Supplement $0. 2. to C^E Palestine Dsa?Ette Bo.574 of Sty <S®Att

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Supplement $0. 2. to C^E Palestine Dsa?Ette Bo.574 of Sty <S®Att Supplement $0. 2. to C^e Palestine dSa?ette Bo. 574 of Sty <S®att% 1936. EXPROPRIATION OF LAND ORDINANCES, 1926-1935. CERTIFICATE I, LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR ARTHUR GRENFELL WAUCHOPE, High Commissioner for Palestine, hereby certify that the construction of an Elementary Boys' School in the town of Safad, in the Sub-District of Safad, is an undertaking of a public nature within the meaning of the Expropriation of Land Ordinances, 1926-1935. A plan of the site is deposited at the offices of the District Officer, Safad, and of the Director of Land Registration, Jerusalem. A. G. WAUCHOPE 25th February, 1936. High Commissioner. (L/42/36) — 109 — — 110 — PALESTINE-SYRIA CUSTOMS AGREEMENT, 1929. NOTICE The following supplementary list of articles wholly manufactured in Palestine which fall under paragraphs (c) and (d) of Article 4 of the Palestine-Syria Customs Agreement, 1929, is published for information, in accordance with the terms of that Article, together with the names and addresses of the manufacturers. WEARING APPAREL TEL AVIV. "Serge-adin" H. Skolnik, 24, Azlan St. Artificial silk tissues and artificial silk wear. "Arnhemia" E. Dunn & A. Polak, Knitted wear. 65, Herzl St. I. Haftka, 53, Nachlat Benjamin St. Wearing apparel, bathing and dressing gowns. I. M. Bayer, 123, Nachlat Benjamin St. All kinds of knitted wearing ap• parel. "Shic Varshai" Haim Sznelling, Ladies' and children's wearing 92, Allenby Road. apparel. "Salmah" Solo Sprai & Wolpert, Ladies' wearing apparel. 4, Nachlat Benjamin St. JERUSALEM. "J.K.R.A." J. Krelenstein & Son and Babies' suits of artificial silk, A. Rot stein, Zichron Moshe. wool and cotton. J. Berger, 41, Ussishkin Road, New Neckties. Bezalel. JAFFA. "Tricoten" Jehuda Tentski, Knitted wear. Florentin Quarter, 26, Menashe Azlan Street. "Rekein" I. Sweranowsky, Knitted wearing apparel. Florentine Quarter, 7, Meir Zion Street. HAIFA. "Hasorgim" The General Federation of Pull-overs, jerseys, children's Jewish Labourers in Palestine, suits and underwear for men, Kvuzat Hahugim Village, near Eiu ladies and children. Haiod. _ 111 _ TEXTILES. HAIFA. "Ata" Textiles Co. Ltd. Cotton yarns, cotton threads, cot• Kfar Ata, Haifa Bay. ton and mixed tissue. HOUSEHOLD ARTICLES. HAIFA. Bruno Rabinovitz, Nazareth Road, Household articles and electrical near Rutenberg Station. fittings. BRASSWARE. TEL AVIV. J. Zaksenberg, Orange juice squeezing machines, taps and all kinds of brassware. Ha'alia St., Corner Salemeh St. WIRE NETTINGS. TEL AVIV. Mendel & Perlman, Galvanized wire nettings, barbed Bnei Brak, near Tel Aviv; wire and clamps. office in Tel Aviv, 94, Nachlat Benjamin Street. UPHOLSTERY. TEL AVIV. "Etun" R. Hirsch & P. Harn, Upholstery and curtain tissue, 22, Aliya Street. sofa and table covers and similar articles. PRINTINGS. TEL AVIV. Graphical Works Institute Embossed and printed labels and Y. Ashour, D. Kretschmer & M. other printings. Kirchheimer, 24, Avoda Street. FANCY LEATHER GOODS. TEL AVIV. J. Obstblum, Fancy leather goods, 138, Rothschild Boulevard, Arie Gurman, Leather coats. 83, Allenby Road. — 112 — Jacob Bornstein, Leather gloves. 37, Rashi Street. Winer and Rosenzweig, Fancy leather goods. 2, Melech Koresh St. "Leviathan" Co. Ltd., Upper and sole leather. S. L. Pieprz, Factory address: Yazour, near Jaffa. Office address : 22, Kalisher St., Tel Aviv JAFFA. Gruen & Friedlaender Ltd., Fancy leather goods. Schechunat Barselai, Hagra St., (Beth Freund). CANNED FISH. TEL AVIV. J. Ehrlich, Smoked and pickled fish and fish Nachlat Itzchak, near Tel Aviv. in oil. SOAP. TEL AVIV. Jacques (Jacob) I. Leon & Counio, Soap. Montefiori Quarter, near Sarona, Schederot Hatikva. RlSHON-LE-TsiYON. Sherf Soap Factorv Co. Common, toilet, medical and A. Sh. H. Sherf & B. Simon. shaving soap. CITRUS JUICE. JAFFA. "Tov-Tov" Albert Davidson, Lemonades of citrus juice and Bnei-Brak, near Pardess Katz. sweetened citrus juice. INSECTICIDES. JAFFA. "Perulina" David Altman, Perfumed liquid soap and insect• (Ismailoff House) Florentin St., Jaffa. icides. SHOE POLISH AND OTHER LEATHER PREPARATIONS. TEL AVIV. "EOS" Chemical Works, Shoe polish, colours for soles and Dr. S. Babad, 51, Nachmani St. preparations for hardening leath• Factorv address : 17, Hachashmal St, er. — 113 — SILK TISSUES. TEL AVIV. "Delfiner's" Silk Industry Ltd. Artificial silk and silk tissues. Delfiner & Yohananoff, Hayarden Street. DENTAL MATERIAL. HAIFA. The Newland Dental Fillings Manu• Filling porcelain, oxyphosphate factory, Ahuza, Mount Carmel. cement and drytex stone cement. ALUMINUM WARE. TEL AVIV. "Metallum" M. Epstein, Aluminium and silver plated 6, Ezra St. brass ware. BUTTONS. JERUSALEM. Moses Abeles, Bait Vegan. Buttons. PAINTS AND COLOURS. HAIFA. Dr. A. Marberger, All kinds of dry paints and colours. Industrial Centre, Haifa Bay. IRON WORKS. HAIFA. Mr. Braunstern, Iron and steel windows, doors, Station Street. iron rolling gates and similar iron works. J. HATHORN HALL 25th February, 1936. Chief Secretary. (C7393/31). — 114 — DISEASES OF ANIMALS ORDINANCE, 1926. RULES MADE BY THE HIGH COMMISSIONER UNDER SECTION 19. IN EXERCISE of the powers vested in him by section 19 of the Diseases of Animals Ordinance, 1926, the High Commissioner has made the following rules :— Citation. 