Mevo Horon

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Mevo Horon
מבוא חורון
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Etymology: Horon Gateway
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Mevo Horon
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Mevo Horon
Coordinates: 31°50′57″N35°2′9″E / 31.84917°N 35.03583°E / 31.84917; 35.03583
District Judea and Samaria Area
Council Mateh Binyamin
Region West Bank
Affiliation Poalei Agudat Yisrael
Founded1970
Founded byEzra members
Population
 (2022) [1]
2,669
Website www.mevo-horon.org.il
Mevo Horon in 1969 Dan Hadani collection (990044455530205171).jpg
Mevo Horon in 1969

Mevo Horon (Hebrew : מבוא חורון, lit. 'Horon Gateway') is an Israeli settlement and religious moshav shitufi in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Located near Latrun and the city of Modi'in, it falls under the jurisdiction of Mateh Binyamin Regional Council. In 2022 it had a population of 2,669.

Contents

The settlement was established directly on the former Palestinian villages of Yalo, Imwas and Bayt Nuba, ethnically cleansed and destroyed by the Israel Defense Forces during the Six-Day War. [2] [3] [4] [5] The international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law, but the Israeli government disputes this. [6]

History

Mevo Horon was established in 1970 by members of the Ezra youth movement and was the first village in the Mateh Binyamin council area. It moved to the present site in 1974. [7] It is named after the biblical Beit Horon (Joshua 10:10), the modern Arab villages of Beit Ur al-Fauqa and Beit Ur al-Tahta.

Some Palestinians managed to return to the area after their expulsion from the villages of Yalo, Imwas and Bayt Nuba on whose lands the moshav was established, and gained employment as farm hands at Mevo Horon in the 1980s. During the early stages of the Al Aqsa Intifada, when the main checkpoint into Israel was moved several kilometers east of Mevo Horon and further into the West Bank, the moshav made arrangements to pick up these workers at the new checkpoint, though since they lacked Israeli work permits, difficulties arose. [8]

On 7 June 2018 residents of Mevo Horon and Israeli descendants of Dutch Jews inaugurated the town's Chasdei Enosh synagogue, which is an exact replica of the synagogue that once stood in Terborg, in the Netherlands. [9] The original in Terborg was hit by an American bomb on 8 March 1945 and was not reconstructed because there were no longer ten adult Jewish men in Terborg in order to reestablish services. In 1958, after the demolition of the ruins, an office building was erected at the location. A stolperstein marks the former location of the synagogue in Terborg. [10]

References

  1. "Regional Statistics". Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
  2. Mundinger, Ulla (2017). "Walking on Ruins: The Untold Story of Yalu". Jerusalem Quarterly (69): 22.
  3. Davis, Uri (2004). "Apartheid Israel and the Jewish National Fund of Canada: The Story of 'Imwas Yalu, Beit Nuba and Canada Park".
  4. Petersen, Kim (7 August 2006). "Canada: The Honest Broker?". Dissident Voice.
  5. Kanj, Jamal Krayem (2010). Children of catastrophe: Journey from a Palestinian refugee camp to America. Garnet Publishing Ltd.
  6. "The Geneva Convention". BBC News. 10 December 2009. Retrieved 27 November 2010.
  7. Carta's Official Guide to Israel and Complete Gazetteer to all Sites in the Holy Land. (3rd edition 1993) Jerusalem, Carta, p.325, ISBN   965-220-186-3 (English)
  8. Tobias Kelly, Returning to Palestine: Confinement and Displacement Under the Israeli Occupation, Stef Jansen, Staffan Lofving (eds.) Struggles For Home: Violence, Hope and the Movement of People, Berghahn Books, 2012 pp.25-41 pp.31-35.
  9. "Replica of Dutch synagogue destroyed in WWII opens near Jerusalem". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 13 June 2018.
  10. Bruntink, Henri (2024-09-17). "Hoe de Terborgse synagoge herrees in een Israëlische nederzetting". Gelderse Post. Oude IJsselstreek. 88 (38): 18/19.