Yanun | |
---|---|
Arabic transcription(s) | |
• Arabic | يانون |
• Latin | Yanoun (official) |
![]() The golden fields of Yanoun in May | |
Location of Yanun withinPalestine | |
Coordinates:32°08′44″N35°21′20″E / 32.14556°N 35.35556°E /32.14556; 35.35556 | |
Palestine grid | 183/172 |
State | State of Palestine |
Governorate | Nablus |
Government | |
• Type | Village council |
• Head of Municipality | Abd al-Latif Bani Jaber |
Area | |
• Total | 16,000 dunams (16.0 km2 or 6.2 sq mi) |
Population (2017)[1] | |
• Total | 92 |
• Density | 5.8/km2 (15/sq mi) |
Name meaning | from personal name[2] |
Yanun (Arabic:يانون,romanized: Yânûn) is aPalestinian village in theNablus Governorate of theState of Palestine, in the northernWest Bank, located 12 kilometers (7.5 mi) southeast ofNablus, and 3 miles north ofAqraba. It lies withinArea C, under total Israeli control, of the West Bank. It is divided into two sites, upper and lower Yanun. Upper or northern Yanin is considered illegal by the Israeli authorities, and development is prohibited there.[3]
After being destroyed post-16th century,[4] the village was reestablished in 1878 byMuslim Bosniak families who received lands from theOttoman government.[4][5] One Bosniak family still owns the land, although it's now inhabited by their tenants, who also live in the nearby hamlet of Ein Yanun. The inhabitants have their origins in the nearby villages ofAwarta andBeit Furik.[4]
According to thePalestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS), the village had a population of 92 in 2017.[1] This was a decrease from 2004 when the PCBS recorded that Yanun had 145 inhabitants.[6] The residents of the village have to travel toBeit Furik for primary health care.[7]
Potterysherds fromIron Age II,Roman,Byzantine, andCrusader/Ayyubid eras have been found here.[8]
Yanun the village is distinct from Khirbet Yanun, nearby ruins to the north-east of the village. According toEdward Robinson, Yanun corresponds to theJanō(Ἰανὼ) ofEusebius andJerome, a village in Acrabatene east of Neapolis, which, according to Robinson, these twoChurch fathers confused with the ancient frontier town ofYanoḥah(ינוחה) ofNaphtali, which belonged to theTribe of Ephraim.[9][10]Victor Guérin argued that both Eusebius and Jerome had confused the Yanoḥah of the tribe of Ephraim with the quite distinct, homophonous village belonging to the tribe of Naphtali (p. 7) Modern researchers, following Guerin, have suggested that the Biblical Yanoḥah refers to Khirbet Yanun, as pottery sherds fromlron Age I has been found there, and not at Yanun.[11] Several caves dot the area, which the local school headmaster claims were dwelt in by theCanaanites.[12]
There is a shrine, formerly used by villagers as amosque, believed to be of the prophetNun on a hillock calledNabinun three hundred metres east of Lower Yanun.[3][12][13]
Byzantine pottery and other signs of ancient habitation includingtombs carved into rock have been found at the village site.[14] There are ruins of aFrankish church.[15][16]
In 1596, Yanun appeared inOttomantax registers as a village in theNahiya ofJabal Qubal, part ofSanjak Nablus, with a population of 18Muslim households. The villagers paid a fixed tax rate of 33,3% on various agricultural products, including wheat, barley, summer crops, olives, goats or beehives, and a press for olives or grapes; a total of 7,500akçe.[17]
Edward Robinson visited Yanun in 1852. He wrote that the village was mostly in ruins and only a few houses were inhabited.[9] In the 19th century, Yanun was settled by some 50Bushnaks (Bosniaks), Muslims fromBosnia, after their country was ceded to theAustro-Hungarian Empire by theCongress of Berlin. The sultanAbdul Hamid gave the immigrants a significant part of the village.[12] According toHaaretz, these were soldiers sent to reinforceOttoman rule inPalestine. Adopting a common surname, Bushnak, they later moved to nearby Nablus and leased their farmlands to villagers fromAqraba who gradually left their village to settle in Yanun themselves. The villagers are their partners and descendants.[18] In 1870,Victor Guérin visited, and noted the Neby Nun east of Yanun.[19] In the 1882, theSurvey of Western Palestine described it as "A small village on the edge of a deep valley, with a sacred place to the east (Neby Nun), and a small spring about 1 mile to the north".[20]
In the1922 census of Palestine conducted by theBritish Mandate authorities, Yanun had a population of 70; allMuslim,[21] increasing in the1931 census to 120, still all Muslims, in a total of 22 houses.[22]
According to the1945 statistics, Yanun had a population of 50Muslims,[23] with a total of 16,439 dunams of land,[24] living in a built-up area of 34dunams.[25] Of this, 731 dunams were plantations and irrigable land, while 3,969 dunams were used for cereals.[26]
In the wake of the1948 Arab–Israeli War, and after the1949 Armistice Agreements, Yanun came underJordanian rule. It wasannexed by Jordan in 1950.
