يا طـالـب المـجــد فـي عجــور مــورده =عـــذب مـعـيــن يـروّي غــلــة فـيـنـــــا=شــــم الأنــــــوف أبــاة دام عـــزهــــــم =هـــم الأوائــل إن نــادى مـنــاديــــــنــــا=تـفـوح يـا بـاقـة الأزهـــار فـي وطـنــي =فــوح الأريـــج ونـفـح الطيــب يغـريـنـا كلمة الإدارة


مبارك .........مبارك لعجور ومنتديات عجور       »     عجور التاريخ و الحضارة - الحلقة الثانية       »     سجل الوفيات لعجور ١٣٢٠هـ -١٣٣٠هـ ١٩٠٢م - ١٩١١م       »     عجور التاريخ و الحضارة       »     ميزانية قرية عجور - 1939       »     عجور - وقوعات الزواج 1915م       »     عهد عشائر عجور بالحفاظ على اراضي عجور المشاع و عدم بيعها لل       »     اول أحصاء(حصر نفوس) موثق لسكان عجور1878م       »     أراضي عجور المشاع - حصري       »     اسماء من عجور مطلوبون للضريبة 1       »     ضريبة الانتداب البريطاني "3"       »     عجور - لجنة 18 ( اللجنة القومية لعجور)       »     أراضي عجور الحكر       »     عجور التاريخ و الحضارة-الحلقة الثالثة       »     علم النفس الاجتماعي       »     ملوك المملكة الاردنية الهاشمية       »     موسوعة صور القدس- زهرة المدائن       »     دليل الجامعات العربية و العالمية       »     روائع الشعر العالمي       »     موسوعة الاصول و القبائل العربية كاملة       »    

آخر 25 مشاركات
ملف عن الحج وما يتعلق به (الكاتـب : نور الهدى - آخر مشاركة : قلم حزين - )           »          كبرت بنتــي / قصة مؤثرة (الكاتـب : أمان - آخر مشاركة : قلم حزين - )           »          مبارك .........مبارك لعجور ومنتديات عجور (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - آخر مشاركة : نور الهدى - )           »          عجور التاريخ و الحضارة - الحلقة الثانية (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          سجل الوفيات لعجور ١٣٢٠هـ -١٣٣٠هـ ١٩٠٢م - ١٩١١م (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          عجور التاريخ و الحضارة (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          ميزانية قرية عجور - 1939 (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          عجور - وقوعات الزواج 1915م (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          عهد عشائر عجور بالحفاظ على اراضي عجور المشاع و عدم بيعها لل (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          اول أحصاء(حصر نفوس) موثق لسكان عجور1878م (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          أراضي عجور المشاع - حصري (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          اسماء من عجور مطلوبون للضريبة 1 (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          ضريبة الانتداب البريطاني "3" (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          عجور - لجنة 18 ( اللجنة القومية لعجور) (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          أراضي عجور الحكر (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          عجور التاريخ و الحضارة-الحلقة الثالثة (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          كيف و متى تحدثين طفلك عن التحرش ؟ (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          قصص اطفال للبنوتات الحلوين (الكاتـب : اميرة عجور - آخر مشاركة : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          علم النفس الاجتماعي (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          ملوك المملكة الاردنية الهاشمية (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          موسوعة صور القدس- زهرة المدائن (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          دليل الجامعات العربية و العالمية (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          روائع الشعر العالمي (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          موسوعة الاصول و القبائل العربية كاملة (الكاتـب : م .نبيل زبن - )           »          ضيف اليوم بصراحة (الكاتـب : Big heart - آخر مشاركة : ajoor - )


العودة   منتديات عجور - بيت كل العرب > قسم ابناء منتدى عجور > ملتقى عجور للموسوعات
ملتقى عجور للموسوعات موسوعات عالمية في منتديات عجور



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قديم 04-03-2013, 12:03 AM رقم المشاركة : 1
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افتراضي find the colonies names in your towns


find the colonies names in your towns



The Greatest Gift

By Stuart Schoffman






During the Passover holiday I went on a picnic with family and friends. My brother and his boy were visiting from Los Angeles* and five carloads of parents and children made for Park Britannia* a scenic spot 40 minutes southwest of Jerusalem* via a sliver of Palestinian territory and then a lovely road through Emek Ha'elah* the verdant valley where David* we are told* slew Goliath. I told my nephew to look real hard and maybe he could spot the rock that felled the giant Philistine. He's only 7* but he wasn't buying.

We feasted on tuna salad and matzah* debated whether it was okay for Ashkenazim to eat kitniyot (legumes) on Passover -- my view being* if Rabbi Ovadia Yosef can do it* who am I to do otherwise? -- and then took a walk through the remarkable olive grove of Ajur* home to some of the oldest and gnarliest olive trees you'll ever see. Wildflowers decorated the hillside* storks glided overhead. Several of the trees* hollowed over the centuries by the elements* were filled with rocks to keep them from collapsing. My brother* an artist* recorded the timeless landscape with a sepia crayon.

