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Jenin

Jenin (/ʒəˈnn/; Arabic: جنين, Ǧinīn, pronunciation) is a city in the State of Palestine, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. The city serves as the administrative center of the Jenin Governorate of Palestine and is a major center for the surrounding towns.[2] Jenin came under Israeli occupation in 1967, and was put under the administration of the Palestinian National Authority as Area A of the West Bank in 1993.

Jenin
Arabic transcription(s)
 • Arabicجنين
 • LatinJinin (official)
Janin (unofficial)
Hebrew transcription(s)
 • Hebrewג'נין
The Jenin Horse sculpture in Jenin, Palestine (September 2023)
Jenin
Location of Jenin within Palestine
Coordinates: 32°27′40″N 35°18′00″E / 32.46111°N 35.30000°E / 32.46111; 35.30000
Palestine grid178/207
State State of Palestine
GovernorateJenin
Government
 • TypeCity
Area
 • Total37,342 dunams (37.3 km2 or 14.4 sq mi)
Population
 (2017)[1]
 • Total49,908
 • Density1,300/km2 (3,500/sq mi)
 (plus 10,371 in Jenin refugee camp)

In 2017, Jenin had a population of approximately 50,000 people, whilst the Jenin refugee camp had a population of about 10,000, housing Palestinians who fled or were expelled from their homes during the 1948 Palestine War.[1][3] The camp has since become a stronghold of Palestinian militants, and the location of several incidents relating to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict.

Etymology

Jenin has been identified as the place "Gina" or "Ginah" mentioned in the Amarna letters from the 14th century BCE, as a town in Canaan.[4] Jenin is commonly identified with the later biblical city of Ein-Ganim,[5][6][7][8] from Hebrew: עֵין גַּנִּים, meaning "the spring of gardens"[9] or "the spring of Ganim",[10] probably referring to the many springs located nearby. The present-day Arabic name is believed to preserve the city's ancient name.[5]

History

Ancient period

Jenin is identified with a number of important towns mentioned in ancient sources. Throughout history, it was referred to as "Ein Ganim", "Beth Hagan", "Ginah", and "Ginae", along other names.[4][8] Tell Jenin, believed to constitute the original settlement core of the city, is located at the center of what is today Jenin's business district.[5][11]

Bronze Age

Jenin has been identified as the place "Gina" or "Ginah" mentioned in the Amarna letters from the 14th century BCE. At the time, it was a vassal state of the New Kingdom of Egypt.[12][4] The people of Gina managed to kill the warlord Labaya during the reign of Pharaoh Akhenaten.[13]

Iron Age

Jenin is identical to Ein-Ganim, which the Hebrew Bible describes as a Levite city belonging to the Israelite Tribe of Issachar.[4][8][14] It has also been associated with Beth-Haggan, mentioned in 2 Kings in connection with Ahaziah's flight from Jehu, before he is wounded at Ibleam and later dies in Megiddo.[4][8][15] The Book of Judith renders its name as "Gini".[5][4]

Roman and Byzantine periods

Josephus, a Roman-Jewish historian of the 1st-century CE, mentions "Ginae" as being in the great plain, on the northern border of Samaria.[5][16][17] During the Roman period, Ginae was settled exclusively by Samaritans. The people of Galilee were disposed to pass through their city during the annual pilgrimages to Jerusalem.[18] In 51 CE, a Galilean Jew was killed in Ginae by hostile Samaritans while en route to Jerusalem to celebrate Sukkot. With Roman procurator Cumanus failing to respond, Jewish Zealots led by Elazar the Son of Deinaeus (Ben Dinai) sought vengeance, and several Samaritan villages in Aqrabatene were destroyed.[19][20]

Biblical commentator F. W. Farrar raised the possibility that this Samaritan village, "the first village at which [a traveler taking the road from Galilee to Judea over Mount Tabor] would arrive", was the one which rejected the disciples of Jesus in Luke's Gospel at the point where Jesus and his followers begin his journey towards Jerusalem.[21]

Ceramics dating from the Byzantine era have been found here.[22] There is no mention of Jenin in the reports of the Muslim conquest of the Levant from the Byzantines, which, according to the historian Moshe Sharon, "is not surprising, since it was a small place of minor importance".[23]

Crusader, Ayyubid and Mamluk periods

Jenin came under Crusader rule in 1103.[24] The Crusaders called it Le Grand Guerin (Latin: Garinum or Gallina Major),[23] to distinguish it from the town of Zir'in, which they called "Petit Grin".[24] Under the Crusaders it was a small seigniory, forming part of the Principality of Galilee or the Kingdom of Jerusalem.[23]

