Al-Shaykh Muwannis | |
Al-Shaykh Muwannis
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Arabic | الشيخ مونّس |
Name Meaning | "The Sheikh Muwannis" |
Also Spelled | Sheikh Muwannis |
District | Jaffa |
Coordinates | |
Population | 1,930 (1945) |
Area | 15,972 dunums |
Date of depopulation | March 30, 1948[1] |
Cause(s) of depopulation | Military assault by Yishuv forces |
Secondary cause | Fear of being caught up in the fighting |
Current localities | Tel Aviv |
Al-Shaykh Muwannis (Arabic: الشيخ مونّس) (also Sheikh Munis) was a small Palestinian Arab village in the District of Jaffa in British Mandate Palestine[2] located approximately 8.5 kilometers from the center of Jaffa city in territory earmarked for Jewish statehood under the United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine.[3]
The village had apparently existed for centuries, but some residents are said to have arrived from Egypt during the British Mandate period (1921-1948). The village population grew from 315 in 1879 to 664 in 1922 and tripled to 2160 in 1948. The village was abandoned in March 1948 under pressure from Jewish militia, two months before the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. Today, Tel Aviv University lies on part of the village land.[2]
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According to local legend, the village was named for a local religious figure, al-Shaykh Muwannis, whose tomb/shrine (maqam) was in the village.[4] Most of the villagers were members of the Abu Kishk tribe.[5]
In the 1920s, the government of the British Mandate attempted to gain title to lands lying to the west of Al-Shaykh Muwannis and extending to the coast of the Mediterranean sea on the grounds that it was "waste and uncultivated."[6] According to the authors of a book on the Israeli-Arab conflict, the Arabs of the Jaffa-Tel Aviv region "understood the implications of the Zionist-cum-British discourses of development generally and their implementation through town planning schemes."[7] In 1937, the Arabic daily al Ja'miah al-Islamiyya commented on British plans to build a bypass road for Tel Aviv residents on what they claimed were village lands:[8] "[I]n reality the plan in the Town Planning Commission now including Sheikh Muwannis is not really a 'plan', but rather a plan to take the land out of the hands of its owners."[7]
Before the 1948 war, the population of al-Shaykh Muwannis was 2,000. There were two schools in the village, a boy's school built in 1932 and a girl's school built in 1943. 266 students were registered in these schools in 1945.[9] The villagers worked in agriculture, particularly citrus cultivation. In 1944/45 3,749 dunums were used for growing citrus and bananas, and 7,165 dunums of village land was used for cereals. 66 dunums were irrigated or used for orchards, irrigation water was drawn from al-Awja river and a large number of artesian wells.[9][10]
In 1948, the population was largely made up of fellaheen who enjoyed friendly relations with Jews, despite occasional tension.[5] In 1946, for example, three Arab villagers raped a Jewish girl. In the midst of the court proceedings, members of the Haganah shot and wounded one of the attackers, and kidnapped and castrated another.[5] In 1947, in the wake of growing hostility in the days leading up to the war, some of the villagers began to leave. Most stayed, as village notables had secured Haganah protection in exchange for keeping the peace and preventing Arab Liberation Army (ALA) irregulars from the using the village to attack Yishuv forces.[5] While occasional shots were fired from the village toward Jewish residential areas in January and February 1948, there were no casualties, and the Abu Kishk abided by their promise to keep out ALA irregulars. The emissary of the ALA was informed by the Abu Kishk that "the Arabs of the area will cooperate with the Jews against any outside force that tries to enter."[5]
In mid-March, the Alexandroni Brigade of the IDF imposed a 'quarantine' on the village, Abu Kishk and two smaller satellite villages of Jalil al Shamaliyya and Jalil al Qibliya and may even have occupied houses on the edge of village.[5]
On March 12, 1948, the Irgun and Lehi (LHI) groups kidnapped five village notables.[11] The Intelligence Services of the IDF noted that
"many of the villagers ... began fleeing following the abduction of the notables of Sheikh Muwannis. The Arab learned that it was not enough to reach an agreement with the Haganah and that there were 'other Jews' of whom to beware, and possibly to be aware of more than the Haganah, which had not control over them."[11]
Though the notables were turned over to the Haganah on the 23 March and returned to Shaykh Muwannis, most of the villagers there and in other villages north of the Yarkon River continued to leave, as their confidence had been "mortally undermined".[5] Tawfiq Abu Kishk threw a large parting 'banquet' for the remaining villagers and their Jewish friends on the 28 March 1948.[5] After their departure, the village lands were promptly allocated for Jewish use by the Yishuv leaders,[5] and were ultimately incorporated into the municipality of Tel Aviv.[6]
In the days following, the Abu Kishk leaders attributed their abandonment of the village to: "a) the [Haganah] roadblocks ... b) the [Haganah] limitations on movement by foot, c) the theft [by Jews?] of vehicles, and d) the last kidnapping of Sheikh Muwannis men by the LHI." The villagers of Shaykh Muwannis became refugees, with the majority taking up residence in Qalqilya and Tulkarem.[5]
According to the Palestinian historian Walid Khalidi, the village's remaining structures in 1992 consisted of several houses occupied by Jewish families and the wall of a house.[9]Tel Aviv University lies on the land of Al-Shaykh Muwannis and the former home of the village sheikh serves as the University's faculty club.[2]
In a right of return march organized by the Israeli group Zochrot on Nakba Day in 2004, participants called upon the Tel Aviv municipality to name six streets in the city after Palestinian villages that has existed there until 1948, among them, Al-Shaykh Muwannis.[12]