Who planted the olive trees? A sign at the trail head* courtesy of the Jewish National Fund (JNF)* told us in Hebrew and English that "farmers" cultivated these trees* which are now tended by an Israeli youth group. And who were these "farmers" -- Crusaders* Turks* Zionist pioneers? For all the sign says* they might be olive-growers from Mars. The fact that they were Palestinian Arabs* who fled the now nonexistent village of Ajur in 1948* never to return* is not part of the JNF's narrative of reclaiming the barren Jewish homeland and making the desert bloom.

To learn what happened to Ajur and hundreds of other vanished Arab villages* you might turn to a masterful book just published by the University of California Press called "Sacred Landscape." The author* Meron Benvenisti* is a former deputy mayor of Jerusalem and a well-known Israeli gadfly who airs his iconoclastic views in a regular column in Ha'Aretz. Benvenisti doesn't reject the Jewish claim to Palestine -- far from it. He also assigns the Palestinians an ample share of blame for the national disaster they suffered in 1948. But he also insists that attention be paid to the Palestinian story and to the historical landscape of the Land of Israel before it was reinvented by Zionism.

Voices like Benvenisti's are controversial in Israel* to say the least (not to mention among American Jews). In 1998* the 22-part documentary series "Tekumah" ("Rebirth") aired by Israeli Television to mark Israel's 50th birthday* provoked a storm of local criticism for its warts-and-all account of Israel's founding. Similarly* when it became known last summer that the Education Ministry had approved junior high school texts that include a "revisionist" view of the 1948 War* the airwaves and op-ed pages were filled with dire warnings that instilling guilt feelings in Israeli youth would undermine the morale essential to defending the country against its enemies. It's a reasonable worry* to be sure* but along with many other Israelis* I believe that we are mature enough as a nation to cultivate a sense of empathy with the Palestinians and to resist demonizing them. Whether the Palestinians are equally ready in return is* of course* another question* which lies at the heart of the problem.

Still* we push on with the Oslo peace process -- we have no reasonable alternative. And one day soon the Palestinians will proclaim their independence. When Israel took that step in 1948* the Palestinians took notes; now they're doing it. It's inevitable* and by now most Israelis realize that. The world will recognize their new state* whose borders and relationship with Israel remain to be negotiated. Like all countries* it will have a capital* possibly in Abu Dis* an Arab village just east of Jerusalem that Prime Minister Barak* as I write these lines* is planning to hand over to the Palestinians along with two others* Azzariye and Suwahara. Barak's political opponents say the handover will have a domino effect leading to the division of Jerusalem and God knows what other dire consequences. I'm willing to wager that not one outraged Israeli in a hundred could find Abu Dis without a map* but as it goes around here* so it will continue to go.

As Benvenisti points out* the Six-Day War conveniently shifted the moral battleground from the country as a whole to the West Bank* enabling Israeli peaceniks to shed any responsibility for ruined villages like Ajur -- of whose 600 houses only three survive* one of which is home to chamber-music concerts at Moshav Agur -- and instead righteously demand that Israel return the West Bank to the Palestinians.

Balancing the ideal of a Jewish polity with the canons of justice and democracy is a tricky affair* to be sure. In America* democracy is an axiom. Immigrants unschooled in democratic values imbibe the common creed in the process of their naturalization. Citizenship is granted only after completing a course of study. People who don't get with the program don't become Americans. In Israel* however* no Jewish immigrant has ever had to pass a citizenship test. You qualify as Jewish under the Law of Return and zap* you're an Israeli. Most Israelis derive from countries with no tradition of democracy (or religious pluralism). No surprise* then* that many Israelis have a fuzzy concept of democracy.

A significant number* for example* believe that the full benefits of democracy in Israel should apply only to Jews -- not to the descendants of those people who planted the olive trees in Ajur. And for many Israelis* democracy means the license to wield decisive parliamentary power while at the same time reserving the right to flout the rule of law or shirk civic responsibility. A government commission charged with finding a creative compromise on the thorny issue of drafting ultra-Orthodox yeshiva students has just come up with a pareve proposal that will only marginally increase the number of ultra-Orthodox in the military. The perceived power of the charedim may be the single biggest reason that so many Israelis are* ironically -- indeed tragically -- turned off to Judaism in the very country that was invented in order to preserve and protect it. Of the many fascinating paradoxes of Zionism* this is also the saddest.

This* and not denominational issues* is what world Jewry ought to be most concerned about* if you ask me. The religious pluralism question is slowly working itself out. The Reform and Conservative movements are pressing on with their court cases* seeking to compel the state to accept as Jews non-Orthodox converts who were trained in Israel. (Such converts from abroad are* thanks to a court victory in the late 1980s* recognized under the Law of Return.) The Reform movement has just inaugurated a program to certify physicians -- male and female -- as mohalim (ritual circumcisers)* provoking a predictable denunciation from the Orthodox. But the deeper problem goes far beyond the recognition of non-Orthodox institutions. As Israel settles squarely into middle age* it may fairly be asked: How Jewish are Israeli Jews?