1. These rules may be cited as the Animal Quarantine (Amend• ment) Rules, 1936. Interpretation. 2. In these rules the term "principal rules" shall mean the Animal Quarantine Rules, 1931. Addition of new 3. The schedule to the principal rules shall be amended by the paragraph to addition of the following paragraph after paragraph X thereof, as schedule to the enacted by rule 3 of the Quarantine (Amendment) Rules (No. 9), principal rules. 1935. " Y. IRISH FREE STATE. (1) Cattle for breeding purposes or for the purpose of slaughter in quarantine may be imported from the Irish Free State. (2) Any person who intends to import cattle for breeding pur• poses shall obtain before shipment of any such cattle a permit from the Chief Veterinary Officer. The Chief Veterinary Officer may refuse to grant, or, when granted, may suspend or revoke any permit issued. (3) Any cattle shipped to Palestine directly from a port in the Irish Free State shall be accompanied by a certificate signed by a Veterinary Officer of the Government of the Irish Free State to the effect :— (i) that no cases of foot-and-mouth disease, cattle plague or contagious bovine pleuro-pneumonia have occurred in the Irish Free State during the six months immediately preced• ing the shipment of the cattle to Palestine, and (ii) that such cattle have been examined by him within twenty- four hours of the date of their shipment and have been found free from any infectious or contagious disease and, in addition, (iii) in the case of cattle for breeding purposes that the cattle have been tested for tuberculosis and bovine contagious abortion and found free from such diseases. — 115 — (4) The certificate required by sub-rule (3) of this paragraph shall state the pedigree numbers of the cattle, in the case of cattle for breeding purposes, and the dates on which the tests referred to in (iii) of that sub-rule have been applied. (5) Cattle for breeding purposes shall, on arrival in Palestine, be detained in quarantine for a period of forty-eight hours and, in the case of female cattle, they shall be strictly isolated on premises approved by the Chief Veterinary Officer and tested for bovine con• tagious abortion after an interval of thirty days from the date on which the test was made in the Irish Free State. Any animal which gives a positive reaction shall be slaughtered or otherwise dealt with as the Chief Veterinary Officer directs. (6) Any cattle shipped to Palestine via the port of Liverpool in Great Britain, shall, in addition to the certificate required by sub- rule (3) of this paragraph, be accompanied by a certificate issued by a Veterinary Inspector of the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, Great Britain, to the effect that the cattle have not come in contact with any other stock at the port of Liverpool while awaiting embarkation for Palestine. " 4. The Animal Quarantine (Amendment) Rules, 1936, pub• !Revoking rules lished in Palestine Gazette No. 565 of the 23rd January, 1936, are in Gazette dated 23rd January, hereby revoked. 1936. By His Excellency's Command, J. HATHORN HALL 3rd March, 1936. Chief Secretary. (A/91/35). DISEASES OF ANIMALS ORDINANCE, 1926. NOTICE BY THE HIGH COMMISSIONER UNDER SECTION 16. IN EXERCISE of the powers vested in him by section 16 of the Diseases of Animals Ordinance, 1926, the High Commissioner has declared that the undermentioned localities in the Sub-District of Haifa and the lands belonging thereto are infected areas so far as poultry are concerned, on account of the existence of cell inclusion disease of poultry therein : — 116 — Zikhron Ya'aqov Kafr Qari' Bureika Qannir Giv'at Adda Ara iirab at Turkman Wadi Ara Sufsafa Ar'ara Pardess Hanna Sindyana Karkur Sabbarin Binyamina Tantura Zarghanya Ein Ghazal Arab Barrdt Qisarya Ein Haud Qisarya Jaba' Mayer Shefeya Al Mazar Fureidis Kafr Lam Bat Shelomo Sarafand By His Excellency's Command, J. HATHORN HALL 25th February, 1936. Chief Secretary. (A/46/31). PRESS ORDINANCE, 1933. NOTICE OP GRANT OF A PERMIT TO PUBLISH A NEWSPAPER. