Saliha (), sometimes transliterated Salha, meaning 'the good/healthy place', was a
Palestinian Arab
Palestinians () are an Arab ethnonational group native to the Levantine region of Palestine.
*: "Palestine was part of the first wave of conquest following Muhammad's death in 632 CE; Jerusalem fell to the Caliph Umar in 638. The indigenous ...
village located 12 kilometres northwest of
Safed
Safed (), also known as Tzfat (), is a city in the Northern District (Israel), Northern District of Israel. Located at an elevation of up to , Safed is the highest city in the Galilee and in Israel.
Safed has been identified with (), a fortif ...
.
The
Franco-British boundary agreement of 1920 placed Saliha within the
French Mandate of Lebanon
The State of Greater Lebanon (; ), informally known as French Lebanon, was a state declared on 1 September 1920, which became the Lebanese Republic (; ) in May 1926, and is the predecessor of modern Lebanon.
The state was declared on 1 Septembe ...
border, thus classifying it a part of Lebanese territory. It was one of the 24 villages transferred from the
French mandate of Lebanon
The State of Greater Lebanon (; ), informally known as French Lebanon, was a state declared on 1 September 1920, which became the Lebanese Republic (; ) in May 1926, and is the predecessor of modern Lebanon.
The state was declared on 1 Septembe ...
to British control in 1924 in accordance with the 1923 demarcation of the border between the
Mandatory Palestine
Mandatory Palestine was a British Empire, British geopolitical entity that existed between 1920 and 1948 in the Palestine (region), region of Palestine, and after 1922, under the terms of the League of Nations's Mandate for Palestine.
After ...
and the
French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon
The Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon (; , also referred to as the Levant States; 1923−1946) was a League of Nations mandate founded in the aftermath of the First World War and the partitioning of the Ottoman Empire, concerning the territori ...
.
Under the 1948
United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine
The United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine was a proposal by the United Nations to partition Mandatory Palestine at the end of the British Mandate. Drafted by the U.N. Special Committee on Palestine (UNSCOP) on 3 September 1947, the Pl ...
, Saliha was to be included in the proposed
Arab
Arabs (, , ; , , ) are an ethnic group mainly inhabiting the Arab world in West Asia and North Africa. A significant Arab diaspora is present in various parts of the world.
Arabs have been in the Fertile Crescent for thousands of years ...
state, while the boundary between it and the proposed
Jewish state
In world politics, Jewish state is a characterization of Israel as the nation-state and sovereign homeland for the Jewish people.
Overview
Modern Israel came into existence on 14 May 1948 as a polity to serve as the homeland for the Jewi ...
was to run north of the built-up area of the village.
[Moore, 2004, p. 160.]
During the
1948 Arab-Israeli war
Events January
* January 1
** The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) is inaugurated.
** The current Constitutions of Constitution of Italy, Italy and of Constitution of New Jersey, New Jersey (both later subject to amendment) ...
, Saliha was the site of a massacre carried out by
Israel
Israel, officially the State of Israel, is a country in West Asia. It Borders of Israel, shares borders with Lebanon to the north, Syria to the north-east, Jordan to the east, Egypt to the south-west, and the Mediterranean Sea to the west. Isr ...
i forces shortly before the village was completely depopulated.
[Morris, 2004, p]
498
/ref> The built structures in the village, with the exception of an elementary school for boys, were also destroyed.[
]
History
There were several old structures in the village, including rock-cut tombs, traces of mosaic
A mosaic () is a pattern or image made of small regular or irregular pieces of colored stone, glass or ceramic, held in place by plaster/Mortar (masonry), mortar, and covering a surface. Mosaics are often used as floor and wall decoration, and ...
floors, and oil presses. The nearby Khirbat al-Sanifa contained ancient relics, such as a circular pressing floor. A winepress was excavated in the area in 2001.
In 1881, the PEF's ''Survey of Western Palestine
The PEF Survey of Palestine was a series of surveys carried out by the Palestine Exploration Fund (PEF) between 1872 and 1877 for the completed Survey of Western Palestine (SWP) and in 1880 for the soon abandoned Survey of Eastern Palestine. The ...
