German Colony, Jerusalem

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Cremieux Street, German Colony, Jerusalem
Cremieux Street, German Colony, Jerusalem

The German Colony (Hamoshava Hagermanit) (Hebrew: מושבה גרמנית‎) is a neighbourhood in Jerusalem, established in the second half of the 19th century by members of the German Temple Society. Today the Moshava, as it is popularly known, is an upscale neighborhood bisected by Emek Refaim Street, an avenue lined with trendy shops, restaurants and cafes.

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[edit] History

[edit] Biblical era

Emek Refaim (Valley of Refaim) is mentioned in the Book of Joshua and Samuel II. The name is derived from a legendary race of giants who lived in this region in biblical times.

[edit] Templer settlement

In 1873, after establishing colonies in Haifa and Jaffa, members of the Templers (religious believers) sect from Wurttemberg, Germany settled on a large tract of land in the Refaim Valley, southwest of the Old City of Jerusalem. The land was purchased by one of the colonists, Matthaus Frank, from the Arabs of Beit Safafa. [1] [2]

The Templers were Christians who broke away from the Protestant church and encouraged their members to settle in the Holy Land to prepare for Messianic salvation. They built their homes in the style to which they were accustomed in Germany - farmhouses of one or two stories, with slanting tiled roofs and shuttered windows, but using local materials such as Jerusalem stone instead of wood and bricks. [3] The colonists engaged in agriculture and traditional trades such as carpentry and blacksmithing. Their homes ran along two parallel streets that would become Emek Refaim and Bethlehem Road.

As the neighborhood expanded south along the valley, many of the lots were purchased by well-to-do Christian Arab families attracted by its location between the road to Bethlehem and the developing neighbourhoods of Katamon, Talbieh, and Baka, which were populated by some of Jerusalem's wealthiest Arabs.

The British Mandatory government deported the German Templers during World War II. As Germans, they were considered enemy citizens, all the more so because they made no effort to disguise their Nazi sympathies. Some of them resettled in Australia.

The Arab residents fled in 1948, during the Israeli war of independence, in the wake of bitter fighting in the Katamon neighborhood. After the establishment of the state, the abandoned homes were used to house new immigrants.

[edit] Today

In recent years, the German Colony has been undergoing a process of gentrification. Modern apartment blocks were built there in the 1960s and 1970s, but today, efforts are being made to restore old landmark buildings and incorporate some of their architectural features, such as arched windows and tiled roofs, in new construction. Since the end of the 1980s, numerous cafes, bars, restaurants and boutiques have opened in the neighborhood. Many affluent Jerusalemites have moved there, pushing up the price of real estate. The German Colony has a large English-speaking population.

During the Second Intifada, a Palestinian suicide bomber blew himself up outside a cafe on Emek Refaim Street, killing seven people.

[edit] Architecture

Lintel with Arabic inscription from 1925
Lintel with Arabic inscription from 1925

The colorful history of the German Colony is illustrated by the mix of architectural styles found within a relatively small area. One finds Swabian-style homes, examples of late provincial Ottoman architecture and British Art Deco from the Mandatory period, within close proximity. An example of British architecture is the Scottish Hospice and St Andrew's church, built in 1927, decorated with local Armenian tile-work.[1][2] Some of the Templer homes have biblical inscriptions in German on their lintels, in Fraktur script.

[edit] Development and protest

For years, developers have been trying to build up the area at the northern entrance to the neighborhood, overlooking Liberty Bell Park. Mass protests in the early 1970s failed to halt the construction of a high-rise apartment building, known as the Omariya compound. In the wake of protests by environmentalists and neighborhood activists, the plans have been altered, and the height of a planned 14-story Four Seasons Hotel has been cut to seven stories. [3]

[edit] Landmarks

  • Gemeindehaus, communal hall - 1 Emek Refaim Street
  • Friedrich Eberle House - 10 Emek Refaim Street
  • Matthaus Frank House - 6 Emek Refaim Street
  • Pension Schmidt
  • Lev Smadar Theater - formerly Orient Cinema, Lloyd George Street,
  • Convent of Borromean Sisters - Bethlehem Road
  • Templer Cemetery - 39 Emek Refaim Street
  • Imberger House

[edit] Famous residents

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Hamoshava Hagermanit Beyerushalayim," Itzik Sweiki, SPNI bulletin, p. 23, teva.org.il
  2. ^ Studies in the Economic and Social History of Palestine in the Nineteenth, by Roger Owen, 1982, Southern Illinois University Press, Page 44
  3. ^ Jerusalem: Architecture in the late Ottoman Period