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a permit No. S. 94 has been granted on the 31st day of January, 1936, under the hand of the District Commissioner, Southern District, to MESSRS. HERMAN SWET and ISSAI KLINOW, residing at Rehavia, Jerusa• lem, and 56, Yehuda Halevy St., Tel Aviv, to publish once a week at the printing press situated at 54, Mazeh Street, Tel-Aviv, a newspaper in the Hebrew language, entitled Shiva'a Yamim (Seven Days), treating of theatre, concert, cinema and radio programmes and under the editorship of MR. SHMUEL MAISLIS. J. HATHORN HALL 26th February, 1936. Chief Secretary. (K/89/35). PRESS ORDINANCE, 1933. NOTICE OF CHANGE OF PERMIT GRANTED FOR PUBLICATION OF A NEWSPAPER. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the following change is made in the notice dated the 15th September, 1934, published in the Palestine Gazette of the 20th Septem• ber, 1934:— The "Sviataia Zemlia" religious review' will be edited by the REV.
Recommended publications
  • Migration of Eretz Yisrael Arabs Between December 1, 1947 and June 1, 1948
    [Intelligence Service (Arab Section)] June 30, 1948 Migration of Eretz Yisrael Arabs between December 1, 1947 and June 1, 1948 Contents 1. General introduction. 2. Basic figures on Arab migration 3. National phases of evacuation and migration 4. Causes of Arab migration 5. Arab migration trajectories and absorption issues Annexes 1. Regional reviews analyzing migration issues in each area [Missing from document] 2. Charts of villages evacuated by area, noting the causes for migration and migration trajectories for every village General introduction The purpose of this overview is to attempt to evaluate the intensity of the migration and its various development phases, elucidate the different factors that impacted population movement directly and assess the main migration trajectories. Of course, given the nature of statistical figures in Eretz Yisrael in general, which are, in themselves, deficient, it would be difficult to determine with certainty absolute numbers regarding the migration movement, but it appears that the figures provided herein, even if not certain, are close to the truth. Hence, a margin of error of ten to fifteen percent needs to be taken into account. The figures on the population in the area that lies outside the State of Israel are less accurate, and the margin of error is greater. This review summarizes the situation up until June 1st, 1948 (only in one case – the evacuation of Jenin, does it include a later occurrence). Basic figures on Arab population movement in Eretz Yisrael a. At the time of the UN declaration [resolution] regarding the division of Eretz Yisrael, the following figures applied within the borders of the Hebrew state: 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Scouting Palestinian Territory, 1940- 1948
    Scouting In the years between 1943 and1948, squads of young scouts from the Haganah, the pre- Palestinian state armed organization and forerunner of Territory, 1940- the Israel Defense Forces, were employed to gather intelligence about Palestinian villages 1948: and urban neighborhoods1 in preparation for Haganah Village a future conflict and occupation, and as part of a more general project of creating files on Files, Aerial Photos, target sites.2 and Surveys The information was usually collected Rona Sela under the guise of nature lessons aimed at getting to know the country, or of hikes that were common in that period. The scouts systematically built up a database of geographical, topographical and planning information about the villages and population centers. This included detailed descriptions of roads, neighborhoods, houses, public buildings, objects, wells, Palmach Squadron, Al-Majdal (Gaza District), caves, wadis, and so forth. 1947, Aerial Photograph, Haganah Archive. Overall, this intelligence effort was [ 38 ] Scouting Palestinian Territory, 1940-1948: Haganah Village Files, Aerial Photos, and Surveys known as the “Village Files” project, reflecting the fact that most of the sites about which information was collected were the numerous Palestinian villages existing in Palestine before 1948, and that documenting those villages was a central mission. The scouts’ work included perspective sketches, maps, drawings and photographs of each village and its surroundings. The maps used by the scouts were collected in a secret base on Mapu Street in Tel Aviv, located in a cellar that was given the cover name of “the engineering office” and code-named “the roof.” Detailed information about the villages was meticulously catalogued and organized in files by the planning bureau of the Haganah general staff, then held in the organization’s territorial command centers around the country.
