After moving to Israel, some fellow new immigrants and I played a game: renaming places in Israel with famous names from our home cities. So, Derech Yigal Alon, the main highway in Tel Aviv, became our Sunset Boulevard and Dizengoff Square turned into Place du Tertre, and so on.
One friend disliked this game, saying it was too nostalgic. While he might be right about the nostalgia, it also felt, well, maybe a very Jewish tendency?
Haven’t checked this, but I prefer to believe the same thing explains why France in Hebrew is Tzarfat (a town in Lebanon) and Spain is Spharad (probably a place in Turkey).