Shortly before the Battle of Hattin in 1187, Jenin was captured by the Ayyubid sultan Saladin,[23] who destroyed the nearby fort, Castellum Beleismum.[25] In the 1220s, the geographer Yaqut al-Hamawi described Jenin as "a small and beautiful town, lying between Nabulus and Beisan, in the Jordan Province. There is much water, and many springs are found here, and often have I visited it."[26] In 1229, a peace was concluded between Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor and Sultan al-Kamil, during the Sixth Crusade, whereby the city was given to the Crusaders, but Sultan as-Salih Ayyub was able to control it permanently in 1244 after the Battle of La Forbie.[citation needed]

In 1255, it was agreed between the Ayyubid sultan in Syria, an-Nasir Yusuf, and the first Mamluk sultan in Egypt, Izz al-Din Aybak, to give the latter all of the lands lying west of the Jordan River, and thus Jenin entered into the possession of the Mamluks.[citation needed] It was one of eleven subdistricts of Mamlakat Safad (Province of Safed).[27] In the late 13th century, Mamluk emirs (commanders) stationed at Jenin were ordered by Sultan Qalawun (r. 1279–1290) "to ride every day with their troops before the fortress of 'Akka, so as to protect the coast and the merchants."[28] As one of the stations of the Mamluk barid (postal route) between the Mamluk capital Cairo and Damascus, it was one of the towns where fires were lit to warn of a Mongol attack.[27] The geographer al-Dimashqi mentioned Jenin around 1300.[29] From the time of Qalawun's son, Sultan an-Nasir Muhammad (r. 1299–1309, 1310–1341), it was a station on the route where ice was transported to Cairo for the sultans' drink houses.[27] The Mamluk historian al-Qalqashandi (d. 1418) described Jenin as "an ancient spacious town which is riding on a shoulder of a nice valley in which there is a river of flowing water" north of Qaqun "on the top end of Marj Bani Amer [Jezreel Valley]".[27] He also noted that it contained the mausoleum of Dihyah al-Kalbi, a companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.[27]

Ottoman era

 
Painting of Jenin by David Roberts, 1839, in The Holy Land, Syria, Idumea, Arabia, Egypt, and Nubia
 
A general view of Jenin, between 1890 and 1900
 
Street scene in Jenin, 1917. An Ottoman Army soldier (center left) with a local Arab (center right)

The Ottomans conquered Mamluk Syria in 1516. Jenin became the administrative center of a nahiya (subdistrict) of the Lajjun Sanjak (Lajjun District).[27] The sanjak was officially called the Iqta (Fief) of Turabay until 1559 when it became officially known as the Lajjun Sanjak.[30] The Turabay dynasty was the ruling house of the Bedouin Banu Haritha tribe, whose members held the governorship of Lajjun from the start of Ottoman rule through 1677.[31]

The tax registers from 1548–1549 report that Jenin had a population of eight households, all Muslim. They paid a fixed tax rate of 25% on agricultural products, including wheat, barley, summer crops, goats and beehives, in addition to occasional revenues; a total of 2,000 akçe. All of the revenue went to a waqf (religious endowment) in the name of the Mamluk sultan Qansuh al-Ghuri (r. 1501–1516).[32] Turabay rule was occasionally interrupted, including in 1564, when a certain Kemal Bey was appointed sanjak-bey (district governor) by the Ottomans.[33] On 15 October 1564 Kemal Bey requested from the beylerbey (provincial governor) of Damascus that the stone caravanserai of Jenin be repaired, garrisoned and serve as the chief headquarters of the Lajjun sanjak-bey in order for Lajjun to prosper and for the road connecting Damascus to Jerusalem and Egypt to become secure. The official response was that the caravanserai be turned into a fortress; the fortress became ruined at some later point and 19th-century residents of Jenin used to claim that certain large rocks strewn in the village were the remnants of the 16th-century fortress.[34]

The Turabays, who remained nomads in the plain between Mount Carmel and Caesarea, made Jenin the administrative headquarters of Lajjun and used the town's Izz al-Din Cemetery to bury their dead.[35] A large, domed mausoleum was built for the grave of one of the chiefs and sanjak-beys of the family, Turabay ibn Ali (d. 1601). Known as Qubbat al-Amir Turabay (Dome of the Emir Turabay), it was described in a 1941 report as a ruined structure, and Sharon, writing in 2017, notes that it "does not exist anymore".[36] No other graves of the Turabays in Jenin had survived into the 20th century.[36] During the conflict between Fakhr al-Din of the Ma'n dynasty, who governed the sanjaks of Sidon-Beirut and Safed, and the Turabays, in 1623, Fakhr al-Din captured Jenin and stationed his men there. In 1624 the most prominent Turabay chief and sanjak-bey of Lajjun, Ahmad ibn Turabay, drove out the Ma'nid troops from Jenin and established his personal residence in the town.[37]

