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District of Tiberias
Ethnically cleansed days ago |
العربية Google Earth |
Gallery (211) |
Statistic & Fact | Value | |||||||||||||||||||||
Occupation Date | July 16, 1948 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Distance From District | 10.5 (km) West of Tiberias | |||||||||||||||||||||
Elevation | 300 (meters) | |||||||||||||||||||||
Before & After Nakba, Click Map For Details![]() |
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Pre-Nakba Aerial View![]() |
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Map Location | See location #11 on the map View from satellite |
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Military Operation | Operation Dekel | |||||||||||||||||||||
Defenders | Local militia & Arab Liberation Army | |||||||||||||||||||||
Exodus Cause | Military assault by Zionist troops | |||||||||||||||||||||
Village Temains | Lubya was completely defaced, and only house rubble left behind. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Ethnically Cleansing | Lubya inhabitants were completely ethnically cleansed. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Pre-Nakba Land Ownership |
**Town Lands' Demarcation Maps |
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Land Usage As of 1945 |
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Population |
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Number of Houses |
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Near By Towns![]() |
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Town's Name Through History | The Crusades referred to Lubya by Lubia. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Schools | Lubya had an elementary school for boys found by the Ottomans in 1895. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Archeological Sites | The village has a site known by Khan Lubya, which contained the remains of a pool, cisterns, and large building stones. | |||||||||||||||||||||
Exculsive Jewish Colonies Who Usurped Village Lands |
Lavi | |||||||||||||||||||||
Featured Video | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Village Before NakbaThe village was located on the summit of a rectangular, rocky hill that extended in an east-west direction and overlooked the plain of Tar'an to the south. It was divided into eastern and western parts by a secondary road that linked it to the Tiberias-Nazareth highway. The Crusaders knew the village as Lubia. Lubya was said to be the hometown of Abu Bakr al-Lubyani, a prominent Muslim scholar of the fifteenth century who taught Islamic religious sciences in Damascus. In 1596, Lubya was a village in the nahiya of Tiberias (liwa' of Safad) with a population of 1,177. It paid taxes on goats, beehives, and on a press that was used for processing either olives or grapes. [[Hut. and Abd.:187]] The governor of Damascus, Sulayman Pasha, died in Lubya in 1743 on his way to confront Zahir al-'Umar, who became the de facto ruler of northern Palestine for a short period in the second half of the eighteenth century. [[Abu Dayya 1986:19]] In the early nineteenth century the British traveler Buckingham described it as a very large village on top of a high hill. [[Buckingham 1821:491]] The Swiss traveler Burckhardt (writing in 1822) noted the wild artichokes that covered the plain where the village was located. [[Burckhardt 1822:333]]Later in the nineteenth century, Lubya was described as a stone village, on top of a limestone ridge. The residents of the village, estimated variously at 400 to 700, cultivated olive and fig trees. [[SWP (1881) I:361]] The older houses were clustered on the eastern side of the site (as were the newer buildings constructed during the British Mandate), possibly because the eastern side of the hill overlooked the cultivated lands of the village. The villagers were predominantly Muslim. An elementary school was established in the village during the Ottoman