TheJordanian census of 1961 found 103 inhabitants.[27]
After theSix-Day War in 1967, Yanun has been underIsraeli occupation.
After the1995 accords, 31% of the land ofAqraba/Yanun was classified asArea B, the remaining 69% asArea C.[28]
As of 2002, the village is still leased by the residents of Aqraba and payment for leasing the land could be made in the form of wheat,olive oil or cash. About three-quarters of Yanun's 16,000 dunams of land is still leased.[18]
According to Vikram Sura,Itamar settlers used to trade with local farmers and visit Yanun to enjoy refreshments like cardamom-spiced coffee and mint tea there. In the mid-late 1990s, Itamar began 'annexing' hills stretching out from the settlement towards Yanun.Trailer homes from Itamar began to be set up along the ridge overlooking the village. The last outpost,Giv'ot Olam, looking down over the village of Yanun, was created byAvri Ran, who obtained the land by trespassing on Yanun-owned areas and on Israeli state land, and assaulting any Palestinians who approached his settlement.[29][30] Though they felt surrounded, the Yanun villagers did not feel vulnerable. Relations changed with the outbreak of theAl-Aqsa Intifada in October 2000, when 13 Israeli Arabs were shot dead during the suppression of a riot protesting the visit ofAriel Sharon to theTemple Mount. Yanun lies far from the main areas where Palestinian militants and theIDF subsequently clashed, and till then grievances between the two communities were less than the norm. Over the next three years, Palestinian militants killed roughly 11 Itamar settlers. A Californian who madealiyah to Itamar later accused Yanun of having aided these terrorists.[citation needed] No member of the village has been linked to any attack on settlers.[31] The youths on Avri Ran's hilltop outpost argue that they have a prerogative to respond with violence when they feel their Palestinian neighbours are preventing them from realizing their right, as legal heirs of God's bequest, to work the land.[32]
Armed settlers, according to local reports began to hinder Yanun farmers from harvesting their olive crops, intimidating the villagers and damaging the village's electrical generator.[33] According to a survey reported and compiled by Yanun councilor Abdelatif Sobih, Yanun villagers have since been subjected to repeated assaults on their homes and farms; beatings; shootings, some resulting in death; poisoning and shootings of their flocks; the use of fierce dogs to impede farmer access to their lands; blocking of their access roads; pollution of their water resource; destruction of their electric generator, constructed with a donation from the Economic Development Group; the ploughing of fields sown with crops, or the burning of crops at harvest time; theft of olive trees; shooting at relatives' cars travelling to visit Yanun; and interrogation of teachers at the Yanun elementary school.[34][35]
Assaults and shootings by settlers at Palestinian farmers and foreign volunteers at olive harvest time took place in 2002.[36] A Council spokesman for theIsraeli settlement ofItamar, in response to queries about the incidents, replied that he was unaware of claims of harassment and that settlers were trying to keep Palestinian villagers away from themselves. Another Itamar spokesman toldThe Guardian at the time “If anyone is being terrorized it is us. Arabs have to learn that if they continue to be violent they can’t live here. There is all this talk of Arab olives, what about Jewish blood?”[12]
The village was temporarily abandoned on October 19, 2002,[37] the first exodus in recent times of aPalestinian community abandoning a village in the wake of attacks by settlers. The last of 25 families relocated to nearby Aqraba after a reported worsening in their harassment by Itamar residents, including Avri Ran and his organization, theHilltop Youth. Two aged people stayed behind, refusing to accept the village decision to go.[3][29] The village was re-occupied with the aid of peace activists fromTa'ayush and theInternational Solidarity Movement, who came and held a round-the-clock presence there for two weeks when the villagers started moving out in response to harassment.[38][39] The presence of foreign volunteers as witnesses has acted as a brake on settler assaults.[35][40] Ta'ayush activist David Nir was reportedly pushed by Avri Ran in Yanun.[29] Amiel Vardi, professor ofclassics atHebrew University, was also shot there by a settler whom he subsequently identified and took to court. The case was dismissed.[41] Since 2003,EAPPI has maintained a round-the-clock protective presence in Yanoun, reporting on human rights violations.[42]