In the mid-18th century, Jenin was designated the administrative capital of the combined districts of Lajjun and Ajlun.[38] There are indications that the area comprising Jenin and Nablus remained functionally autonomous under Ottoman rule and that the empire struggled to collect taxes there. During the Napoleonic Campaign in Egypt which extended into Syria and Palestine in 1799, a local official from Jenin wrote a poem enumerating and calling upon local Arab leaders to resist Bonaparte, without mentioning the Sultan or the need to protect the Ottoman Empire.[39]

In the late 19th century, some members of the Jarrar family, who formed part of the mallakin (elite land-owning families) in Jenin, cooperated with merchants in Haifa to set up an export enterprise there.[40] During the Ottoman era, Jenin was plagued by local warfare between members of the same clan.[41] The French explorer Guérin visited in 1870.[42] In 1882, the PEF's Survey of Western Palestine described Jenin as "The capital of the district, the seat of a Caimacam, a town of about 3,000 inhabitants, with a small bazaar. The houses are well built of stone. There are two families of Roman Catholics; the remainder are Moslems. A spring rises east of the town and is conducted to a large masonry reservoir, near the west side, of good squared stonework, with a long stone trough. This reservoir was built by 'And el Hady, Mudir of Acre, in the first half of the century [..], north of the town is the little mosque of 'Ezz ed Din, with a good- sized dome and a minaret."[43]

British Mandate period

 
View of the rubble in Jenin after a quarter of the town was dynamited by British forces in 1938, as a retaliatory attack after a British official was assassinated

According to a census conducted in 1922 by the British Mandate authorities, Jenin had a population of 2,637 (2,307 Muslims, 212 Hindus, 108 Christians, seven Jews, and three Sikhs).[44] A following census in 1931 showed a slight increase to 2,706 (2,610 Muslims, 103 Christians, two Jews, and one Druze) with another 68 in nearby suburbs (all Muslims).[45] From 1936, Jenin became a center of rebellion against the British Mandatory authorities. By the summer of 1938, residents of the city embarked on "an intensified campaign of murder, intimidation and sabotage" that caused the British administration "grave concern", according to a British report to the League of Nations;[46] the population had further increased to 3,100.[47] The city played an important role in the 1936–39 Arab revolt in Palestine, prompted by the death of Izz ad-Din al-Qassam in a fire-fight with British colonial police at the nearby town of Ya'bad months prior to the start of the revolt. On 25 August 1938, the day after the British Assistant District Commissioner was assassinated in his Jenin office, a large British force with explosives entered the town. Despite having captured and killed the assassin, British forces ordered the inhabitants to leave, and blew up one quarter of the town as a form of punishment.[48]

Jenin was used by Fawzi al-Qawuqji's Arab Liberation Army as a base.

The village statistics of 1945 list the population as 3,990 (3,840 Muslims and 150 Christians).[49]

1948 War

In the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, the city was defended by the Iraqi Army, then captured briefly by the forces from Israel's Carmeli Brigade during the "Ten Days' fighting" following the cancellation of the first cease-fire. Prior to the battle, the city's residents fled temporarily.[50] The offensive was actually a feint designed to draw Arab forces away from the critical Battle for Jerusalem, and gains in that sector were quickly abandoned when Arab reinforcements arrived.

Jordanian control

In the wake of the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, and after the 1949 Armistice Agreements, Jenin came under Jordanian rule. It was annexed by Jordan in 1950.

The Jenin refugee camp was founded in 1953 by Jordan to house displaced Palestinians who fled or were expelled during the 1948 War. In 2014 the camp had a population of 16,000. For 19 years, the city was under Jordanian control. A war cemetery for Iraqi soldiers and local combatants is located on the outskirts of Jenin.

The Jordanian census of 1961 found 14,402 inhabitants in Jenin.[51]

Israeli occupation

 
2018 United Nations map of the area, showing the Israeli occupation arrangements.
 
A street in Jenin, 2011

Jenin has been under Israeli occupation since the Six-Day War, in 1967.