period, in 1895, and remained in use during the British Mandate. During the Mandate period, Lubya was the second largest village in Tiberias sub-disctrict in terms of area. The village economy was based on agriculture; its lands were fertile, and it was known in the region for its quality wheat. Wheat was planted in the fields of the Tar'an depression, while olive trees were grown on the mountainous slopes north of the village. In 1944/45 a total of 31,026 dunums was allotted to cereals; 1,655 dunums were irrigated or used for orchards. The village was built on the remains of previous settlements and thus was an archaeological site. Two km to the east of the village were the ruins of a structure known as Khan Lubya (192242) that contained the remains of a pool, cisterns, and large building stones. This site was probably a caravansary during the Ottoman period. Village Occupation and Ethnic CleaningThe Palestinian press reported an attack by Zionist forces on Lubya during the night of 20 January 1948, which left one villager dead. That early raid was coordinated with another on the nearby village of Tur'an, according to an account in the newspaper Filastin. Another clash occurred on the outskirts of Lubya on the morning of 24 February. A skirmish with a Jewish convoy lasted four hours and left one Arab killed and two wounded, as well as many casualties in the convoy, according to the account in Filastin. A third attack took place during the first week of March 1948. Palestinian historian 'Arif al-'Arif states that Haganah soldiers attempted to force their way through the road between Tiberias and al-Shajara, attacking Lubya at dawn. They reached the western edge of the village but were repulsed by the villagers themselves, who lost six men while killing seven of the attackers. Filastin reported another infiltration attempt on 11 March that was preceded by mortar shelling.With the occupation of Tiberias in mid-April 1948, the people of Lubya were isolated and turned to Nazareth for help and guidance, according to the recollections of the villagers themselves. They told Palestinian historian Nafez Nazzal that there was another attack on Lubya on 10-11 June, as the first truce of the war was about to go into effect. At the same time, the Arab Liberation Army (ALA) attacked the Jewish settlement of Sejera, to the southwest. Villagers recalled that an Israeli infantry unit took up positions at the southern end of the village, but withdrew by nightfall on 11 June. The village militia participated briefly in the fighting at Sejera with the ALA, but returned to protect the village during the truce. [[F:22/1/48,25/2/48, 13/3/48; N:81-83; R:86-87]] After the truce ended, Israeli forces launched Operation Dekel (see 'Amqa, Acre sub-disctrict). On 16 July, some villagers brought the news of the fall of Nazareth. The people of Lubya were 'terrified,' in the words of villagers interviewed some twenty-five years later, and they asked the nearby ALA contingent for military aid, but the request was turned down. During the night of 16 July, most of them left for Nimrin, 'Aylabun, and on to Lebanon, leaving behind the village militia and some elderly people. When an Israeli armored unit approached the following day, the poorly-armed militia decided to retreat. Eyewitnesses said that the occupying force shelled the village before entering it and then destroyed some of the houses and commandeered some of the others. Some elderly people took refuge in a nearby cave and a few later escaped; the fate of the rest is unknown. 