In the case of a couple of hundred thousand of our Russian immigrants* the answer is* not at all. Under Jewish law* you're Jewish if your mother is Jewish. Under Israel's Law of Return* one Jewish grandparent -- Hitler's definition of a Jew* and do we dare* goes the reasoning* be less inclusive? -- entitles you and your immediate family to become Israelis* overnight.

In a single decade* the Russian immigrants have created a thriving subculture -- there are some 50 Russian-language newspapers in Israel -- and have leapfrogged economically and professionally over longstanding immigrant groups* notably Jews from Morocco and other Arab lands. This has provoked no small degree of resentment* which is only exacerbated by the Russians' widespread indifference to Jewish tradition* exemplified most gratingly by the proliferation of pork emporia in Israel since their arrival. And with the conversion apparatus still under the control of the right-wing Orthodox* non-Jewish Russians are in no hurry to become Jews.

But the biggest Jewish problem involves the veteran secular community. Shas leader Rabbi Ovadia Yosef* by scurrilously comparing the left-wing Education Minister Yossi Sarid to Haman and Pharoah* has only reinforced the alienation of secular Israelis from Judaism. But when the rabbi wondered why Sarid* instead of assigning secular students the poetry of Palestinian nationalist Mahmoud Darwish* did not agonize over the fact that these same students were ignorant of the prayer "Shema Yisrael*" he had a point. I suspect that the garden-variety Israeli youngster does* in fact* know the difference between "Shema Yisrael" and "Beam Me Up* Scotty*" but it may well be that his or her Jewish literacy -- by which I mean a comfortable familiarity with Jewish tradition -- doesn't go much beyond that. Secular Jewish leaders of earlier generations -- Ben-Gurion and Begin* for example -- were steeped in the religious heritage they chose to transmute into something new. That legacy has been all but lost by later generations. At the same time* the insidious* widespread consensus in Israeli society as a whole that right-wing Orthodoxy does* in fact* represent Jewish authenticity minimizes the likelihood that many secular* liberal Israelis will be inclined to reembrace their roots.

It is true that a growing number of secular Israelis are taking up classical Jewish texts in various study groups. But many of these same people retain a strong suspicion of traditional Judaism and of rabbis in particular* and as a result are reluctant to go the next step and become religiously affiliated* even with the non-Orthodox streams.

The word charedi means fearful* and the ultra-Orthodox are first of all God-fearing* and also afraid that the secular authorities -- mainly the Supreme Court -- will erode the Jewishness of Israel by awarding further victories to the Reform and Conservative movements. The staunch secularists* for their part* are no less doctrinaire* fearful that the charedim* given their druthers* would turn Israel into a Jewish version of Iran.

But liberal Jews in Israel and elsewhere ought not be put off automatically by the "otherness" of the black-hatted charedim. There's a world of wisdom to be gleaned from the ultra-Orthodox* the chassidim not least. As the great Galician Rebbe Elimelech of Lizhensk (1717-1787) taught us in his "Prayer before Praying": "May it be given to me to see my neighbor's virtues* not his faults." Such a capability is a gift indeed* one that all Jews are empowered to give themselves* and* God willing* each other.

Yet for many Israelis* finding common ground with their Arab neighbors is easier than bridging the gulf between secular and ultra-Orthodox Jews. Indeed the Jewish state is slowly acknowledging its overdue obligations to its Palestinian citizens* a trend which is likely to continue alongside the evolution of Palestinian autonomy next door. Interior Minister Natan Sharansky* for example* recently ordered that 150 acres of land that had been confiscated by the government from the Israeli Arab village of Kafr Kassem in the aftermath of the 1948 war should* at last* be returned to the village.

In another case* the Jewish village of Katzir* near Hadera* had refused to allow Adel Ka'adan* an Arab citizen of Israel (and a registered nurse working in a Jewish hospital)* to buy a lot and build a home* on the grounds that the town was on Jewish Agency land and thus for Jews only. The Israeli Supreme Court ruled a few months ago that the government could not allocate public land for such a purpose* because ethnic discrimination against Israeli citizens is against the law -- a landmark decision. Ruby Rivlin* a leader of the Likud party* declared that the ruling would lead to "the end of Zionism and the end of the Jewish state." But can it really be acceptable* after suffering so much discrimination themselves -- including restrictive covenants in gentile-only American suburbs -- that Jews should continue to inflict such unfairness on fellow Israeli citizens who happen to be Arab?