On 14 May 1989, during the early months of the First Intifada. Mohammad Jibrin, aged 45, died in Ramallah Hospital after being beaten by Israeli soldiers in Jenin. Three months later, in response to a question from a member of Knesset Defence Minister Yitzhak Rabin wrote that there was no investigation by the Military Police Investigator.[52]

In 1996, Israel handed over control of the city to the Palestinian National Authority in keeping with the Oslo Accords. Known to Palestinians as "the martyrs' capital", the camp's militants, some 200 armed men, included members of Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades, Tanzim, Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) and Hamas.[53][54] By Israel's count, at least 28 suicide bombers were dispatched from the Jenin camp from 2000–2003 during the Second Intifada.[53] Israeli army weekly Bamahane attributes at least 31 militant attacks, totaling 124 victims, to Jenin during the same period, more than any other city in the West Bank.[55]

 
In Jenin

During the al-Aqsa Intifada, Israel launched Operation Defensive Shield with the stated aim of dismantling terrorist infrastructure so as to curb suicide bombings and other militant activities. The army encircled and entered six major Palestinian population centers in the West Bank, among them Jenin. During the Battle of Jenin (2002) in April 2002, 23 Israeli soldiers and 52 Palestinians, including civilians,[56][57] were killed.[58] Human Rights Watch reported that the refugee camp, which was the major battleground, suffered extensive damage. Witnesses stated unarmed people were shot and denied medical treatment, and as a result died. Human Rights Watch have regarded many killings to be unlawful such as the death of a 57-year-old wheelchair bound man who was shot and run over by a tank despite having attached a white flag on his wheelchair. A 37-year-old man who was paralysed was crushed under the rubble of his house, his family was not allowed to remove his body. A 14-year-old boy was killed as he travelled to purchase groceries during the temporary relief of the curfew that was imposed by the army. Medical staff were shot at (one nurse killed) while trying to reach the wounded even after clearly being in uniform displaying the red crescent symbol.[59] There have also been reports of Israeli soldiers using Palestinians as human shields, one father described how a soldier rested his rifle on his 14-year-old son's shoulder as he shot.[60] Israel denied the entry of rescue teams and journalists into Jenin even after they withdrew. Over the following years, Jenin was subject to extended curfews and targeted killings.

During a gun-battle with Islamic Jihad militants whom Israel says were firing at troops from inside the UN compound, an Israeli military sniper shot and killed a UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) employee, Iain Hook (54) on November 22, 2002.[61] The sniper reportedly mistook a cellphone in Hook's hands for a gun or grenade.[62]

 
Downtown Jenin

In the framework of the Valley of Peace initiative, a joint Arab-Israeli project is under way to promote tourism in the Jenin region.[63] In 2010, 600 new businesses opened in Jenin.[64] The Canaan Fair Trade is headquartered in Jenin.[65] Director of The Freedom Theatre in Jenin, Juliano Mer-Khamis, was killed by masked gunmen in the city in April 2011. Mer-Khamis co-founded the theatre with Zakaria Zubeidi, former military chief of the al-Aqsa Brigades who had renounced violence.[66]

On 6 February 2020, a Palestinian policeman, Tarek Badwan, was shot dead by an Israeli sniper as he stood at the entrance to the Jenin police station and chatted with a colleague. No explanation has been forthcoming. The incident was recorded on video.[67]

On 17 June 2022, Israeli forces conducted a raid in the al-Marah area of the city. During the raid, Israeli forces opened fire on a car, killing three Palestinians and seriously injuring another.[68]

 
A street in Jenin

On 26 January 2023, Israeli forces killed nine in a clash with Islamic Jihad militants during a raid in the city and refugee camp of Jenin.[69][70]

On 3 July 2023, shortly after 1 a.m., Israeli forces attacked the city's refugee camp using drone-fired missiles and ground troops. Eight Palestinians died from injuries sustained during the attack and a further eighty were injured, nine of them critically.[71][72] Fifty Palestinians, whom Israeli forces labeled "militants", were arrested. Israeli forces cut off telecommunications and electricity in the area and medical professionals struggled to reach the injured. Israel claimed that while they were targeting suspected members of the Jenin Brigades, an armed group, they acknowledged that innocent people may have been injured or killed in the raid. Yoav Gallant, the Israeli Minister of Defense, said "The operation is progressing as planned," and Eli Cohen, the Israeli Foreign Minister, said claimed the refugee camp had become a "center for terrorist activity" thanks to funding from Iranian sources.[73] The refugee camp has a population of roughly 17,000 inhabitants and is about a quarter a square mile in size.

