Al-Jalama, Haifa

Al-Jalama (Arabic: الجلمة) was a Palestinian village about 14 kilometres south-east of Haifa. It was depopulated in 1948.

Al-Jalama

الجلمة
Jalame Prison (Kishon Detention Center)
Etymology: The hill[1]
1870s map
1940s map
modern map
1940s with modern overlay map
A series of historical maps of the area around Al-Jalama, Haifa (click the buttons)
Al-Jalama
Location within Mandatory Palestine
Coordinates: 32°43′24″N 35°05′27″E
Palestine grid158/236
Geopolitical entityMandatory Palestine
SubdistrictHaifa
Area
  Total7,713 dunams (7.713 km2 or 2.978 sq mi)

History

The village was situated just above Khirbat Asafna. Excavations between 1964 and 1971 showed that the site had been occupied intermittently from the first to the fourth century CE.[3]

In the British Mandate period in Palestine, the village was classified as a hamlet in the Palestine Index Gazetteer.[2] In the 1931 census of Palestine, Al-Jalama was counted under Isfiya.[4]

In 1948 al-Jalama was depopulated and the area was subsequently incorporated into the State of Israel after the war. The Kishon prison, also known as the Al Jalame detention centre, was later established on the village site.[5]

The Palestinian historian Walid Khalidi described the village site in 1992: "A military camp occupies the area, which is covered by eucalyptus trees."[2]

gollark: I see. Maybe he should be RVPed.
gollark: It's possible. Presumably if I used an encoding which it was actually possible for other people to decode this would not be the case.
gollark: Not really. If I have a UTF-16 document with valid grammar/spelling and I convert it to UTF-8, the grammar/spelling is not altered.
gollark: That's grammar/spelling, not *encoding*.
gollark: <@!160279332454006795> REVIEW‽

See also

  • List of Arab towns and villages depopulated during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War

References

  1. Palmer, 1881, p. 109
  2. Khalidi, 1992, p. 167
  3. Weinberg, 1988, cited in Khalidi, 1992, p. 167
  4. Mills, 1932, p. 92
  5. Sherwood, Harriet (22 January 2012). "Palestinian children – alone and bewildered – in Israel's Al Jalame jail". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 January 2012.

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.