Of course not. Yet the larger picture is all so terribly confus-ing and anxiety-provoking. Can Jews really afford to let down their guard* take risks for peace? Hasn't our history proven that there's nothing so awful it can't happen? Does not the Passover Haggadah teach us that "in every generation they rise up against us to destroy us?" What about Syria? Lebanon? Iraq? Iran* for pete's sake? So King Abdallah of Jordan wears a baseball cap* so what? And can you trust those Egyptians? And just imagine those rogue Russian scientists in Khazakhstan* selling plutonium to terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden.

You ask me how I cope* in Israel at 52? I read* I write* I dream* I take my kids on picnics. Wearily* joyfully* hopefully* I seek wisdom from the sages. Listen to the liberating* visionary words of Martin Buber* from his 1942 essay entitled "Hebrew Humanism":

"He who has been reared in our Hebrew biblical humanism ... is not taken in by the hoax of modern national egoism* according to which everything which can be of benefit to one's people must be true and right. ... [T]he Zionist movement must decide either for national egoism or national humanism. If it decides in favor of national egoism* it too will suffer the fate which will soon befall all shallow nationalism* that is* nationalism which does not set the nation a true supernational task. If it decides in favor of Hebrew humanism* it will be strong and effective long after shallow nationalism has lost all meaning and justification* for it will have something to say and to bring to mankind." Amen.



تستطيع أن ترى الصورة بحجمها الطبيعي بعد الضغط عليها




Colonies in Palestinian Towns (1948-51)

(not including major urban population)



Acre District
No. from Map
Name of Palestinian Village
1944-1945 Population
Israeli Settlement

43
al-Bassa
2*950
Betzet (1949)* Kefar Ro'sh ha-Niqra (1949)* Leman (1949)* Shelomi (1950)* Matzuva (1940)

103
al-Birwa
1*460
Kibbutz Yas'ur (1949)* Achihud (1950)

106
al-Damun
1*310
--

57
al-Ghabisiyya
690
Elqosh (1949)* Netu'a (1966)* Mattat (1979)* Abbirim (1980)

55
al-Kabri
1*520
Kibburz Kabri (1949)* Ga'ton (1948)* Me'ona (1949)* 'En Ya'aqov (1950)* Ma'a lot (1957)* Kefar Vradim (1984)

96
al-Manshiyya
810
Shamrat (1948)* Bustan ha-Galil (1948)

46
al-Mansura
2*300
Netu'a (1966)* Elqosh (1949)* Biranit (1950)* Mattat (1979)* Abbirim (1980)

40
al-Nabi Rubin
1*000
Kafr Rosenwald (1967)* Shetula (1969)

56
al-Nahr
610
Ben 'Ammi (1949)

107
al-Ruways
330
--

86
al-Sumayriyya
760
Shomera (1949)* Rosenwald (1967)* Shetula (1969)

58
al-Tall
300
--

45
al-Zib
1*910
Kibbutz Geshar ha-Ziv (1949)

84
Amqa
1*240
Amqa (1949)

44
Arab al-Samniyya
200
Ya'ara (1950)

54
Dayr al-Qasi
2*300
Elqosh (1949)* Netu'a (1966)* Mattat (1979)* Abbirim (1980)

41
Iqrit
490
Netiv ha-Shayyara (1950)

95
Kafr 'Inan
360
Kefar Chananya (1989)

42
Khirbat 'Iribbin
360
Adamit (1958)

60
Khirbat Jiddin
1*500
Yechi'am (1947)* Ga'ton (1948)

85
Kuwaykat
1*050
Beyt ha-'Emeq (1949)

105
Mi'ar
770
Segev (1953)* Ya'ad (1975)* Manof (1980)

61
Suhmata
1*130
Chosen (1949)

38
Suruh
1*000
Shomera (1949)* Kefar Rosenwald (1967)* Shetula (1969)

39
Tarbikha
1*000
Shomera (1949)* Kefar Rosenwald (1967)* Shetula (1969)

59
Umm al-Faraj
800
Ben 'Ammi (1949)



------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Baysan District
No. from Map
Name of Palestinian Village
1944-1945 Population
Israeli Settlement

199
al-Ashrafiyya
230
Reshafim (1948)* Sheluchot (1948)

148
al-Bira
260
--

214
al-Fatur
110
--

198
al-Ghazzawiyya
1*020
Ma'oz Chayyim (1937)* Newe Eytan (1938)

194
al-Hamidiyya
220
--

212
al-Hamra'
730
--

213
al-Khunayzir
260
Tirat Tzvi (1937)

188
al-Murassas
460
--

196
al-Sakhina
530
Tel 'Amal (1936)

210
al-Sammiriyya
250
Sde Terrumot (1951)

146
al-Tira
150
Kibbutz Gazit (1948)