On 19 September 2023, four Palestinians were killed during another Israeli military invasion of the city – among them a 15-year-old Palestinian boy, chased and killed for having noticed the Israeli undercover soldiers sneaking into the Jenin refugee camp.[74]

During the 2023 Hamas-Israel war, Israeli forces carried out multiple operations in Jenin. On October 22, the IDF conducted an airstrike targeting an underground compound beneath the Al-Ansar Mosque in the city. It was reported to be the first airstrike in the West Bank since the Second Intifada. The IDF stated that the strike aimed at operatives from Hamas and PIJ who were planning a terror attack.[75]

Geography

Jenin is situated at the foot of the rugged northernmost hills (Jabal Nablus) of the West Bank, and along the southern edge of the Jezreel Valley (Marj Ibn Amer),[76] which the city overlooks.[77] Its highest elevation is about 250 meters above sea level and its lowest areas are 90 meters above sea level.[78] Immediately southwest of Jenin is the Sahl Arraba plain (Dothan Valley), while further south is the Marj Sanur valley.[79] About 1.5 kilometers to Jenin's east is Mount Gilboa (Jabal Faqqua).[80]

Jenin is 42 kilometers north of Nablus, 18 kilometers to the south of Afula, and 51 kilometers southeast of Haifa.[81] The nearest localities are Umm at-Tut and Jalqamus to the southeast, Qabatiya and Zababdeh to the south, Burqin to the southwest, Kafr Dan to the west, Arranah, Jalamah and the Arab Israeli village of Muqeible to the north, Deir Ghazaleh to the northeast, and Beit Qad and Deir Abu Da'if to the east.

Government

Jenin municipality was established in 1886 under the Ottoman rule with no more than 80 voters and elections were made every 4 years until 1982 when the Israeli government took control over the municipality until 1995. [citation needed]

List of Jenin mayors:[82]

Municipal elections were held in Jenin on 15 December 2005. Six seats each were won by Hamas and the local coalition of Fatah and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. Jenin was one of several Palestinian cities where Hamas showed a dramatic growth in electoral support. [83] Hadem Rida was then elected as Mayor of the city, until he was arrested by the Israel Forces and spent 3 years in jail. After his release, he resigned from the position and went back to practice in his clinic in Jenin city.

Demographics

 
Palestinian children in Jenin

According to the 2017 census by the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, Jenin had a population of 49,908,[1] the Jenin Refugee Camp of 10,417[1] on 373 dunams (92 acres). Some 42.3% of the population of the camp was under the age of 15.

Year Population Jenin City
1596 8 households[32]
1821 ~1,500–2,000[84]
1838 ~2,000[85]
1870 ~2,000[86]
1882 ~3,000[87]
1922 2,637[44]
1931 2,706 + 68[88]
1945 3,990[89][90]
1961 14,402[51]
1997 26,681[91]
2007 39,004[3]
2017 49,908[1]

Public institutions and landmarks

Holy sites

The ancient cemetery in Jenin houses the tomb of Sheikh Izz al-Din, a Sufi saint of the Rifa'i order. According to local traditions, he was a descendant of Ali Zayn al-Abidin, the grandson of Muhammad and the sixth Sh'ia Imam. According to a local tradition, Sheikh Izz al-Din fought alongside Saladin against the Crusaders. The tomb possibly predates the cemetery, which served as a burial site for the people of Jenin and the Turabay dynasty. Another tomb in the same cemetery is al-Sheikh Tarabiya, where the Turabay emir Ahmad ibn Turabay ibn Ali al-Harithi is buried.[95]

Education and culture

 
Arab American University in Jenin

The Arab American University is located in Jenin's vicinity.

Cinema Jenin is the largest movie theater in the area. The cinema, which reopened in 2010 after a 23-year intermission, has indoor and outdoor screens, a film library and educational facilities.[96]