    [Show full text]
  • United Nations Conciliation.Ccmmg3sionfor Paiestine
    UNITED NATIONS CONCILIATION.CCMMG3SIONFOR PAIESTINE RESTRICTEb Com,Tech&'Add; 1 ORIGINAL: ENGLISH APPENDIX J$ NON - JlXWISHPOPULATION WITHIN THE BOUNDARXESHELD BY THE ISRAEL DBFENCEARMY ON X5.49 AS ON 1;4-,45 IN ACCORDANCEWITH THE PALESTINE GOVERNMENT VILLAGE STATISTICS, APRIL 1945. CONTENTS Pages SUMMARY..,,... 1 ACRE SUB DISTRICT . , , . 2 - 3 SAPAD II . c ., * ., e .* 4-6 TIBERIAS II . ..at** 7 NAZARETH II b b ..*.*,... 8 II - 10 BEISAN l . ,....*. I 9 II HATFA (I l l ..* a.* 6 a 11 - 12 II JENIX l ..,..b *.,. J.3 TULKAREM tt . ..C..4.. 14 11 JAFFA I ,..L ,r.r l b 14 II - RAMLE ,., ..* I.... 16 1.8 It JERUSALEM .* . ...* l ,. 19 - 20 HEBRON II . ..r.rr..b 21 I1 22 - 23 GAZA .* l ..,.* l P * If BEERSHEXU ,,,..I..*** 24 SUMMARY OF NON - JEWISH'POPULATION Within the boundaries held 6~~the Israel Defence Army on 1.5.49 . AS ON 1.4.45 Jrr accordance with-. the Palestine Gp~ernment Village ‘. Statistics, April 1945, . SUB DISmICT MOSLEMS CHRISTIANS OTHERS TOTAL ACRE 47,290 11,150 6,940 65,380 SAFAD 44,510 1,630 780 46,920 TJBERIAS 22,450 2,360 1,290 26,100 NAZARETH 27,460 Xl, 040 3 38,500 BEISAN lT,92o 650 20 16,590 HAXFA 85,590 30,200 4,330 120,520 JENIN 8,390 60 8,450 TULJSAREM 229310, 10 22,320' JAFFA 93,070 16,300 330 1o9p7oo RAMIIEi 76,920 5,290 10 82,220 JERUSALEM 34,740 13,000 I 47,740 HEBRON 19,810 10 19,820 GAZA 69,230 160 * 69,390 BEERSHEBA 53,340 200 10 53,m TOT$L 621,030 92,060 13,710 7z6,8oo .