'' described Saliha as a village of about 200 people who cultivated gardens in the surrounding area and built their homes out of basalt
Basalt (; ) is an aphanite, aphanitic (fine-grained) extrusive igneous rock formed from the rapid cooling of low-viscosity lava rich in magnesium and iron (mafic lava) exposed at or very near the planetary surface, surface of a terrestrial ...
stones mortared with mud. They took their drinking water from several cistern
A cistern (; , ; ) is a waterproof receptacle for holding liquids, usually water. Cisterns are often built to catch and store rainwater. To prevent leakage, the interior of the cistern is often lined with hydraulic plaster.
Cisterns are disti ...
s and a large pond.
British Mandate era
Its population was predominantly Shia Muslim
Shia Islam is the second-largest Islamic schools and branches, branch of Islam. It holds that Muhammad in Islam, Muhammad designated Ali ibn Abi Talib () as both his political Succession to Muhammad, successor (caliph) and as the spiritual le ...
and it had an elementary school for boys.
In the 1931 census of Palestine
The 1931 census of Palestine was the second census carried out by the authorities of Mandatory Palestine. It was carried out on 18 November 1931 under the direction of Major E. Mills after the 1922 census of Palestine.
* Census of Palestine 1931, ...
the population of ''Salha'' was 742 Muslims, in a total of 142 houses.[Mills, 1932, p]
110
/ref>
By the 1945 statistics the population was counted with Maroun al-Ras
Maroun al-Ras () is a municipality nestled in Jabal Amel (Mount Amel) in the district of Bint Jbeil in the Nabatiye Governorate in southern Lebanon. It is located around south east of Beirut, roughly one km (0.62 mi) from the border with I ...
and Yaroun
Yaroun (also spelled Yarun; )From personal name, according to Palmer, 1881, p104"perhaps the Iron of Josh. xix 38" is a municipality located in the Caza of Bint Jbeil in the Nabatieh Governorate in Lebanon.
Geography
Yaroun sits on a hill 750 ...
, and totaling 1,070 Muslims[ with 11,735 ]dunam
A dunam ( Ottoman Turkish, Arabic: ; ; ; ), also known as a donum or dunum and as the old, Turkish, or Ottoman stremma, was the Ottoman unit of area analogous in role (but not equal) to the Greek stremma or English acre, representing the amo ...
s of land, according to an official land and population survey.[ Of this, 7,401 dunams were allocated to cereals, 422 dunams were irrigated or used for orchards,] while 58 dunams were built-up (urban) area.
1948 war
Between 30 October 1948 and 2 November 1948, Saliha was the first of three villages (the others being Safsaf
Safsaf ( ''Ṣafṣāf'', " weeping willow") was a Palestinian village 9 kilometres northwest of Safed, present-day Israel. Its villagers fled to Lebanon after the Safsaf massacre in October 1948, during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.
History
Th ...
and Jish
Jish (, ), also known by its Hebrew name of Gush Halab (, ), or by its classical name of Gischala, is a local council in Upper Galilee, located on the northeastern slopes of Mount Meron, north of Safed, in Israel's Northern District. In , it ...
) in which a massacre
A massacre is an event of killing people who are not engaged in hostilities or are defenseless. It is generally used to describe a targeted killing of civilians Glossary of French words and expressions in English#En masse, en masse by an armed ...
was committed by the 7th Brigade of the Israel Defense Forces
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF; , ), alternatively referred to by the Hebrew-language acronym (), is the national military of the State of Israel. It consists of three service branches: the Israeli Ground Forces, the Israeli Air Force, and ...
[Morris, 2004, p.]
487
/ref> under the command of General Moshe Carmel.[Rogan, 2007, p. 53.]
In the case of Saliha, Israeli archival sources say the troops entered the village and blew up a structure, possibly a mosque, killing the 60 to 94 people who had taken refuge inside.[ These estimates are based on documentary evidence that include a 6 November 1948 diary entry by Yosef Nahmani. When Nahmani's papers was first published by his commander Yosef Weitz in 1965, guided by propagandistic motives, he laundered it to remove details of atrocities such as those which took place in Saliha.][Aida Essaid]
''Zionism and Land Tenure in Mandate Palestine,''
Routledge 2013 p.231. Nahmani refers to "'60 - 70' men and women murdered after 'they had raised a white flag'".[Morris, 2004, p. ]
500
/ref> Also referenced by Morris are handwritten notes taken by Aharon Cohen
Aharon Cohen (; 1910–1980) was a senior member of Mapam, a pro-USSR Israeli political party which existed during the first two decades of statehood.