Strings of Freedom is an orchestra in Jenin founded by an Arab citizen of Israel, Wafaa Younis, who travels form her home in central Israel to teach music to the local youth.[97]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Preliminary Results of the Population, Housing and Establishments Census, 2017 (PDF). Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS) (Report). State of Palestine. February 2018. pp. 64–82. Retrieved 2023-10-24.
  2. ^ "Jenin City". Welcome To Palestine. Retrieved 2022-06-18.
  3. ^ a b 2007 Locality Population Statistics 2010-12-10 at the Wayback Machine. Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics
  4. ^ a b c d e f Zertal, Adam (2016). The Manasseh Hill Country Survey: From Nahal 'Iron to Nahal Shechem. Vol. 3. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-13756-1. OCLC 54694679. Jenin is well identified with a number of important sites: in the el-Amarna letters "The Land of Ginah" is mentioned (EA 250), which is probably the E7 of the 'Execration Texts' (Posener's group); in the Bible there is 'Ein Ganim' (see Kallai's opinion in EB VI: 207–208) and Beth Hagan (I Kgs 9: 27); in the Book of Judith, it appears as Ginei (Jdt 3: 11) and Ginae of the Roman period appears in Josephus (Ant. XX, vi, 1; War III, iii, 4); in the Moslem and the Crusader sources it appears under many names: Geninum, Le Grand Gerin, Major Gallina, Gerinum Magnum. These identifications refer to the tell and/or the settlement of Jenin
  5. ^ a b c d e Tasneem Ghalib Khader Atatrah (2010). "Assessment of Traditional Home Practices Carried by Palestinian Mothers During the Neonatal Period in Jenin District". Deanship of Graduated Studies, Al-Quds University. Etymology: Jenin was known in ancient times as the Canaanite village of "Ein-Ganim" or Tel Jenin. Tel Jenin, its name in Arabic, is located at the center of what is today Jenin's business center. The city of Ein-Ganim is mentioned in the Hebrew bible as the city of the Levites of the Tribe of Issachar. After some years, the city's name was changed to "Giant". In the book of Judith, the settlement is mentioned as "Gini". The Jewish historian Josephus also mentioned Ganim as a city in northern Samaria. The Arabic name "Jenin" ultimately derives from this ancient name.
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  45. ^ Palestine Census 1931.
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Bibliography

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  • Barron, J.B., ed. (1923). Palestine: Report and General Abstracts of the Census of 1922. Government of Palestine.
  • Chatty, D. (2006). Nomadic societies in the Middle East and North Africa: entering the 21st century (Illustrated ed.). Brill Publishers. ISBN 978-90-04-14792-8.
  • Conder, C.R.; Kitchener, H.H. (1882). The Survey of Western Palestine: Memoirs of the Topography, Orography, Hydrography, and Archaeology. Vol. 2. London: Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund.
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  • Doumani, B. (1995). Rediscovering Palestine: merchants and peasants in Jabal Nablus, 1700-1900 (Illustrated ed.). University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-20370-9.
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  • Le Strange, G. (1890). Palestine Under the Moslems: A Description of Syria and the Holy Land from A.D. 650 to 1500. Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund.
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  • Negev, Avraham; Gibson, Shimon (2005). Archaeological encyclopedia of the Holy Land (4th, revised, illustrated ed.). Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-8264-8571-7.
  • Palmer, E.H. (1881). The Survey of Western Palestine: Arabic and English Name Lists Collected During the Survey by Lieutenants Conder and Kitchener, R. E. Transliterated and Explained by E.H. Palmer. Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund.
  • Quataert, D. (2005). The Ottoman Empire, 1700-1922 (2nd, illustrated, revised ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-83910-5.
  • Rhode, H. (1979). The Administration and Population of the Sancak of Safad in the Sixteenth Century (PhD). Columbia University.
  • Robinson, E.; Smith, E. (1841). Biblical Researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea: A Journal of Travels in the year 1838. Vol. 3. Boston: Crocker & Brewster.
  • Scholz, J.M.A. (1822). Reise in die Gegend zwischen Alexandrien und Parätonium, die libysche Wüste, Siwa, Egypten . F. Fleischer.
  • Sharon, M. (2017). Corpus Inscriptionum Arabicarum Palaestinae, Volume Six: J (1). Leiden and Boston: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-32515-9.
  • Yazbak, M. (1998). Haifa in the late Ottoman period, 1864-1914: a Muslim town in transition (Illustrated ed.). Brill Publishers. ISBN 978-90-04-11051-9.
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External links

  • Welcome To Jinin
  • Survey of Western Palestine, Map 8: , Wikimedia commons
  • Peace and Prosperity in the West Bank in-depth report on NOW on PBS
  • Heart of Jenin documentary on PBS wide angle

