Our History

19th century

The Beginning

Background

The Herzog Medical Center is the oldest Hebrew Medical Center operating in the State of Israel; it is considered the first and senior most psychiatric hospital in the Middle East, and amongst the pioneers in theory and policy of mental health in Israel. The beginning of this glorious history is in the late 19th century and is intertwined in the history of the “Old Yishuv” (the first settlement of the land of Israel in the modern ear) in general and of Jerusalem in particular.

As is written in the book of Prof’ Joseph Yoel Rivlin (the father of the former President Mr. Reuven Rivlin), the hospital began its way as a tiny one-room shelter in the Old City, housing only two mental patients collected by Mr. Asher Rivlin, the uncle of Prof’ Rivlin and the son of Joseph Rivlin. The situation of the two patients and the shelter assigned to them was so severe that Mr. Asher Rivlin turned to the “All-Kolelim Committee” seeking aid. Just then, a new women’s organization was founded called “Agudah Ezrat Nashim,” led by Haya Tzipa Pines (wife of Yehiel Pines, a leader in the Mazkeret Moshe Neighborhood) – an organization which took upon itself to manage the institution.

This was the starting point of the first mental health “hospital” in the land of Israel, and in fact in the entire Middle East.

Throughout the 19th century, despite the opposition of some of the Jewish community in Israel’s supporters, Jewish medical services began to develop in Jerusalem as a counterreaction to the extant missionary hospitals. The first Jewish hospital was established in the Old City of Jerusalem in 1854, called the Meir Rothschild Hospital, followed by several additional hospitals, until forty years later, in an attempt to provide a response to the extant lack in the field of mental health, which the general hospitals were ill-equipped or oriented to deal with, the hospital: “Ezrat Nashim” was founded in 1894 by Haya Tzipa Pines, her daughters Ita Yalin and Margalit Meyuhas and Rosa Feinstein. In Hanukkah of that year (1894), the “Ezrat Nashim Clalit” Association assumed responsibility for the tiny shelter in the Old City which housed a few mentally ill patients and was conspicuously neglected and ill-managed. The association renovated the facilities and changed its name to “Ezrat Nashim – hospital for the incurable.” That is how the Herzog Medical Center began – as the first psychiatric institute in the Middle East. The site housed, among other patients, women suffering from depression and other mental disturbances after giving birth. The documentation of the “shelter for mental patients” can be seen in the book of accounts for the Ezrat Nashim Clalit Association in Jerusalem whose original copy is still kept in the hospital archives to this day.

The men's building and the inner courtyard 1910

Women's building around 1908

Late 19th to early 20th century

1896 – 1904

In the first two years following its founding, the medical institution grew rapidly, migrating between various buildings in the Old City, until it burst out of the walls of Jerusalem to take up residence in the Mazkeret Moshe Neighborhood (which was established by, among others, Yehiel Pines). In order to meet the rising demand for its services, the bed capacity was raised to 54. In 1901, the young medical institution won a plot of land on Jaffa Street, and between 1902-1906 began the construction of two buildings, funded by the donation of Yeshayaa Baruch Neushtad of Moscow. These structures and others, built later on, served the hospital until the late 1960s, up until the hospital’s transition to its current location in Givat Shaul.

20th century

During the First World War, the Ottomans sought to commandeer the structure. According to the account given in the book of Rivlin Ita Yelin, the daughter of Haya Zipa Pines hurled the keys to the building at the feet of the Turkish officer who came to take possession of the building and told him he would have to take care of the patients, or else toss them out – and he withdrew!