'Lubiya fell without fighting,' the History of the War of Independence states, 'and the road to Tiberias was open to us.' Zionists Colonies on Village LandsThe settlement of Lavi (191243) was established on village lands (to the northeast) in 1949Village TodayThe Lavi pine forest has been planted by the Jewish National Fund, the body of the World Zionist Organization in charge of land acquisition and development, on the western side of the site, and another forest has been planted nearby in the name of the Republic of South Africa. The debris of houses is buried under these forests. Scattered wells (which formerly were used by the villagers for collecting rainwater) further mark the site. Pomegranate and fig trees as well as cactuses grow there. The lands around the site are cultivated by the nearby settlement. A forest and a military museum have been established near the site in honor of the Golani Brigade of the Israeli army. The secondary road that once led from the village to the Tiberias-Nazareth highway is still recognizable.SourceDr. Walid al-Khalidi, 1992: All That Remains. |
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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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Related Links | Wikipedia's Page Facebook Page Google Search Google For Images Google For Videos |
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More Information | مخطط البلد في كتاب كي لا ننسى في كتاب بلادنا فلسطين المزيد من موقع هوية |
Display Name | Clan/Hamolah | Country of Residence |
Ahmed | shanshiri | Doha, Qatar |
Yosef Heidar El Dirawi | Sama’lot | Oslo, Norway |
مهند | - | أبوظبي |
wasim Ahmad | - | Göteborg, Sweden |
Ahmad Hadrous | 3asafre | västervik, Sweden |
Mahmoud Ibrahem | - | - |
FADI MANSOUR | ATWAT | ABU DHABI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES |
مضر عوده | الكفارنة | مخيم اليرموك, سورية |
jamal adwan | Adwan | Københagen, Danmark |
ابو اسيل | السملوت | - |
لؤي العطوات | العطوات | عمان, الاردن |
محمد جوهر | العطوات | Rennerod, المانيا |
مجد سلامة | الفقرا | سوريا, مخيم اليرموك |
Mouhammad Ahmad chanchiri | Alshanshre | Danmark |
ramiz mohammad | - | - |
محمد هدروس | asafreh | al-khobar |
بشار الرفاعي | الفقراء - الرفاعي | دبي |
بلال عبدالرحمن | شناشرة | النروج |
معتز العايدي | عوايدي | - |
Firas M. Hmayyed | السملوت | Al-Khobar - Al-Riyadh, Saudi Arabia |
أحمد أبو علول | slamowat | hama, syria |
منتصر ابو علول | SamaLout | sheikh jarrah, jerusalem |
Hiba Mousa Hmayed | Samalot | Dubai, UAE |
ابو زيد الفلسطيني | الشناشرة | - |
Baraa | - | Riyadh, ksa |
Mariam Mohamad Barmawi | - | Berlin, Germany |
Iman Mohamad Barmawi | Barmawi/Schahabi | Berlin, Germany |
ابوعمر برماوي | برماوي | Berlin, Germany |
فادي أبودهيس | - | - |
Mustafa HASSAN | Dhabiat/Atwat | SAKARYA, TURKEY |
ثائر محمد خير الشهابي | الشهايبة | Horsens, Denmark |
Fouad Khalil | Samallot | brabrand, Denmark |
رهف | السملوت | Bulgaria |
nader | kayed | - |
نبيهه | زعيتر | صنعاء |
أحمد بكراوي | عجاينة | - |
debeli | hajjo | - |
محمود محمد خير الشهابي | الشهايبة | Horsens, Denmark |
ALaa Khalil | SamaLout | - |
Alaa Khalil | Samalout | North, Lebanon |
سعيد الشهابي | - | - |
ahmed ossama atwany | atwat | - |
بلال عطواني | العطوات | بعلبك |
mbrahem | ابراهيم | الجنوب, لبنان |
ali tallouzi | - | - |
JAMAL ALI ABU ALI | Atwat-Asafreh | UAE, UAE |
Mahmoud alzien | العجاينة | Yarmouk Camp |
براءة ابودهيس | العطوات | Jordan, Jordan |
ياسر الديراوي | السملوت | Oslo |
وسيم ابراهيم دلاشي | العطوات | الامارات, الامارات |
وسيم دلاشي | العطوات | الامارات , ابو ظبي |
wassimda | العطوات | الامارات, لبنان |
Chadi Aboualloul | Al Samalot | Sweden - Goteborg |
Wael M H Abu Dheis | Al Atwat | Irbid, Jordan |
ALI KWATEIN Almustafa | ATWAT-ASAFRE | Berlin |
Abo Nazmi | Atwat | Beqaa, lebanon |
Amar Eid | Atawat | Abu Dhabi, UAE |
مهيب | الكفارنة | auh |
جمال اللوباني | - | الإمارات |
Amjad Loubani | - | - |
ayed mansour | - | - |
Wael Atwat | Atwat | Ca, U.S.A |
OMAR AZZAM | sammallouti | OSLO, NORWAY |
طارق عمر | أبوعلول | الخبر |
طارق القاسم | العطوات | لوبيه, الرياض |
adel zeaiter | zeater | riyadh, soudi |
hammouda dallashi | samalout | saida, lebanon |
akram gheith | shanashry | odense, denmark |
nayef al-smadi | ajaineh | damas |
yosef Ali | Samalout | Sweden, Sweden |
Mohamed Hadrous | Asafri - Loubie | Germany, Hamburg |
Eyad Hadrous | Asafri - Loubie | Germany, Berlin |
Amr Esmadi | - | - |
