Bnei Darom

Bnei Darom
בְּנֵי דָּרוֹם
Bnei Darom
Coordinates: 31°49′13.43″N 34°41′31.2″E / 31.8203972°N 34.692000°E / 31.8203972; 34.692000Coordinates: 31°49′13.43″N 34°41′31.2″E / 31.8203972°N 34.692000°E / 31.8203972; 34.692000
District Central
Council Hevel Yavne
Affiliation Religious Kibbutz Movement
Founded 1949
Founded by Former residents of Kfar Darom
Population (2014)[1] 629
Website www.bnei-darom.com

Bnei Darom (Hebrew: בְּנֵי דָּרוֹם, lit. Sons of the South) is a religious moshav shitufi in central Israel. Located near the Mediterranean coast, it falls under the jurisdiction of Hevel Yavne Regional Council. In 2014 it had a population of 629.

History

Bnei Darom was established in 1949 by members of the gar'in group Netivot Kfar Darom who had been forced out of Kibbutz Kfar Darom in the Gaza Strip when it was occupied by the Egyptian Army during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. They were joined by another gar'in group, Morasha from the United States, though most of its members were not prepared for the kibbutz-style life in a moshav shitufi and left, some of them to form Beit Hazon. Originally affiliated with Hapoel HaMizrachi, it joined the Religious Kibbutz Movement as a moshav shitufi in 2007.

According to Walid Khalidi, Bnei Darom was founded on land belonging to Isdud.[2] However, according to Andrew Petersen, it was on land belonging to the depopulated Arab village of Arab Suqrir,[3] with the remains of a khan located in a wooded park next to the modern water tower.[3] The khan ruins were first described by Victor Guérin, who inspected them in 1863, and who wrote the following description:

This ruin is that of a Khan, now overthrown. It is 60 paces long by 37 broad. It contains a cistern and a small vaulted magazine, as yet not destroyed. Below the hillock covered by its ruins I remarked on the east a reservoir and viaduct, a well partly fallen in, but well built. A canal, traces of which are alone visible, carried the water of the reservoir to a fountain, now demolished, and situated in the plain near the road[3][4]

Clermont-Ganneau visited the place in 1873, and gave a very similar description, with the addition: "this must have been the site of some ancient "manzel", or posting-house, on the Arab route from Syria to Egypt.[5]

The site was registered as "an ancient monument" during the Mandate era, although the owners were permitted to build a reservoir 20m square within the khan.[6]

Petersen, inspecting the place in 1994, found the place in much the same condition as during the Mandate period, except that the reservoir from the Mandate time had been now replaced with a water-tower. Petersen described the remains as comprising a nearly 40m long wall, running north-south, with an entrance near the north end. A barrel-vaulted chamber, with an interior measuring 8.3m long and 3.8m wide, is located inside the khan, just south of the entrance.[7]

In 2002 excavations in the moshav found major remains from the Mamluk period.[8]

References

  1. 2014 populations Israel Central Bureau of Statistics
  2. Khalidi, 1991, p. 81
  3. 1 2 3 Petersen, 2001, p. 287
  4. Guérin, 1869, pp.79 - 80, as given in translation by Conder and Kitchener, 1882, II, pp.425 - 426
  5. Clermont-Ganneau, 1896, II, p.184. Also cited in Petersen, 2001, p. 287
  6. ATG/284 (=Antiquities Reports (held in the Palestine Archaeological Museum)), cited on Petersen, 2001, p. 287
  7. Petersen, 2001, p. 287-288
  8. Barkan, Diego ( 03/07/2006): Bene Darom Final Report, Hadashot Arkheologiyot – Excavations and Surveys in Israel, No. 118

Bibliography

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External links

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