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Hebron
Hebron is an ancient biblical city in Erez Israel located in the Judean
Hills, 19 miles south of Jerusalem.
The name Hebron may derive from the Hebrew word "haber" meaning friend,
or from the Arabic "haber" meaning granary. In Arabic it is known as al-Khalil,
which means "the city of the beloved" and refers to Abraham (see below).
In the Bible, Hebron is also called Kiriath-Arba (Gen. 23:2).
Hebron was founded around the year 1727 b.c.e. on Jebel al-Rumayda,
a hill near to the present town. At about this time, the Patriarch Abraham
purchased the Cave of Machpelah from Ephron the Hittite, and it was here
that the Jewish forefathers Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and their wives
were buried. Hebron, however, remained a Canaanite city until it was captured
by the Jews in the time of Joshua. Several hundred years later (c. 1010
b.c.e.), David was anointed king of Israel in Hebron.
Hebron remained a Jewish city until the destruction of the First Temple
in 586 b.c.e., when the Jews were exiled to Babylon; however, it became
a Jewish city again around the second century b.c.e. A Jewish settlement
continued to exist there under various foreign rulers until the 20th century
c.e., except for a short period when Hebron was under Crusader rule (1100--1260
c.e.) and all the Jews were temporarily expelled.
Although the Jewish settlement in Hebron was small, it was considered
very important by the Jews, who made frequent pilgrimages to the Cave
of Machpelah. It also became an important spiritual center during the
16th century, after many learned Jews expelled from Spain in 1492 had
settled there.
By the 17th century many important kabbalists and scholars had also
settled in Hebron; a yeshivah was founded in 1659. In 1662 the pseudo-Messiah
Shabbetai Zevi visited the Jewish community and impressed its members,
but his final disgrace led to an economic and spiritual decline. The influence
of the kabbalists was felt until the 19th century, when Habad Hasidim
and other leading rabbis settled there and established several new educational
institutions.
The
flourishing period of Jewish settlement in Hebron came to an end in 1914,
with the outbreak of World War I. After the war the Jewish settlement
began to recover, but was destroyed in 1929 by Arab rioters who killed
67 men, women and children and wounded 60 others. The community was resettled
in 1931, but was again destroyed by the Arab upheavals of 1936. In 1948
Hebron became part of the kingdom of Jordan. It was captured by Israel
in the Six-Day war of June 1967, and there is now a Jewish settlement
of 4,000 inhabitants called Kiriyat Araba adjacent to Hebron. Jewish presence
in Hebron proper was resumed in Jewish-owned buildings in the city. Yeshivot
were also established there.
Uniquely among West Bank cities, Jews and Arabs live side-by-side in Hebron.
In the 1990s, there are approximately 400-500 Jewish settlers living next
to 120,000 Arabs. These Jewish settlers place ideology over personal safety.
Hebron is the stronghold of the Islamic extremist movement Hamas who has
more support here than in any other West Bank region. It is also home
to the ideological core of the Jewish settlement movement which includes
leaders and members of the religious extremist Kach group and the settler
movement Gush Emunim, from which the 1980s Jewish terror underground sprouted.
In 1994, doctor and Kach activist Baruch Goldstein walked into the Cave
of Makhpelah and killed 29 Muslim worshippers. Under the Oslo Accords
II, 80% of Hebron is to be handed over to Yasser Arafat's Palestinian
Authority. Despite the March 1996 pullback date, four devastating Hamas
suicide bombings forced the Labor Government to postpone withdrawal.
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This page was put up with the cooperation of:
Keter Publishing House Ltd and C.D.I. Systems
from their CD-Rom "Encyclopedia Judaica for youth 1996"
cdisys@actcom.co.il
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