a Byzantine church dated to the fifth century AD, which includes mosaic floors that are now preserved and displayed at the Israel Museum and The Good Samaritan Museum[11] Its main agricultural pursuits include three turkey coops with 16,000 birds apiece, a dairy housing 260 cows that is among the largest in the country, and fruit orchards.
The eponymous Migdal Oz seminary, an advanced women's beit midrash, was opened in 1997 in the Kibbutz