Biography
Born in Briceni (formally, Britchany), Bessarabia Governorate, Russian Empire (later ...
from the Mapam
File:Pre-State_Zionist_Workers'_Parties_chart.png, chart of zionist workers parties, 360px, right
rect 167 83 445 250 Hapoel Hatzair
rect 450 88 717 265 The non-partisans (pre-state Zionist political movement), Non Partisans
rect 721 86 995 243 ...
Political Committee meeting on 1 November 1948 in which Galili, or Moshe Erem is recorded as stating: "94 in Saliha blown up in a house".[ In accounts recorded from interviews with Saliha families, now resident in Lebanon, ]Robert Fisk
Robert William Fisk (12 July 194630 October 2020) was an English writer and journalist. He was critical of United States foreign policy in the Middle East, and the Israeli government's treatment of Palestinians.
As an international correspo ...
provides a different version. Nimr Aoun (b.1915), one of two survivors of the massacre in the square, says that when the Jewish army arrived, leaflets were handed over to villagers saying they would be spared if they surrendered, which they duly did. The area was surrounded by thirteen tanks (other accounts speak of 10 armoured cars) and, while the villagers stood together, the Israelis opened fire. He survived, though wounded, by hiding under corpses and then crawling off under cover of night, finding a donkey and riding it to Maroun for surgery. In an earlier interview Aoun said the villagers were summoned from a crier to assemble in the village square in front of a mosque. Two Israeli officers sipped coffee as the locals gathered. The crowd was then asked to hand over their weapons, and then the Arabic-speaking officer turned to converse with his troops, after which machine guns on top of the armoured cars opened fire and killed some 70 villagers. The corpses were left to rot for four days, and then Israeli bulldozers came and piled them into the mosque, which was then blown up with explosives. Many villagers hoped to return, waiting nearby in Lebanese villages with relatives, but they ended up settling in the Tyre suburb of Shabriha.[Nicholas Blanford]
'Zionism’s first Lebanese victims remembered,'
The Daily Star May 14, 1998.
After the assault was over, the remaining inhabitants of the village were expelled,[ forming part of the Palestinian exodus of 1948. Nahmani, speaking of the 67 men and women gunned down in the village square, asked himself in his papers: 'Where did they come by such a measure of cruelty, like Nazis? . . Is there no more humane way of expelling the inhabitants than by such methods?'.]
Yoav Gelber
Yoav Gelber (; born September 25, 1943) is a professor of history at the University of Haifa, and was formerly a visiting professor at the University of Texas at Austin.
He was born in Mandatory Palestine in 1943 and studied world and Jewish his ...
lists Saliha alongside Deir Yassin, Abu Shusha
Abu Shusha () was a Palestinian Arab village in the Ramle Subdistrict of Mandatory Palestine, located 8 km southeast of Ramle. It was ethnically cleansed in May 1948.
Abu Shusha was located on the slope of Tell Jezer/Tell el-Jazari, whi ...
, Safsaf
Safsaf ( ''Ṣafṣāf'', " weeping willow") was a Palestinian village 9 kilometres northwest of Safed, present-day Israel. Its villagers fled to Lebanon after the Safsaf massacre in October 1948, during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.
History
Th ...
(Sufsuf), and Lydda
Lod (, ), also known as Lydda () and Lidd (, or ), is a city southeast of Tel Aviv and northwest of Jerusalem in the Central District of Israel. It is situated between the lower Shephelah on the east and the coastal plain on the west. The ci ...
as forming part of the "Palestinian pantheon of massacres ... villages where Palestinians claimed that atrocities had taken place".[Gelber, 2006, p. 324.]
Salman Abu-Sitta
Salman Abu Sitta (; born 1937) is a Palestinian people, Palestinian researcher. Abu Sitta, who was Nakba, expelled from Palestine as a child in 1948, has dedicated his life to the Palestinian cause and is engaged in public debates with Israe ...
, author of the ''Atlas of Palestine'', estimated that the number of Palestinian refugee
Palestinian refugees are citizens of Mandatory Palestine, and their descendants, who fled or were expelled from their country, village or house over the course of the 1948 Palestine war and during the 1967 Six-Day War. Most Palestinian refug ...
s from Saliha in 1998 was 7,622 people.