SHADY | JUDY | DEAR HANNA -, PALASTINE |
Mr. Rami Hadrous | Asfori | Malmِ, Sweden |
Nayef | Samalout | - |
mounir zeaiter | - | - |
Hassan Hassan | Samaloot | syria, syria |
Abed Hassan | Samalot | إrhus, Denmark |
walid yousef | Kafarneh | - |
mohammad hassan | - | lebanon, palestine |
Bilal abdul-rahman | Shanshir | Norway |
ziad khalil | - | - |
Raafat Khalil | Samallot | lebanon, lebanon |
imad khalil | samaloot | na3me, lebanon |
aboudy | 3ASFORY | abu dhabi, UAE |
Abuo bilal | asafreh | Sweden, Sweden |
khalil zater | zaeter | ryadh, ksa |
AHMAD ZAETER | ZAETER | RYADH, KSA |
Ayman Derawi | Sammalot | Denmark |
Ahmad Younes | - | ABU DUABI, UAE |
Dalal Ibrahim Ahmad | Asafri | Denmark |
Tarek Smady | Smady | - |
ahmad Kayed | - | - |
Waleed Atwani | Atwat | - |
Firas Hmayyed | Al samalot | - |
fouad hussein | - | - |
hussam | - | ankara, Turkey |
Tarek Taha | - | Sydney, Australia |
okley | Asfori | NRW, Deutschland |
AbouFouad Khalil | Sammalot | Aarhus, Denmark |
ali shansheri | shansheri | saudi arabia |
الوحدات | صباح | فلسطين, قفين |
أنس المضر | الكفارنة | - |
Alaa M. Aboud | ASFORY | AbuDhabi, UAE |
Hazem Alzien | الزين/ العجاينة | - |
umran kayed | kafarina | berlin |
Abu Rami Barmawi | Barmawi-Schahabi | Neukِlln, Germany |
abu omar | barmawi/schahabi | NRW, Deutschland |
MOHAMAD ZAHI ABED | asafri | west-vlaanderen, belgium |
ISSA ZEITER | ATWAT | SAIDA, LEBANON |
...... | asafreh/asfouri | ksa, aaa |
Hayssam Gheith | Shanshiry | Denmark, Denmark |
Haritha Aydi | العايدي | Manchester, UK |
Raslan Odeh | al kafarneh | Damascuc, Syria |
abdo | asafri | sweden, sweden |
Ghada Chanchiri | Shanshiry | Denmark |
HUSSEIN | ASFORI | Hanaskog, Sweden |
suliamn | - | aarhus, denmark |
SOUHEIL AREF HUSEIN | ASAFRI | Sweden, Sweden |
studient | - | d, d |
Abu Ahmad | Samalout | Haderslev, Danmark |
Youssif Shanshiry | Al Shanshir / Shanashreh | MA, USA |
M Hasan | - | - |
FAROUK MAHMOUD | - | abu dahbi, UAE |
MORSEE ALSMADI | AJAYNIEH | NA, NA |
youyou ihmed | - | - |
sami yousef | - | - |
Saleh kamel Taha | Shansher | - |
Khaled Musleh | - | Damascus, Syria |
ثائر عودة | الكفارنة | alain, uae |
Mohammad Mufaddi Khalil | sammalot | Aarhus, Danmark |
Fuad Zein | Zein | Syria, Syria |
Omar Azzam | Samalout | Denmark, Danmark |
yuossef ibraheem | al_ajainah | ksa _ dammam |
alaa | alajainah | ksa_dammam, dammam |
deeamah ibraheem | al_ajainah | dammam _ksa |
MUNIR AL-ZAHI | ASAFRI | BAALBECK-LEBANON, LEBANON |
wissam hadrous | asfoori | baalbeck, lebanon |
Anwar Ahmed | Aa'jayneh | ENGLAND |
Musbah Alsmadi | A'ajayneh | ENGLAND |
khalil semadi | ajaena | riyadh, riyadh |
Hassan Shiri | Samalloot | , Syria |
samah rashdan | shanshrah | ksa-damas |
Ameer Alkafri | Alkafri | Syria, Syria |
mousa alzain_موسى الزين | ajainy | Dubai, syria |
abu tareq | AJAYNI | DUBAI, U A E |
Mohammed Shehabi | - | - |
Mahmoud Al Shehabi | Al Shehabi | Dhahran, Saudi Arabia |
Hassan Hashim | - | Homs, Syria |
razor | ||
Manal Jawher Hameed | atwat | Abu Dhabi, U.A.E |
majed2002 | - | Amman, Jordan |
البطل ممحمد فالح | صباح | عوريف, عوريف |
mulham semadi | ajaina | ksa, ksa |
Ahmed Karzoun | Kafarneh | - |
Mohammed | Al-KAfri | - |
Mohammed | Al-Kafri | Damscuse, Syria |
Ghassan Taha | Shanshiri | Malmo, SWEDEN |
Nasser Rashdan | Shanshiry - الشناشرة | USA |
Mohammad Arsan Mahmoud | zamel | denmark, denmark |
fadi khalil | joude | damascus |
Mohd Joher Hameed | Atwat | Damascus, Syria |
Nabeel Mohd Hameed | Atwat | Abu Dhabi, UAE |
Nasser Hussein | kayed | Sweden, Sweden |
Mohammad Hameed | العطوات | - |
Muhannad Chehade El Lafi | karzoun | Abu Dhabi, UAE |
karzoun | Al Kafarneh | Abudhabi, UAE |
0000 | lobye | saudi arabia, ksa |
ABOU NASSIM | Atwat | Sweden, Sweden |
Abu Husein | Karzoun | Baalbeck, Libanon |
Khaled Shihabi | SHAHAIBI | Amman, Jordan |
Yousef Ali | Smmallot | - |
Laila Ali | Samallot | - |
hassan atwani | atwani | B.C, CANADA |
MERVAT ATWANI | ATWANI | ABU DHABI, U.A.E. |
FADI ATWANI | ATWANI | - |