209
Arab al-'Arida
150
Sde Eliyyahu (1939)

195
Arab al-Bawati
520
--

211
Arab al-Safa
650
--

149
Danna
190
--

208
Farwana
330
Rechov (1951)* Chawwat Eden

187
Jabbul
250
--

165
Kafra
430
--

166
Kawkab al-Hawa
300
--

147
Khirbat al-Taqa
n/a
--

167
Khirbat al-Zawiya
n/a
--

168
Khirbat Umm Sabuna
n/a
--

207
Masil al-Jizl
100
Kefar Ruppin (1938)

189
Qumya
440
En Charod-Ichud (1921)

145
Sirin
810
--

197
Tall al-Shawk
120
--

206
Umm 'Ajra
260
Shif'a (1950)

169
Yubla
210
--

193
Zab'a
170
Beyt Yosef (1937)



------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Gaza District
No. from Map
Name of Palestinian Village
1944-1945 Population
Israeli Settlement

316
al-Batani Al-Gharbi
980
--

317
al-Batani Al-Sharqi
650
--

397
al-Faluja
4*670
Qiryat Gat (1954)* Shahrar (9155)* Noga (1955)* Nir Chen (1955)* Nehora (1956)

371
al-Jaladiyya
360
--

400
al-Jiyya
1*230
Moshav Ge'a (1949)* Beyt Shiqma (`1950)

385
al-Jura
2*420
Ashqelon (1948)

386
al-Khisas
150
Ashqelon (1948)

319
al-Masmiyya al-Kabira
2*520
Bene Re'em (1949)* Chatzav (1949)* Yinnon (1952)* Achawa (1976)

364
al-Masmiyya al-Saghira
530
Masmiyya shalom (1950)* Kefar ha-Rif (1956)

416
al-Muharraqa
580
Yakhini (1950)

369
al-Sawafir al-Gharbiyya
1*030
Merkaz Shappira (1948)* Massu'ot Yitzchaq (1949)* Deganim

368
al-Sawafir al-Shamaliyya
680
--

370
al-Sawafir al-Sharqiyya
970
En Tzurim (1949)* Shafir (1949)* Zerachya (1950)* Nir Banim (1954)

313
Arab Suqrir
390
Nir Gallim (1949)* Ashdod (1955)

401
Barbara
2*410
Mavqi'im (1949)* Talmey Yafe (1950)

314
Barqa
890
--

388
Bayt 'Affa
700
--

367
Bayt Daras
2*750
Azriqam (1950)* Emunim (1950)* Giv'ati (1950)

403
Bayt Jirja
940
--

399
Bayt Tima
1*060
--

372
Bi'lin
180
--

408
Burayr
2*740
Beror Chayil (1948)* Telamim (1950)* Cheletz (1950)* Sde David (1955)* Zohar (1956)

410
Dayr Sunayd
730
--

411
Dimra
520
Erez (1949)

384
Hamama
5*010
Nitzanim (9143)* Nitzanim-Kefar ha-No'ar (1949)* Beyt 'Ezra (1850)

390
Hatta
970
Zavdi'el (1950)* Alumma (1965)

402
Hiribya
2*240
Ziqim (1949)* Karmiyya (1950)* Yad Mordekhay (1943)

413
Huj
810
Dorot (1941)

404
Hulayqat
420
--

382
Ibdis
540
--

405
Iraq al-Manshiyya
2*010
Kibbutz Gat (1941)* Qiryat Gat (1954)* Sde Moshe (1956)

389
Iraq Suwaydan
660
Yad Natan (1953)* 'Otzem (1955)

315
Isdud
4*620
Sde 'Uzziyyahu (1950)* Shetulim (1950)* Bene Darom (1949)* Gan ha-Darom (1953)

383
Julis
1*030
Hodiyya (1949)

381
Jusayr
1*180
Menucha (1953)* Wardon (1968)

391
Karatiyya
1*370
Qomemiyyut (1950)* Rewacha (1953)* Nehora (1956)

415
Kawfakha
500
Nir 'Aqiva (1953)

398
Kawkaba
680
Kokhav Mikha'el (1950)

412
Najd
620
Sderot (1951)* Or ha-Ner (1957)

387
Ni'ilya
1*310
Ashqelon (1948)

365
Qastina
890
Kefar Warburg (1939)* 'Arugot (1949)* Kefar Achim (1949)* Avigdor (1950)* Qiryat Mal'akhi (1951)

409
Simsim
1*290
Gevar'am (1942)

380
Summil
950
Qedma (1946)* Segula (1953)* Menucha (1953)* Nachala (1953)* Wardon (1968)

366
Tall al-Turmus
760
Timmorim (1954)

318
Yasur
1*070
Talmay Yechi'el (1949)* Bene 'Ayish (1958)



------------------------------------------------------------------------------





Beersheba District
No. from Map
Name of Palestinian Village
1944-1945 Population
Israeli Settlement

417
al-'Imara
n/a
Urim (1948)

414
al-Jammama
n/a
Ruchama (1944)

418
al-Khalasa
n/a
--



------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Hebron District
No. from Map
Name of Palestinian Village
1944-1945 Population
Israeli Settlement

