Jubata ez-Zeit

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Jubata ez-Zeit
جباتا الزيت
Jubata ez-Zeit is located in Syria
Jubata ez-Zeit
Jubata ez-Zeit
Jubata ez-Zeit in Syria
Coordinates: 33°15′N 35°44′E / 33.250°N 35.733°E / 33.250; 35.733Coordinates: 33°15′N 35°44′E / 33.250°N 35.733°E / 33.250; 35.733
Country Syria
GovernorateQuneitra
DistrictQuneitra
SubdistrictMas'ade
RegionGolan Heights
Destroyed1967
Elevation
979 m (3,215 ft)
Population
 (1967)
 • Total1,500−2,000 (individual estimate)

Jubata ez-Zeit (Arabic: جباتا الزيت‎, Jubātā az-Zayt)[1] was a Syrian village situated in the far north of the Golan Heights. According to an Arab resident of a nearby town, it had a population of around 1,500 to 2,000 people prior to the forced expulsion of the town's residents in 1968.[2]

Etymology[]

Jubata ez-Zeit is an Arabic name that translates into English as "olive oil pit," and refers to the olive trees that grew in the village which remain present today.[3]

History[]

1967 and aftermath[]

About half of the residents of Jubat ez-Zeit fled during the fighting in the Six-Day War of June 1967. The remaining half were expelled from the Golan Heights by the Israeli Army after the war,[2] and the village was razed.[4] One year after the war, in 1968, the area was declared a closed military zone.[2]

In the early 1970s, the Israeli settlement of Neve Ativ was built on the site of the former village.[5]

Geography[]

Jubata ez-Zeit was located in a wadi whose name was transcribed by Edward Robinson and Eli Smith as Wady Khǔshābeh during their travels in the region in the mid-19th-century. The wadi extends out to the southwest from the base of the southwestern peak of Jabal esh-Sheikh.[6]

Notable residents[]

See also[]

  • Syrian towns and villages depopulated in the Arab-Israeli conflict

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b Hanna Batatu (1999). Syria's peasantry, the descendants of its lesser rural notables, and their politics (Illustrated ed.). Princeton University Press. p. 338. ISBN 978-0-691-00254-5.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c Murphy & Gannon 2008, p. 149
  3. ^ Dar 1993, p. 168
  4. ^ Murphy & Gannon 2008, p. 163
  5. ^ Murphy & Gannon 2008, p. 151
  6. ^ Robinson & Smith 1857, p. 405

Bibliography[]

External links[]

Further reading[]

  • Ray Murphy: Forgotten Rights: Consequences of the Israeli occupation of the Golan Heights. in David Keane and Yvonne McDermott (eds.): The Challenge of Human Rights: Past, Present and Future. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham and Northampton 2012, pp. 138–163. Article focusses on Jubata ez-Zeit.
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