    [Show full text]
  • Israeli Settler-Colonialism and Apartheid Over Palestine
    Metula Majdal Shams Abil al-Qamh ! Neve Ativ Misgav Am Yuval Nimrod ! Al-Sanbariyya Kfar Gil'adi ZZ Ma'ayan Baruch ! MM Ein Qiniyye ! Dan Sanir Israeli Settler-Colonialism and Apartheid over Palestine Al-Sanbariyya DD Al-Manshiyya ! Dafna ! Mas'ada ! Al-Khisas Khan Al-Duwayr ¥ Huneen Al-Zuq Al-tahtani ! ! ! HaGoshrim Al Mansoura Margaliot Kiryat !Shmona al-Madahel G GLazGzaGza!G G G ! Al Khalsa Buq'ata Ethnic Cleansing and Population Transfer (1948 – present) G GBeGit GHil!GlelG Gal-'A!bisiyya Menara G G G G G G G Odem Qaytiyya Kfar Szold In order to establish exclusive Jewish-Israeli control, Israel has carried out a policy of population transfer. By fostering Jewish G G G!G SG dGe NG ehemia G AGl-NGa'iGmaG G G immigration and settlements, and forcibly displacing indigenous Palestinians, Israel has changed the demographic composition of the ¥ G G G G G G G !Al-Dawwara El-Rom G G G G G GAmG ir country. Today, 70% of Palestinians are refugees and internally displaced persons and approximately one half of the people are in exile G G GKfGar GB!lGumG G G G G G G SGalihiya abroad. None of them are allowed to return. L e b a n o n Shamir U N D ii s e n g a g e m e n tt O b s e rr v a tt ii o n F o rr c e s Al Buwayziyya! NeoG t MG oGrdGecGhaGi G ! G G G!G G G G Al-Hamra G GAl-GZawG iyGa G G ! Khiyam Al Walid Forcible transfer of Palestinians continues until today, mainly in the Southern District (Beersheba Region), the historical, coastal G G G G GAl-GMuGftskhara ! G G G G G G G Lehavot HaBashan Palestinian towns ("mixed towns") and in the occupied West Bank, in particular in the Israeli-prolaimed “greater Jerusalem”, the Jordan G G G G G G G Merom Golan Yiftah G G G G G G G Valley and the southern Hebron District.
    [Show full text]
  • Amplement 5ßo. 2 to Cï)E Palestme ®Alette Bo, Nu of Asmîr &Pttl, 1945
    amplement 5ßo. 2 to Cï)e palestme ®alette Bo, nu of asmîr &pttl, 1945. ROAD TRANSPORT ORDINANCE. RULES MADE BY THE HIGH COMMISSIONER UNDER SECTION 23. IN EXERCISE of the powers vested in him by section 23 of the Road Cap. 128. Transport Ordinance, the High Commissioner has made the following rules : — 1. These rules may be cited as the Road Transport (Routes and Citation. Tariffs) (Amendment) Rules (No. 2), 1943, and shall be read as one with the Road Transport (Routes and Tariffs) Regulations, 1934, Gaz: 1.3.34, hereinafter referred to as the principal Rules. p. 159. 2. Paragraph (b) of Schedule I to the principal Rules shall be Amendment of amended by the deletion of the following particulars appearing in the paragraph (b) column headed "Maximum Fare chargeable per Passenger" in Route of Schedule I A 1. :— to principal Bvtles "(d) Jerusalem—Ramie — 96 mils. (e) Jerusalem—Jaffa — 120 mils." and the substitution of the following therefor : — "(d) Jerusalem—Ramie — 100 mils. (e) Jerusalem—Jaffa — 132 mils." 3. Paragraph (a) of Schedule II to the principal Rules shall be re• Amendment of voked and the following substituted therefor : — paragraph (a) of Schedule II to "SCHEDULE II. principal Eules. HAIFA DISTRICT. (a) ROUTES WITHIN THE HAIFA DISTRICT. These Routes and the Stops thereon shall conform to those specified in the Permit No. Maximum Fare chargeable Description of Route ply per Passenger to Route Number of authorised Omnibuses of Maximum 1 Main Police Station-—Kingsway—Ard el 13 Main Police Station to Naza• Yahud—Nazareth Road to Yajur and reth Road — return via Station Road (East Exten• 7 mils per single journey.
    [Show full text]
  • The Palestinians in Israel Readings in History, Politics and Society
    The Palestinians in Israel Readings in History, Politics and Society Edited by Nadim N. Rouhana and Areej Sabbagh-Khoury 2011 Mada al-Carmel Arab Center for Applied Social Research The Palestinians in Israel: Readings in History, Politics and Society Edited by: Nadim N. Rouhana and Areej Sabbagh-Khoury اﻟﻔﻠﺴﻄﻴﻨﻴﻮن ﰲ إﴎاﺋﻴﻞ: ﻗﺮاءات ﰲ اﻟﺘﺎرﻳﺦ، واﻟﺴﻴﺎﺳﺔ، واملﺠﺘﻤﻊ ﺗﺤﺮﻳﺮ: ﻧﺪﻳﻢ روﺣﺎﻧﺎ وأرﻳﺞ ﺻﺒﺎغ-ﺧﻮري Editorial Board: Muhammad Amara, Mohammad Haj-Yahia, Mustafa Kabha, Rassem Khamaisi, Adel Manna, Khalil-Nakhleh, Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Mahmoud Yazbak Design and Production: Wael Wakeem ISBN 965-7308-18-6 © All Rights Reserved July 2011 by Mada Mada al-Carmel–Arab Center for Applied Social Research 51 Allenby St., P.O. Box 9132 Haifa 31090, Israel Tel. +972 4 8552035, Fax. +972 4 8525973 www.mada-research.org [email protected] 2 The Palestinians in Israel: Readings in History, Politics and Society Table of Contents Introduction Research on the Palestinians in Israel: Between the Academic and the Political 5 Areej Sabbagh-Khoury and Nadim N. Rouhana The Nakba 16 Honaida Ghanim The Internally Displaced Palestinians in Israel 26 Areej Sabbagh-Khoury The Military Government 47 Yair Bäuml The Conscription of the Druze into the Israeli Army 58 Kais M. Firro Emergency Regulations 67 Yousef Tayseer Jabareen The Massacre of Kufr Qassem 74 Adel Manna Yawm al-Ard (Land Day) 83 Khalil Nakhleh The Higher Follow-Up Committee for the Arab Citizens in Israel 90 Muhammad Amara Palestinian Political Prisoners 100 Abeer Baker National Priority Areas 110 Rassem Khamaisi The Indigenous Palestinian Bedouin of the Naqab: Forced Urbanization and Denied Recognition 120 Ismael Abu-Saad Palestinian Citizenship in Israel 128 Oren Yiftachel 3 Mada al-Carmel Arab Center for Applied Social Research Acknowledgements We would like to express our gratitude to a group of colleagues who helped make possible the project of writing this book and producing it in three languages.
