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Welcome To al-Naghnaghiyya - النغنغية (א-נע'נע'יה)

District of Haifa
Ethnically cleansed days ago

العربية

Google Earth
Picture for al-Naghnaghiyya Village - Palestine: : النغنغيه
Gallery (11)
Statistic & Fact Value
Occupation Date April 12, 1948
Distance From District 28.5 (km) South East of Haifa
Elevation 100 (meters)
Before & After Nakba, Click Map For Detailswhat's new
Pre-Nakba Map showing before and after destruction
Map Location See location #31 on the map

View from satellite
Military Operation The battle for Mishmar ha-'Emeq
Attacking Units Some unknown Haganah troops
Defenders Arab Liberation Army volunteers
Exodus Cause Military assault by Zionist troops
Village Temains The village has been completely obliterated soon after occupation.
Ethnically Cleansing al-Naghnaghiyya inhabitants were completely ethnically cleansed.
Pre-Nakba
Land Ownership
Ethnic Group Land Ownership (Dunums)*
Arab 11,607
Jewish 0
Public 532
**Total 12,139
*Sourced from British Mandate's Village Statisitics
**Town Lands' Demarcation Maps
Population
Year Population*
1931 416
1945 1,130
1948 1,311
Est. Refugees 1998 8,050
*Sourced from British Mandate's Village Statisitics
Number of Houses
Year Number of Houses
1931 78
1948 245
Near By Townswhat's new
Abu Zurayq
         
Zionist Colonies

(N)
   Lid, Khirbat

al-Mansi
           
al-Kafrayn
Schools The three Ghubayyat villages shared an elementary school which was built by the Ottomans in 1888, but it was later during the British Mandate period.
Nearby Wadies & Rivers al-Muqatta' River is nearby village lands (see Topography Of Palestine in Maps sections for more details).
Water Supply For water sources, al-Naghnaghiyya used the surrounding wadis, springs, and the al-Muqatta' River.
Exculsive Jewish Colonies
Who Usurped Village Lands
No settlements on village lands

Village Before Nakba

The village was the smallest of a group of three villages (known collectively as al-Ghubayyat) that were located on the eastern slopes of the bilad al-rawha' (see Daliyat al-Rawha', Haifa District) the other two villages were al-Ghubayya al-Fawqa and al-Ghubayya al-Tahta. It lay on the northern edge of a hill at the edge of a wadi bed, and overlooked the plain of Marj ibn Amir and the Nazareth hills to the north and northeast. It was adjacent to the Haifa-Jenin highway.

Al-Naghnaghiyya's population was Muslim. The village houses, scattered over the slopes, were made of stone and mud, stone and cement, or concrete. The three villages shared an elementary school that was built around 1888, during Ottoman rule; it was closed during the Mandate. They had access to a number of water sources including wadis, springs, and the al-Muqatta' River. Their economies were based on agriculture and animal husbandry, grain being the chief crop. A small area to the north of al-Naghnaghiyya was planted with fruit trees. In 1944/45 a total of 10,883 dunums of the lands of the three villages was allotted to cereals 209 dunums were irrigated or used for orchards. Next to al-Naghnaghiyya lay an artificial mound that bore the same name. Two km southeast, on the highway to Jenin, lay Tall al-Mutasallim, identified with Megiddo.

Village Occupation and Ethnic Cleaning

The village was reported occupied in a New York Times dispatch on 9 April 1948, when units of the Haganah broke a two-day truce in the battle for the settlement of Mishmar ha-Emeq. But Israeli historian Benny Morris states that al-Naghnaghiyya was not occupied until the night of 12-13 April. Like all villages captured in this operation, it was completely destroyed over the following days. It is not certain what happened to the residents they either fled during the attack or were expelled upon occupation, as occurred at nearby villages.

Zionists Colonies on Village Lands

There are no Israeli settlements on village lands. Mishmar ha-Emeq, built in 1926, and Midrakh Oz, built in 1952, are the closest settlements.

Village Today

The remains of houses are scattered on the slope of one hill. The site, traversed by the Haifa-Megiddo highway and partly occupied by an Israeli soccer field, is difficult to identify.

Source

Dr. Walid al-Khalidi, 1992: All That Remains.

Related Maps Town Lands' Demarcation Maps
خرائط للقضاء توضح حدود القرى والاودية
Town's map on MapQuest
View from satellite
Help us map this town at WikiMapia
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