jenin, this, article, about, city, palestine, other, uses, disambiguation, arabic, جنين, Ǧinīn, pronunciation, city, state, palestine, israeli, occupied, west, bank, city, serves, administrative, center, governorate, palestine, major, center, surrounding, town. This article is about the city in Palestine For other uses see Jenin disambiguation Jenin ʒ e ˈ n iː n Arabic جنين Ǧinin pronunciation is a city in the State of Palestine in the Israeli occupied West Bank The city serves as the administrative center of the Jenin Governorate of Palestine and is a major center for the surrounding towns 2 Jenin came under Israeli occupation in 1967 and was put under the administration of the Palestinian National Authority as Area A of the West Bank in 1993 JeninMunicipality type A City Arabic transcription s Arabicجنين LatinJinin official Janin unofficial Hebrew transcription s Hebrewג ניןThe Jenin Horse sculpture in Jenin Palestine September 2023 JeninLocation of Jenin within PalestineCoordinates 32 27 40 N 35 18 00 E 32 46111 N 35 30000 E 32 46111 35 30000Palestine grid178 207State State of PalestineGovernorateJeninGovernment TypeCityArea Total37 342 dunams 37 3 km2 or 14 4 sq mi Population 2017 1 Total49 908 Density1 300 km2 3 500 sq mi plus 10 371 in Jenin refugee camp In 2017 Jenin had a population of approximately 50 000 people whilst the Jenin refugee camp had a population of about 10 000 housing Palestinians who fled or were expelled from their homes during the 1948 Palestine War 1 3 The camp has since become a stronghold of Palestinian militants and the location of several incidents relating to the Israeli Palestinian conflict Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Ancient period 2 1 1 Bronze Age 2 1 2 Iron Age 2 2 Roman and Byzantine periods 2 3 Crusader Ayyubid and Mamluk periods 2 4 Ottoman era 2 5 British Mandate period 2 6 1948 War 2 7 Jordanian control 2 8 Israeli occupation 3 Geography 4 Government 5 Demographics 6 Public institutions and landmarks 6 1 Holy sites 7 Education and culture 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksEtymologyJenin has been identified as the place Gina or Ginah mentioned in the Amarna letters from the 14th century BCE as a town in Canaan 4 Jenin is commonly identified with the later biblical city of Ein Ganim 5 6 7 8 from Hebrew ע ין ג נ ים meaning the spring of gardens 9 or the spring of Ganim 10 probably referring to the many springs located nearby The present day Arabic name is believed to preserve the city s ancient name 5 HistoryAncient period Further information Gina Canaan Jenin is identified with a number of important towns mentioned in ancient sources Throughout history it was referred to as Ein Ganim Beth Hagan Ginah and Ginae along other names 4 8 Tell Jenin believed to constitute the original settlement core of the city is located at the center of what is today Jenin s business district 5 11 Bronze Age Jenin has been identified as the place Gina or Ginah mentioned in the Amarna letters from the 14th century BCE At the time it was a vassal state of the New Kingdom of Egypt 12 4 The people of Gina managed to kill the warlord Labaya during the reign of Pharaoh Akhenaten 13 Iron Age Jenin is identical to Ein Ganim which the Hebrew Bible describes as a Levite city belonging to the Israelite Tribe of Issachar 4 8 14 It has also been associated with Beth Haggan mentioned in 2 Kings in connection with Ahaziah s flight from Jehu before he is wounded at Ibleam and later dies in Megiddo 4 8 15 The Book of Judith renders its name as Gini 5 4 Roman and Byzantine periods Josephus a Roman Jewish historian of the 1st century CE mentions Ginae as being in the great plain on the northern border of Samaria 5 16 17 During the Roman period Ginae was settled exclusively by Samaritans The people of Galilee were disposed to pass through their city during the annual pilgrimages to Jerusalem 18 In 51 CE a Galilean Jew was killed in Ginae by hostile Samaritans while en route to Jerusalem to celebrate Sukkot With Roman procurator Cumanus failing to respond Jewish Zealots led by Elazar the Son of Deinaeus Ben Dinai sought vengeance and several Samaritan villages in Aqrabatene were destroyed 19 20 Biblical commentator F W Farrar raised the possibility that this Samaritan village the first village at which a traveler taking the road from Galilee to Judea over Mount Tabor would arrive was the one which rejected the disciples of Jesus in Luke s Gospel at the point where Jesus and his followers begin his journey towards Jerusalem 21 Ceramics dating from the Byzantine era have been found here 22 There is no mention of Jenin in the reports of the Muslim conquest of the Levant from the Byzantines which according to the historian Moshe Sharon is not surprising since it was a small place of minor importance 23 Crusader Ayyubid and Mamluk periods Jenin came under Crusader rule in 1103 24 The Crusaders called it