    [Show full text]
  • F-Dyd Programme
    ‘Your memory shines in me’ in shines memory ‘Your St. John’s Wood Church, London NW8 London Church, Wood John’s St. Sunday, 1st April at 6:30pm at April 1st Sunday, 2007 Deir Yassin Day Day Yassin Deir Destroyed Palestinian villages Amqa Al-Tira (Tirat Al-Marj, Abu Shusha Umm Al-Zinat Deir 'Amr Kharruba, Al-Khayma Harrawi Al-Zuq Al-Tahtani Arab Al-Samniyya Al-Tira Al-Zu'biyya) Abu Zurayq Wa'arat Al-Sarris Deir Al-Hawa Khulda, Al-Kunayyisa (Arab Al-Hamdun), Awlam ('Ulam) Al-Bassa Umm Ajra Arab Al-Fuqara' Wadi Ara Deir Rafat Al-Latrun (Al-Atrun) Hunin, Al-Husayniyya Al-Dalhamiyya Al-Birwa Umm Sabuna, Khirbat (Arab Al-Shaykh Yajur, Ajjur Deir Al-Shaykh Al-Maghar (Al-Mughar) Jahula Ghuwayr Abu Shusha Al-Damun Yubla, Zab'a Muhammad Al-Hilu) Barqusya Deir Yassin Majdal Yaba Al-Ja'una (Abu Shusha) Deir Al-Qasi Al-Zawiya, Khirbat Arab Al-Nufay'at Bayt Jibrin Ishwa', Islin (Majdal Al-Sadiq) Jubb Yusuf Hadatha Al-Ghabisyya Al-'Imara Arab Zahrat Al-Dumayri Bayt Nattif Ism Allah, Khirbat Al-Mansura (Arab Al-Suyyad) Al-Hamma (incl. Shaykh Dannun Al-Jammama Atlit Al-Dawayima Jarash, Al-Jura Al-Mukhayzin Kafr Bir'im Hittin & Shaykh Dawud) Al-Khalasa Ayn Ghazal Deir Al-Dubban Kasla Al-Muzayri'a Khirbat Karraza Kafr Sabt, Lubya Iqrit Arab Suqrir Ayn Hawd Deir Nakhkhas Al-Lawz, Khirbat Al-Na'ani Al-Khalisa Ma'dhar, Al-Majdal Iribbin, Khirbat (incl. Arab (Arab Abu Suwayrih) Balad Al-Shaykh Kudna (Kidna) Lifta, Al-Maliha Al-Nabi Rubin Khan Al-Duwayr Al-Manara Al-Aramisha) Jurdayh, Barbara, Barqa Barrat Qisarya Mughallis Nitaf (Nataf) Qatra Al-Khisas (Arab
    [Show full text]
  • Remembering Palestine in 1948 Beyond National Narratives
    Remembering Palestine in 1948 Beyond National Narratives The war of 1948 in Palestine is a conflict whose history has been written primarily from the national point of view. This book asks what happens to these narratives when they arise out of the personal stories of those who were involved, stories that are still unfolding. Efrat Ben-Ze’ev, an Israeli anthropologist, examines the memories of those who participated in and were affected by the events of 1948, and how these events have been mythologized over time. This is a three-way conversation between Palestinian villagers, Jewish-Israeli veterans, and British policemen who were stationed in Palestine on the eve of the war. Each has his or her story to tell. Across the years, these witnesses relived their past in private within family circles and tightly knit groups, through gatherings and pilgrimages to sites of villages and battles, or through naming and storytelling. Rarely have their stories been revealed to an outsider. As Dr. Ben-Ze’ev discovers, these small-scale truths, which were collected from people at the dusk of their lives and previously overshadowed by nationalized histories, shed new light on the Palestinian–Israel conflict, as it was then and as it has become. Dr. Efrat Ben-Ze’ev is Senior Lecturer in Social Anthropology in the Department of Behavioral Sciences at the Ruppin Academic Center in Israel, and Research Fellow at the Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Her publications include, as co-editor, Shadows of War: A Social History of Silence in the Twentieth Century (Cambridge University Press, 2010).