375
Ajjur
3*730
Agur (1950)* Tzafririm (1958)* Li-O'n (1960)* Giv'at Yesh'ayahu (1958)* Tirosh (1955)

407
al-Dawayima
3*710
Amatzya (1955)

406
al-Qubayba
1*060
Lakhish (1955)

378
Barqusya
330
--

396
Bayt Jibrin
2*430
Beyt Guvrin (1949)

374
Bayt Nattif
2*150
Netiv haLamed-He (1949)* Avi'ezer (1958)* Roglit (1958)* Newe Mikha'el (1958)

376
Dayr al-Dubban
730
Luzit (1955)

395
Dayr Al-Nakhkhas
600
--

394
Khirbat Umm Burj
140
Nechusha (1982)

393
Kudna
450
Beyt Nir (1955)

361
Mughallis
540
Gefen (1955)

377
Ra'na
190
Gal-On (1946)

373
Tall al-Safi
1*290
--

360
Zakariyya
1*180
Zekharya (1950)

392
Zayta
330
--

379
Zikrin
960
--



------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Jerusalem District
No. from Map
Name of Palestinian Village
1944-1945 Population
Israeli Settlement

359
al-Burayj
720
Sedot Mikha (1955)

346
al-Jura
420
Ora (1950)

354
Allar
440
Matta' (1950)* Bar-Giyyora (1950)

345
al-Mahila
1*940
Manachat (1949)

351
al-Qabu
260
Mevo Betar (1950)

334
al-Qastal
90
Ma'oz Tziyyon (1951)

347
al-Walaja
1*650
Amminadav (1950)

348
Aqqur
40
--

328
Artuf
350
Nacham (1950)

344
Ayn Karim
3*180
Beyt Zayit (1949)* Even Sapir (1949)

353
Bayt 'Itab
540
Nes Harim (1950)

330
Bayt Mahsir
2*400
Beyt Me'ir (1950)* Mesillat Tziyyon (1950)

333
Bayt Naqquba
240
Beyt Neqofa (1949)

296
Bayt Thul
260
Nataf (1982)

340
Bayt Umm al-Mays
70
--

357
Dayr Aban
2*100
Tzor'a (1948)* Machseya (1950)* Beyt Shemesh (1950)* Yish'I (1950)

352
Dayr al-Hawa
60
--

349
Dayr al-Shaykh
220
--

339
Dayr 'Amr
10
--

325
Dayr Rafat
430
Giv'at Shemesh (1954)

337
Dayr Yasin
610
Giv'at Sha'ul Bet (1949)

329
Ishwa'
620
Eshta'ol (1949)

327
Islin
260
Eshta'ol (1949)

358
Jarash
190
--

341
Kasla
280
Ramat Razi'el (1948)* Kesalon (1952)

342
Khirbat al-Lawz
450
--

355
Khirbat al-Tannur
n/a
Matta (1950)

332
Khirbat al-'Umur
270
Giv'at Ye'arim (1950)

324
Kirbat Ism Allah
20
--

336
Lifta
2*550
Mey Niftoach*Giv'at Sha'ul

295
Nitaf
40
--

335
Qalunya
910
Mevasseret Yerushalayim (1956)

350
Ras Abu 'Ammar
620
Tzur Hadassa (1960)

326
Sar'a
340
Tarum (1950)

331
Saris
560
Shoresh (1948)* Sho'eva (1950)

343
Sataf
540
--

338
Suba
620
Kibbutz Tzova (1948)

356
Sufla
60
--



------------------------------------------------------------------------------





Safad District
No. from Map
Name of Palestinian Village
1944-1945 Population
Israeli Settlement

1
Abil Qamh
330
Yuval (1952)

89
Akbara
390
--

14
al-'Abisiyya
1*220
Amir (1939)* Kefar Szold (1942)

98
al-Butayha
n/a
Almagor (1961)

22
al-Buwayziyya
510
--

17
al-Dawwara
700
Kibbutz 'Amir (1939)* Sde Nechemya (1940)

30
al-Dirbashiyya
310
--

77
al-Dirdara
100
--

94
al-Farradiyya
670
Parod (1949)* Shefer (1950)

19
al-Hamra'
n/a
--

51
al-Husayniyya
340
Chulata (1937)* Sde Eli'ezer (1952)

80
al-Ja'una
1*150
Ro'sh Pinna (1878)

10
al-Khalisa
1*840
Qiryat Shemona (1950)

49
Alma
950
'Alma (1949)

6
al-Mansiyhiyya
n/a
--

11
al-Mansura
360
Sha'ar Yashuv (1940)

20
al-Muftakhira
350
Shamir (1944)

26
al-Nabi Yusha'
70
Ramot Naftali (1945)

16
al-Na'ima
1*030
Ne'ot Mordekhay (1946)* Kefar Blum (1943)* Beyt Hillel (1940)