In the 1940s
The Hospital's Structure
In the 1940s activity increased, and the building on Jaffa Street could no longer meet the demand for medical services by the residents of Jerusalem. From the Valero family's legacy, the Jewish National Fund (JNF) allocated land and Rebbetzin Sarah Herzog (who then served as the Chair of the Ezrat Nashim Association) led a fundraising campaign to build a new building for the hospital. However, given the background of the heavy recession which the country suffered from in the early 1960s, the building was never completed. Instead, in 1968, following the Six Day War, the hospital relocated from its structure on Jaffa Street to its current abode.
In the 1940s
In the 1950s
A University Hospital
In the 1950s the institute became a university hospital, one associated with the Hebrew University of Jerusalem's Faculty of Medicine. Its patient and hospital bed capacity doubled with it growing to be able to provide service for a total 127 psychiatric patients.
In the 1950s
1968-1999
The Hospital's Solidification
Transition to the Givat Shaul Neighborhood in the outskirts of Jerusalem and the hospital's institutional solidification.
1968-1999
1968
A Hospital in Givat Shaul
After ten years of construction, the hospital was relocated to Givat Shaul.
1968
1973
Establishing a Community Health Center
The Community Mental Health Center, which provides ambulatory treatment to the residents of North Jerusalem – children, teenagers and adults, is established.
1973
1978
Opening a Geriatric Department
The first geriatric department is opened in the hospital.
1978
An important historical landmark
in the history of the Hospital: 1986
An important historical landmark in the history of the Hospital: its name is changed to Herzog
The Hospital changes its name from "Ezrat Nashim" to "Herzog Hospital," named after the Rebbetzin Sarah Herzog, wife of Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Halevi Hertzog, the mother of the former president Hair Herzog of blessed memory, and grandmother of the current President of the State of Israel Yitzhak Herzog may he merit a long and healthy life. She not only served the hospital as its president for nearly 40 years with the utmost dedication, she also – among other achievements, led the Hospital to the construction of its current structure.
An important historical landmark
in the history of the Hospital: 1986
1989
Establishment of the Israeli Center for Treating Psychotrauma
Establishment of the Israeli Center for treating Psychotrauma. The center offers a response to patients from all over the country and even overseas.
1989
1998
Establishment of the Adult Chronic Respiratory Care Department
Establishment of the unit for adult chronic respiratory care.
1998

21st century

From 2000 to the present day

2004
Establishing the Pediatric Chronic Respiratory Care Department
Establishing the Pediatric Chronic Respiratory Care Department, and later on the growth of the respiration ward to the largest in Israel, and one of the most conspicuous and largest in the entire world.
2004
2018
Inauguration of Two Departments in the New Samson Medical Pavilion
the inauguration of the first two departments in a new, luxurious hospital building, which occupies over 22 thousand square meters, with an investment of 450 million NIS. The building was constructed out of donations gathered from around the world, particularly by the Jewish philanthropist Heinz Samson of Switzerland. The building was gradually completed, and now nearly all of its wards are operational and receiving patients. The building has 12 departments, in which there are 360 hospital beds. Following that year, with the outbreak of the Corona virus pandemic, Herzog Medical Center opened its first COVID-19 ward - then a second, and then a third with a focus on providing treatment for geriatric patients. During the pandemic, Herzog Medical Center treated over 2,500 COVID-19 patients, considered the largest caseload of patients treated among Israeli hospitals. This was until the closing of its COVID-19 department, in May 2023 (the last dedicated COVID-19 department closed in Israel.)
2018
2022
The Inauguration of the new Dr. Max and Jeanna Glassman Ambulatory Health Centre
The inauguration of the new Dr. Max and Jeanna Glassman Ambulatory Health Centre too place and was established through the generosity of the Glassman Family of Canada and the generous funding and support received from the Jewish National Fund (JNF) in Canada (home of Max and Jeanna). The new Ambulatory Health Centre occupies an area of 3,000 square meters and contains the necessary amenities to provide ambulatory psychiatry assistance to the broader public including a Center for Psycho-trauma Therapy, a Psycho-Geriatric Clinic, as well as a pediatric mental health clinic including a clinic for young adults aged 18 – 25.
2022
2023
An Ambitious Plan to Establish a Hospital Campus
Ambitious masterplan of the Herzog Medical Center to establish a Hospital Campus advances through the Jerusalem Municipality's Planning and Construction Committees.
2023

Herzog Medical Center established the following services of the past few decades:

  • A mental health center, a rehabilitation department, a chronic respiratory care department and a skilled nursing department. 
  • A clinical research center for brain sciences conducting multi-disciplinary research focusing on neurodegenerative and neurological diseases, motor function rehabilitation, brain damage stemming from lack of oxygen and psychiatric disturbances.
  • A medical and para-medical professional training center.
  • Community clinics and institutions.

 

Alongside medical responses for patients, the research division of the Medical Center has won international recognition due to knowledge and achievements, primarily in the fields of medicine associated with geriatrics, respiratory and mental illness and the field of psycho-trauma.