    [Show full text]
  • Financing Racism and Apartheid
    Financing Racism and Apartheid Jewish National Fund’s Violation of International and Domestic Law PALESTINE LAND SOCIETY August 2005 Synopsis The Jewish National Fund (JNF) is a multi-national corporation with offices in about dozen countries world-wide. It receives millions of dollars from wealthy and ordinary Jews around the world and other donors, most of which are tax-exempt contributions. JNF aim is to acquire and develop lands exclusively for the benefit of Jews residing in Israel. The fact is that JNF, in its operations in Israel, had expropriated illegally most of the land of 372 Palestinian villages which had been ethnically cleansed by Zionist forces in 1948. The owners of this land are over half the UN- registered Palestinian refugees. JNF had actively participated in the physical destruction of many villages, in evacuating these villages of their inhabitants and in military operations to conquer these villages. Today JNF controls over 2500 sq.km of Palestinian land which it leases to Jews only. It also planted 100 parks on Palestinian land. In addition, JNF has a long record of discrimination against Palestinian citizens of Israel as reported by the UN. JNF also extends its operations by proxy or directly to the Occupied Palestinian Territories in the West Bank and Gaza. All this is in clear violation of international law and particularly the Fourth Geneva Convention which forbids confiscation of property and settling the Occupiers’ citizens in occupied territories. Ethnic cleansing, expropriation of property and destruction of houses are war crimes. As well, use of tax-exempt donations in these activities violates the domestic law in many countries, where JNF is domiciled.
    [Show full text]
  • For PDF in English
    ﻣﻘﺎﻻت ﻣﺨﺘﺎرة ‡Collection of Articles ÌÈ¯Ó‡Ó ˙ÙÂÒ from tr th to redress ﻋﻮدة اﻟﻼﺟﺌﻴﻦ اﻟﻔﻠﺴﻄﻴﻨﻴﻴﻦ ÌÈÈËÒÏÙ‰ ÌÈËÈÏÙ‰ ˙·È˘ realizing the return of palestinian refugees ﻣﺆﺗﻤﺮ ّدوﻟﻲ ˇ international conference ˇ ÈÓ‡ÏÈ· ÒÎ | 29-30.9.2013| ﺗﻞ- أﺑﻴﺐ ˙Tel Aviv ·È·‡ Ï 1 Table of contents 2 Transitioning Towards Equality and Return: Building the one-state Movement Adv. Allegra Pacheco 5 Reconciliation in Peace Agreements: The Geneva Initiative as Test Case Yoav Kapshuk 7 Towards a Bi-National End-Game in Palestine/Israel Jeff Halper 9 Return(s) in the Oral Histories of Palestinian exiles Dominika Blachnicka-Ciacek 12 A Society of Peace is Possible in Israel/Palestine Dr. Erella Shadmi 15 The Nakba or Post-Utopia as a Model for Multi-Existence Aïm Deüelle Lüski 18 Cultural Return as a Response to the Limits of Postcolonial Discourse on Return Roi Zilberberg 21 Planning the Return: Blueprints of Refugee Return Michal Ran-Rubin 25 Between Memory and Renewal: Principles for Designing the Return to al-Lajjun Shadi Habib-Allah 2 Transitioning Towards Equality and Return: Building the one-state Movement Adv. Allegra Pacheco Today, I would like to focus on Tuesday, the day after this conference. How do we start working towards an appropriate political framework that will enable Awda – the return of Palestinian refugees? Many supporters of Awda advocate one democratic secular state – the so-called one-state political solution conferring full political and economic equality to all residents of historic Palestine. This solution would facilitate the return of refugees and enable them to begin their lives here on an equal footing.