92
al-Qudayriyya
390
Kachel (1980)

52
al-Ras al-Ahmar
620
Kerem Ben Zimra (1949)

18
al-Salihiyya
1*520
--

87
al-Sammu'I
310
Kefar Shammay (1949)* Amirim (1950)

3
al-Sanbariyya
130
Ma'yan Barukh (1947)* Dafna (1939)

93
al-Shuna
170
--

35
al-'Ulmaniyya
260
--

29
al-'Urayfiyya
n/a
--

71
al-Wayziiyya
100
--

88
al-Zahiriyya al-Tahta
350
Safad (1948)

90
al-Zanghariyya
840
Elifelet (1949)

21
al-Zawiya
760
--

2
al-Zuq al-Fawqani
160
Kefar Gil'adi (1916)

8
al-Zuq al-Tahtani
1*050
Beyt Hillel (1940)

72
Ammuqa
140
Ammuqa (1980)

99
Arab al-Shamalina
650
--

34
Arab al-Zubayd
890
--

82
Ayn al-Zaytun
820
--

31
Baysamun
20
--

81
Biriyya
240
Biriyya (1945)

66
Dallata
360
Dalton (1950)

36
Dayshum
590
Dishon (1953)

48
Fara
320
--

75
Fir'im
740
--

63
Ghabbatiyya
60
--

25
Ghuraba
220
Gonen (1951)

33
Harrawi
n/a
--

9
Hunin
1*620
Misgav 'Am (1945)* Margaliyyot (1951)

24
Jahula
420
--

91
Jubb Yusuf
170
'Ammi'ad (1946)

47
Kafr Bir'im
710
Dovev (1963)* Bar'am (1949)

5
Khan al-Duwayr
260
--

79
Khirbat al-Muntar
n/a
--

97
Khirbat Karraza
n/a
--

7
al-Khisas
470
Qiryat Shemona (1950)

23
Khiyam al-Walid
208
Lahavot ha-Bashan (1945)

69
Kirad al-Baqqara
360
--

68
Kirad al-Ghannama
350
--

12
Lazzaza
230
--

13
Madahil
n/a
--

28
al-Malikiyya
360
Malkiyya (1949)

32
Mallaha
890
--

78
Mansurat al-Khayt
200
--

67
Marus
80
--

83
Mirun
290
Meron (1949)

76
Mughr al-Khayt
490
Chatzor ha-Gelilit (1953)

73
Qabba'a
460
--

27
Qadas
390
Yiftach (1948)* Malkiyya (1949)* Ramot Naftali (1945)

74
Qaddita
240
--

15
Qaytiyya
940
Kefar Blum (1943)

62
Sabalan
70
--

64
Safsaf
910
Sifsofa (1949)* Bar Yochay (1979)

37
Saliha
1*070
Yir'on (1949)* Avivim (1960)

53
Sa'sa
1*130
Sasa (1949)

4
al-Shawka al-Tahta
200
--

65
Taytaba
530
--

50
Tulayl
340
Chulata (1937)

70
Yarda
20
Ayyelet ha-Shahar (1948)* Mishmar ha-Yarden (1949)



------------------------------------------------------------------------------





Tiberiash District
No. from Map
Name of Palestinian Village
1944-1945 Population
Israeli Settlement

143
al-Dalhamiyya
410
--

130
al-Hamma
290
--

111
al-Majdal
360
Migdal (1910)

127
al-Manara
490
--

131
al-Manshiyya
n/a
Beyt Zera' (1926)

102
al--Mansura
2*140
Chazon (1969)* Tefachot (1980)* Kallanit (1980)* Ravid (1981)

118
al-Nuqayb
320
Kibbutz of 'En Gev

100
al-Samakiyya
380
Amnon (1983)* Korazin (1983)

128
al-Samra
290
ha-'On (1949)

120
al-Shajara
470
--

104
al-Tabigha
330
--

132
al-'Ubaydiyya
870
--

144
Awlam
720
--

108
Ghuwayr Abu Shusha
1*240
Ginnosar (1937)* Livnim (1982)

142
Hadatha
520
--

112
Hittin
1*190
Arbel (1949)* Kefar Zetim (1950)* Ravid (1949)

126
Kafr Sabt
480
--

109
Khirbat al-Wa'ra al-Sawda
1*870
--

117
Lubya
2*350
Lavi (1949)

133
Ma'dhar
480
Kefar Qish (1946)

119
Nasir al-Din
90
--

113
Nimrin
320
Achuzzat Naftali (1949)

129
Samakh
3*460
Massada (1937)* Sha'ar ha-Golan (1937)* Ma'agan (1949)* Tel Qatzir (1949)

110
Wadi al-Hamam
n/a
--

101
Yaquq
210
Chuqoq (1943)



------------------------------------------------------------------------------



An-Naasirah District
No. from Map
Name of Palestinian Village
1944-1945 Population
Israeli Settlement