On October 30, 2002, together with David Shulman, a group that included the distinguished Israeli writersAmos Oz,Meir Shalev,A. B. Yehoshua,David Grossman, the daughter ofHaim Gouri, with RabbiMenachem Froman, co-founder ofGush Emunim and a settler inTekoa,Ian Buruma and an assortment of Israeli television camera crews and journalists visited Yanun to assist the returned villagers with their harvest and ward off settlers.[43] According to Shulman, one of the settler rabbis had declared that Jews had the right to steal olives from the Palestinians, sincethe land belonged to the former. Rabbi Froman, armed with a heavy pile of books, including theGemara andShulchan Aruch, turned up to show that these texts actually forbid stealing olives from non-Jews.[44]
Early in 2012, the IDF began reviewing plans to revive a dormant firing range, 904A, in the area, and began forbidding Palestinians from using the area, though the ban does not apply to settlers of the Giva 777 outpost of Itamar. Over the summer, Rahed Fahmi, the head of the Yanun council, together withRabbis for Human Rights and an Israeli-Palestinian associationLohamin Leshalom (Fighting for Peace) have been involved in an intense campaign to convince Israeli authorities of the right of Yanun and Aqraba villagers to their lands. They succeeded in obtaining a right to visit their fields for one week, from July 3 to July 10, by which time the wheatcrop had mostly withered.[45]On Saturday July 7, two military jeeps accompanied the farmers to their fields. According to local farmers, sheep were being beaten by settlers. According to the EAPPI andAmira Hass, dozens of Jewish settlers attacked Yanun, one of 50 settler assaults in the West Bank in that month,[45] assailed villagers and killed three sheep, with four villagers, members of the Bani Jaber family, badly injured and requiring hospital treatment. In the assault one was beaten and later handcuffed by soldiers who intervened. A fifth, Jawdat Ibrahim, was reportedly beaten, wounded, bound and left in a field, where he was found the following day.[42] According to an IDF source, the Israeli army intervened in a stone-throwing fray between settlers and villagers, and used tear-gas to stop the clash.[46] According to an official of theNablus Governorate, one of the victims, Jawdat Bani Jabir, was shot in the face and the foot by soldiers and subsequently stabbed by settlers. Five head of cattle were also slaughtered.[47] According to the EAPPI, "The attack began mid-afternoon, when three Palestinian farmers working in their fields were set upon by settlers armed with machine guns and knives. The settlers stabbed three of the farmers’ sheep to death. When EAs arrived at the scene at the request of the head of the village, there were also fires burning in two wheat fields and an olive grove. Israeli soldiers fired tear gas at Palestinians who were trying to reach the area to put out the fires."[42] The day after, another 10 sheep of the flock died. The entire area reserved for their agriculture is now denied to them, but the fields are now tended by settlers permitted to live in the new firing range.[45]
EAPPI reported that Rashed Murrar, head of the village, fears that the intention of the attack was to cause the Palestinian villages to give up their wheat fields. The village, which is home to just 65 people, is surrounded byIsraeli outposts, which are considered illegal both under international law and Israeli law.[42][47]
The villagers reportedly managed to deter settlers who undertook an attack on the village during the olive harvest in October 2015.[48]
The civilian population of Yanun, along with that ofBil'in, Jinba and several other places, in the judgement of scholar andTa'ayush peace activistDavid Shulman, has been subject to practices that are "singularly cruel".Amira Hass, writing forHaaretz, argues that the systematic attacks on Palestinian villagers like those at Yanun, who areSemites, constitute a form ofantisemitism, with the difference that such assaults in the West Bank are rarely if ever reported.[49] The recent history of the village has been cited for the theory that after theOslo Accords, Israel is applying a policy ofslow transfer of Palestinians from villages near Israeli settlements on the West Bank.[50] The Spanish scholar, Ferran Izquierdo Brichs, cites what has happened there as an example ofethnic cleansing.[51]
Yanun has been described as an "idyllic village", if one ignores its recent troubles.[52] Driving in from Aqraba, there are views of hillocks full of olive groves meet the eye, while to the right the land falls steeply down into theJordan Valley.[53] It is surrounded by lush valleys, adorned in spring with anemones and cyclamens, that boast of olive groves and sheep pastures, with views down the valley towards Aqraba. The village itself holds the ruins of fortified Ottoman houses and a dilapidated castle. The site known as Nabinun, on the hillock of that name, has been identified as a former synagogue-mosque and is associated with the biblical father ofJoshua.[54]
{{cite journal}}
:Cite journal requires|journal=
(help)