    [Show full text]
  • Palestine (3A3ette Publtsbeb B^ Butborit\>
    Palestine (3a3ette publtsbeb b^ Butborit\> No. 359 THURSDAY, 4TH MAY, 1933 485 CONTENTS Page ORDINANCES CONFIRMED ^^^^^ Confirmation of Ordinances^•-' ^^^^^^Ht" id 50 of J932, and Nos. 2, 4, 5, 6 and 7 GOVERNMENT NOTICES Certificate under the Expropriation of Land Ordinances, 1926-1932, regarding the Construction ׳... - - of an Electric Transformer Station at Jerusalem ..•-486 Notice under the Collective Punishments Ordinance, 1926, adding, certain Villages to the First ־ - - - Schedule - - 487 Notice of Declaration of Closed Forest Areas under the Forests Ordinance, 1926 - 489 Notices under the Press Ordinance, 1933, regarding Permits to publish Newspapers - 490 Notices under the Press Ordinance, 1933, regarding Permits to keep Printing Presses - 494 Posting of Schedules of Rights in certain Villages - 506 ־ - - - - Claim lor destroyed Currency Note 507 Court of Discipline on an Advocate - 507 Tenders and Adjudication of Contracts .... 507 Citation Orders - - - - - - 508 RETURNS ־ Quarantine and Infectious Diseases Summary 508 Advocates' Licences ------ 509 REGISTRATION OF COMPANIES, COOPERATIVE SOCIETIES, PARTNERSHIPS, ETC. - 509 CORRIGENDA - - - - - . 512 SUPPLEMENT ־ - ־ - Registration of Patents 513 PRICE 30 MILS. 486 THE PALESTINE GAZETTE 4th May, 4933 (454) CONFIRMATION OF ORDINANCES NOTICE The Secretary of State for the Colonies has notified His Excellency the High Commissioner that His Majesty will not be advised to exercise his power of disallowance in respect of the following Ordinances:— No. 42 of 4932, entitled: "An Ordinance farther to amend the Customs House Agents Ordinance, 4925". No. 44 of 4932, entitled: "An Ordinance concerning certain Acts and Decisions of the Jerusalem Municipal Council". No. 45 of 4932, entitled: "An Ordinance to amend the Companies Ordin­ ance, 4929". No. 47 of 1932, entitled: "An Ordinance further to amend the Matches Excise Ordinance, 4927".
    [Show full text]
  • Palestine Village Statistics
    UNITED NATIONS CONCILIATION' COMMISSION FOR PAIESTINE RES TR IC TED Com,Tech/7/Add; 1 ORIGINAL: ENGLISH APPENDIX B NON - JEWISH POPULATION WITHIN THE BOUNDARIES HBLD BY THE ISRAEL DEFENCE ARMY ON Urn IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PALESTINE GOVERNMENT VILLAGE STATISTICS, APRIL 1945. CONTENTS Pages SubfMARY * a . * . * . a. , , . 1 ACRESUBDISTRICT ft . l ft. (I 2-3 SAFAD 11 *wb*a*.e+4u 4-6 T IBER IAS I I .a7 NAZARETH 11 *a**ea+*aaq 8 BE ISAN I I a 9-10 HA IPA I I . v. 11-12 JENIN tt 13 TULKAREM t I aaaa14 JAFFA II .a~I? RAMIE ~t , 16-18 JERUSALEM It 19-20 HEBRON t1 21 GAZA ~t baua22-23 BEERSHEBA .24 SUMMARY OF NON - JEWISH POPULATION Within the boundaries held by the Israel Defence Army . on 1.5.49 AS ON 1.4.45 In accordance with the Palestine Government Village * Statistics, April 1945. S UB DISTRICT MOS LEMS CHRIS TIANS OTHERS TOTAL ACRE 47,290 11 ,150 6,940 65,380 ' . SAFAD W-t, 510 19630 780 46,920 TIBER IAS 22,450 2,360 1,290 26,100 NAZARETH 27,460 l19@t0 W 38,500 BE ISAN 15,920 650 20 16 590 HA IFA 83,590 30,200 4,330 120,120 JENIN 89390 60 m 8,450 TULKAREM 22,310 10 22,320' JAFFA 93 9 070 16,300 330 109,700 RAMLE 76,920 5,290 10 82,220 JERUSALEM 34,740 13,000 M 47,740 HEBR ON 19,810 10 ..R 19,820 GAZA 69,230 l60 69,390 TOTAL 621,030 92 060 13 710 726,800 NON - JEWISH POPULATION ACRE SUB - DISTRICT VILLAGE M OS LEMS CHRISTIANS OTHERS TOTAL ABU S INAN ACRE AMQA ARRABA BASSA BEIT JANN & EIN EL ASAD B INA B IRWA BUQEIA DAMUN DEIR EL ASSAD DEIR EL HATO.
    [Show full text]