141
al-Mujaydil
1*900
Yif'at (1926)* Migdal ha-'Emeq (1952)

150
Indur
620
--

136
Ma'lul
690
Timurim (1948)

121
Saffuriyya
4*330
Tzippori (1949)* ha-Solelim (1949)* Allon ha-Galil (1980)* Hosha'aya (1981)* Chanton (1984)



------------------------------------------------------------------------------





x Tulkarm District
No. from Map
Name of Palestinian Village
1944-1945 Population
Israeli Settlement

224
al-Jalama
70
--

223
al-Manshiyya
260
'En ha-Coresh (1931)* Giv'at Chayyim (1932)* Archituv (1951)

229
Bayyarat Hannun
n/a
--

231
Fardisya
20
--

230
Ghabat Kafr Sur
740
Beyt Yahoshu's (1938)* Tel Yitzchaq (1938)* Kefar Netter (1839)

234
Kafr Saba
1*270
Kefar Sava (1948)* Beyt Berl (1947)*

222
Khirbat al-Majdal
n/a
--

232
Khirbat al-Zababida
n/a
Yaqum (1947)* Ga'ash (1951)

228
Khirbat Bayt Lid
460
Nordiyya (1948)

221
Khirbat Zalafa
210
--

233
Miska
880
Sde Warburg (1938)* Mishmeret (1946)

225
Qaqun
1*970
Kibbutz ha-Ma'pil* Gan Yoshiyya (1949)* Ometz (1949)* 'Olesh (1949)* Channi'el (1950)* Yikkon

218
Raml Zayta
140
Sde Yitzchaq (1952)* Chadera (1890)

235
Tabsur
n/a
Ra'anana (1921)* Batzra (1946)

227
Umm Khalid
970
Sha'ar Chefer (1953)

220
Wadi al-Hawarith
1*330
Kefar ha-Ro'e (1934)* Ge'uley Teyman (1947)

226
Wadi Qabbani
320
Kibbutz ha-'Ogen (1947)



------------------------------------------------------------------------------





Jenin District
No. from Map
Name of Palestinian Village
1944-1945 Population
Israeli Settlement

177
al-Lajjun
1*103
Kibbutz Megiddo (1949)

192
al-Mazar
270
Perazon (1953)* Meytav (1954)* Gan Nir (1987)

170
Ayn al-Mansi
90
--

200
Khirbat al-Jawfa
n/a
Ma'ale Gilbo'a (1962)

191
Nuris
570
Nurit (1950)

190
Zir'in
1*420
Yizre'el (1948)



------------------------------------------------------------------------------





Yaffa District
No. from Map
Name of Palestinian Village
1944-1945 Population
Israeli Settlement

241
Abu Kishk
1*900
--

254
al-Abbasiyya
5*650
Yehud (1948)* Magshimim (1949)* Ganne Yehuda (1951)* Ganne Tiqwa (1953)* Savyon (1954)

236
al-Haram
520
Rishpon (1936)* Kefar Shemaryahu (1937)

248
al-Jammasin al-Gharbi
1*080
--

246
al-Jammasin al-Sharqi
730
--

257
al-Khayriyya
1*420
Kefar Azar (1932)* Ramat Pinqas (1952)* Ramat Ef'al (1969)

249
al-Mas'udiyya
850
--

244
al-Mirr
170
--

240
al-Muwaylih
360
Newe Yaraq (1951)

263
al-Safiriyya
3*070
Tzafriyya (1949)* Kefar Chabad (1949)* Achi'ezer (1950)* Tochelet (1951)* Shafrir(1949)

242
al-Sawalima
800
--

243
al-Shaykh Muwannis
1*930
--

261
Bayt Dajan
3*840
Beyt Dagan (1948)* Mishmar ha'Shiva (1949)* Chemed (1950)* Gannot (1953)

239
Biyar 'Adas
300
Adanim (1950)* Elishama (1951)

245
Fajja
1*200
Petach Tiqwa (1878)

238
Ijlil al-Qibliyya
470
--

237
Ijlil al-Shamaliyya
190
Gelil Yam (1943)

247
Jarisha
190
--

259
Kafr 'Ana
2*800
Yagel (1950)* Newe Efrayim (1953)

253
Rantiya
590
Mazor (1948)* Nofekh (1948)* Rinnatya (1948)

256
Salama
6*730
--

255
Saqiya
1*100
Or Yehuda (1950)

258
Yazur
4*030
Miqwe Yisrael (1870)* Azor (1948)




Benny Morris* The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem* 1947-1949. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press* 1988. (a full list of the villages and neighbors at the beginning of the book. Updated list in the last Hebrezw edition and 2004 English edition).

Baruch Kimmerling* Zionism and Territory: The Socioterritorial Dimension of Zionist Politics. Berkeley: Institute of International Studies* University of California . 1983







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