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Welcome To Mirun - ميرون (מירון)

District of Safad
Ethnically cleansed days ago

العربية

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Picture for Mirun Village - Palestine: : البيت الوحيد الذي لا يزال قائم -- واجد النوباني
Gallery (55)
Statistic & Fact Value
Occupation Date May 10, 1948
Distance From District 5 (km) West of Safad
Elevation 750 (meters)
Before & After Nakba, Click Map For Detailswhat's new
Pre-Nakba Map showing before and after destruction
Map Location See location #60 on the map

View from satellite
Military Operation Operation Hiram
Attacking Units Sheva' and Cammeli Brigades
Exodus Cause Influence of fall of, or exoduce from, neighboring town
Village Temains Mirun has been mostly destroyed with the exception of few rooms and rubble of destroyed houses.
Ethnically Cleansing The village was ethnically cleansed in two waves: the 1st was shortly after the capture of Safad by the Haganah on 10 May 1948, and the 2nd wave was by the end of October 1948.
Pre-Nakba
Land Ownership
Ethnic Group Land Ownership (Dunums)*
Arab 6,765
Jewish 5,839
Public 1510
**Total 14,114
*Sourced from British Mandate's Village Statisitics
**Town Lands' Demarcation Maps
Land Usage
As of 1945
Land Usage Arab (Dunum)* Jewish (Dunum)*
Olive Groves 200 0
Planted W/ Cereal 6,734 5,829
Built up 31 10
Arable 6,734 5,829
Non-Arable 1,510 0
*Sourced from British Mandate's Village Statisitics
Population
Year Population*
1596 715
19th century 50
1922 154
1931 189
1945 290
1948 336
Est. Refugees 1998 2,066
*Sourced from British Mandate's Village Statisitics
Number of Houses
Year Number of Houses
1931 47
1948 83
Near By Townswhat's new
Safsaf

(N)
Qaddita
       
Bayt Jann  
   'Ayn al-Zaytun
Schools Mirun had an elementary school for boys.
Shrines / Maqams A tomb/shrine for Palestinian Jew known by Rabbi Shim'on Bar Yochai
Nearby Wadies & Rivers The village was situated just north of Wadi Mirun
Archeological Sites The village contained the remains of a synagogue which was constructed in the 1st century B.C.
Exculsive Jewish Colonies
Who Usurped Village Lands
Meron
Featured Video

Village Before Nakba

The village was situated on the rocky, gently sloping eastern foot of Mount al-Jarmaq, the highest mountain in Palestine. It overlooked a hilly region in Upper Galilee. Wadi Mirun ran south of the village and constituted its southern border. The village, which lay along the west side of the Safad-Acre highway, was oriented in a northwest-southeast direction. The Arab geographer al-Dimashqi (d. 1327) mentioned Mirun as a village in Safad that was located near a well-known cave. He reported that Jews (and possibly other villagers) came to the cave to celebrate a Jewish festival by witnessing what they thought was the sudden and miraculous rise of water from basins and sarcophagi in the cave. [Al-Khalidi 1968:203] Al-Dimashqi was probably referring to a festival held on Lagba-'Omer, the anniversary of the death of Talmudic sage Rabbi Shim'on (Simeon) Bar Yochai, who, according to tradition, was buried there. In 1596, Mirun was a village in the nahiya of Jira (liwa' of Safad) with a population of 715. It paid taxes on goats, beehives, and a press that was used for processing either olives or grapes. [Hut. and Abd.:176].

In the late nineteenth century, travelers reported that Mirun was a small village at the foot of the high hills of Mount al-Jarmaq. The village's fifty residents cultivated a large number of olive trees to the north and northeast. [SWP (1881) I:198-99] Baedecker described it in 1912 as a small village that appeared quite old and had a Muslim population. [Baedeker 1912:73] Until at least the time of the 1931 census, it was made up of an Arab and a Jewish quarter. The Arab quarter, in the northwest, was the larger of the two. The Jewish quarter in the southwest was built around a tomb, probably that of the above-mentioned Rabbi Shim'on Bar Yochai. The houses in both quarters were placed close together. The 1931 census indicates that the population was composed of 259 Arabs and 31 Jews, while the Village Statistics, 1945 shows the population to be entirely Arab. Mirun had a boys' elementary school.

Agriculture and livestock were the mainstay of the village economy, with grain being the dominant crop, followed by fruits. In the 1942/43 season 200 dunums of village land were planted with olive trees, the majority of which were to the northwest of the village. Two hand-operated olive presses were used by the villagers to process the olives. In 1944/45 a total of 6,732 dunums was allocated to cereals. There were a number of ruins in the vicinity whose dates of habitation ranged from early Roman times to the thirteenth century. Excavations at the nearby Khirbat Shama' (291264), about 1 km southeast of the village, have uncovered the remains of a synagogue that was constructed in the first century B.C. and was no longer used by the seventh century A.D. [Meyers, et. al., 1976, 1981] Other discoveries near the village include a cave containing tombs and cisterns, tombs carved in rock, olive presses, and a miscellany of architectural fragments.

Village Occupation and Ethnic Cleaning

Mirun's inhabitants were driven out in two waves: one shortly after the capture of Safad by the Haganah on 10 May 1948, and the other at the end of October, after the village itself was occupied. During the attacks on Safad, some of the people may have sought refuge in Mirun at the beginning of May, according to Israeli historian Benny Morris. Mirun was also drawn into the battle in and around Safad at that time. Then, on 28-29 May, the Yiftach Brigade's First Battalion attacked the village and destroyed a bridge on its outskirts. According to Israeli sources, this raid was carried out in the context of an assault on Lebanese and Syrian forces stationed in the Galilee panhandle. The History of the War of Independence states: 'The raids on the rearguard of their forces and sabotage operations against their various villages and transportation routes led to their being stopped in their tracks.' [M:102, 104; T:174-76] The village was not occupied, however, until 29 October. At first, it had been designated as the first village to be captured during Operation Hiram (see 'Arab al-Samniyya, Acre sub-disctrict). Palestinian historian Nafez Nazzal presents indirect evidence that it was attacked from the air. Three Israeli planes bombed it shortly before nightfall on 28 October, according to villagers from Tarshiha whose village was bombed at the same time. But the History of the War of Independence states that units of the Sheva' and Carmeli Brigades encountered difficulties in capturing it because of the resistance of its defenders. They finally decided to bypass Mirun and to keep advancing towards Safsaf. No sooner was Safsaf captured than Mirun also fell, 'after most of the enemy company defending it had been wiped out.' It is not clear what happened to any civilians who remained, though a document of the Israeli Minority Affairs Ministry later indicated that the village was depopulated as punishment for resisting.

Zionists Colonies on Village Lands

The settlement of Meron (191266), founded in 1949 on village land, is immediately to the north of, if not on top of, the village site.

Village Today

While the Arab section of the village was demolished, several rooms and stone walls still stand. One of the walls has a rectangular doorlike opening and another has an arched entrance. Otherwise, the site is covered with grass and trees and has become part of the settlement of Meron. The surrounding land is partly planted with apple trees and partly forested; some land also serves as pasture. The area is a tourist attraction.

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
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