Israel
The Israeli Jewish
Jews (, , ), or the Jewish people, are an ethnoreligious group and nation, originating from the Israelites of History of ancient Israel and Judah, ancient Israel and Judah. They also traditionally adhere to Judaism. Jewish ethnicity, rel ...
localities of Yir'on
Yir'on () is a kibbutz in the Galilee Panhandle in northern Israel. Located adjacent to the Blue Line (Lebanon), Lebanese border, it falls under the jurisdiction of Upper Galilee Regional Council. In it had a population of .
History
The village ...
and Avivim
Avivim () is a moshav in Israel, in the northernmost part of Upper Galilee, less than one kilometre (3,000 feet) from the Blue Line with Lebanon. In , its population was .
History Mandatory period
In 1920, Saliha was designated part of Leban ...
are located on the former lands of Saliha.
Of what remains of Saliha's built structures today, Walid Khalidi
Walid Khalidi (; born in Jerusalem on July 16, 1925) is a Palestinian historian who has written extensively on the Palestinian exodus. He is a co-founder of the Institute for Palestine Studies, established in Beirut in December 1963 as an inde ...
writes that, "The only remaining landmark is a long building (which may have been a school) with many high windows. The site is a flat, mostly cultivated area. The bulk of the surrounding land is planted by Israeli farmers with apple trees."
See also
* Shia villages in Palestine
In 1923 and 1924, French Third Republic, France and the United Kingdom re-adjusted the boundary between Greater Lebanon and Mandatory Palestine after years of negotiations. As part of this change, seven villages in which the population was predo ...
* Depopulated Palestinian locations in Israel
* Killings and massacres during the 1948 Palestine War
References
Bibliography
* Agreement between His Majesty's Government and the French Government respecting the Boundary Line between Syria and Palestine from the Mediterranean to El Hámmé, Treaty Series No. 13 (1923), Cmd. 1910.
* Biger, Gideon (1989), Geographical and other arguments in delimitation in the boundaries of British Palestine, ''in'' "International Boundaries and Boundary Conflict Resolution", IBRU Conference, , 41–61.
* Biger, Gideon (1995), ''The encyclopedia of international boundaries'', New York : Facts on File.
* Biger, Gideon (2005), ''The Boundaries of Modern Palestine, 1840-1947''. London: Routledge. .
*
*
*Franco-British Convention on Certain Points Connected with the Mandates for Syria and the Lebanon, Palestine and Mesopotamia, signed Dec. 23, 1920. Text available in ''American Journal of International Law'', Vol. 16, No. 3, 1922, 122–126.
*
* Gil-Har, Yitzhak (1993), British commitments to the Arabs and their application to the Palestine-Trans-Jordan boundary: The issue of the Semakh triangle, ''Middle Eastern Studies'', Vol.29, No.4, 690-70 1.
*
*
*
*
* McTague, John (1982), Anglo-French Negotiations over the Boundaries of Palestine, 1919–1920, ''Journal of Palestine Studies'', Vol. 11, No. 2, 101–112.
*Moore, Dahlia; Aweiss, Salem. (2004) ''Bridges Over Troubled Water: A Comparative Study Of Jews, Arabs, and Palestinians''. Praeger/Greenwood.
* (pp
473
481
484
486
501
502
*
*
* Yusuf, Muhsin (1991), The Zionists and the process of defining the borders of Palestine, 1915–1923, ''Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies'', Vol. 15, No. 1, 18–39.
* US Department of State, International Boundary Study series
Iraq-Jordan
Iraq-Syria
Jordan-Syria
Israel-Lebanon
External links
Saliha
Zochrot
Zochrot (; "Remembering"; ; "Memories") is an Israeli nonprofit organization founded in 2002. Based in Tel Aviv, its aim is to promote awareness of the Nakba, including the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight. The group was co-founded by Eitan ...
*Survey of Western Palestine, map 4
IAA
Wikimedia commons
from the Khalil Sakakini Cultural Center
Khalil Sakakini Cultural Center () is a leading Palestinian arts and culture organization that aims to create a pluralistic, critical liberating culture through research, query, and participation, and that provides an open space for the communit ...
Saliha
Dr. Khalil Rizk.
{{Palestinian Arab villages depopulated during the 1948 Palestine War
Arab villages depopulated during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War
Massacres in Israel during the Israeli–Palestinian conflict
District of Safad
Zionist political violence