Le Grand Guerin Latin Garinum or Gallina Major 23 to distinguish it from the town of Zir in which they called Petit Grin 24 Under the Crusaders it was a small seigniory forming part of the Principality of Galilee or the Kingdom of Jerusalem 23 Shortly before the Battle of Hattin in 1187 Jenin was captured by the Ayyubid sultan Saladin 23 who destroyed the nearby fort Castellum Beleismum 25 In the 1220s the geographer Yaqut al Hamawi described Jenin as a small and beautiful town lying between Nabulus and Beisan in the Jordan Province There is much water and many springs are found here and often have I visited it 26 In 1229 a peace was concluded between Frederick II Holy Roman Emperor and Sultan al Kamil during the Sixth Crusade whereby the city was given to the Crusaders but Sultan as Salih Ayyub was able to control it permanently in 1244 after the Battle of La Forbie citation needed In 1255 it was agreed between the Ayyubid sultan in Syria an Nasir Yusuf and the first Mamluk sultan in Egypt Izz al Din Aybak to give the latter all of the lands lying west of the Jordan River and thus Jenin entered into the possession of the Mamluks citation needed It was one of eleven subdistricts of Mamlakat Safad Province of Safed 27 In the late 13th century Mamluk emirs commanders stationed at Jenin were ordered by Sultan Qalawun r 1279 1290 to ride every day with their troops before the fortress of Akka so as to protect the coast and the merchants 28 As one of the stations of the Mamluk barid postal route between the Mamluk capital Cairo and Damascus it was one of the towns where fires were lit to warn of a Mongol attack 27 The geographer al Dimashqi mentioned Jenin around 1300 29 From the time of Qalawun s son Sultan an Nasir Muhammad r 1299 1309 1310 1341 it was a station on the route where ice was transported to Cairo for the sultans drink houses 27 The Mamluk historian al Qalqashandi d 1418 described Jenin as an ancient spacious town which is riding on a shoulder of a nice valley in which there is a river of flowing water north of Qaqun on the top end of Marj Bani Amer Jezreel Valley 27 He also noted that it contained the mausoleum of Dihyah al Kalbi a companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad 27 Ottoman era nbsp Painting of Jenin by David Roberts 1839 in The Holy Land Syria Idumea Arabia Egypt and Nubia nbsp A general view of Jenin between 1890 and 1900 nbsp Street scene in Jenin 1917 An Ottoman Army soldier center left with a local Arab center right The Ottomans conquered Mamluk Syria in 1516 Jenin became the administrative center of a nahiya subdistrict of the Lajjun Sanjak Lajjun District 27 The sanjak was officially called the Iqta Fief of Turabay until 1559 when it became officially known as the Lajjun Sanjak 30 The Turabay dynasty was the ruling house of the Bedouin Banu Haritha tribe whose members held the governorship of Lajjun from the start of Ottoman rule through 1677 31 The tax registers from 1548 1549 report that Jenin had a population of eight households all Muslim They paid a fixed tax rate of 25 on agricultural products including wheat barley summer crops goats and beehives in addition to occasional revenues a total of 2 000 akce All of the revenue went to a waqf religious endowment in the name of the Mamluk sultan Qansuh al Ghuri r 1501 1516 32 Turabay rule was occasionally interrupted including in 1564 when a certain Kemal Bey was appointed sanjak bey district governor by the Ottomans 33 On 15 October 1564 Kemal Bey requested from the beylerbey provincial governor of Damascus that the stone caravanserai of Jenin be repaired garrisoned and serve as the chief headquarters of the Lajjun sanjak bey in order for Lajjun to prosper and for the road connecting Damascus to Jerusalem and Egypt to become secure The official response was that the caravanserai be turned into a fortress the fortress became ruined at some later point and 19th century residents of Jenin used to claim that certain large rocks strewn in the village were the remnants of the 16th century fortress 34 The Turabays who remained nomads in the plain between Mount Carmel and Caesarea made Jenin the administrative headquarters of Lajjun and used the town s Izz al Din Cemetery to bury their dead 35 A large domed mausoleum was built for the grave of one of the chiefs and sanjak beys of the family Turabay ibn Ali d 1601 Known as Qubbat al Amir Turabay Dome of the Emir Turabay it was described in a 1941 report as a ruined structure and Sharon writing in 2017 notes that it does not exist anymore 36 No other graves of the Turabays in Jenin had survived into the 20th century 36 During the conflict between Fakhr al Din of the Ma n dynasty who governed the sanjaks of Sidon Beirut and Safed and the Turabays in 1623 Fakhr al Din captured Jenin and stationed his men there In 1624 the most prominent Turabay chief and sanjak bey of Lajjun Ahmad ibn Turabay drove out the Ma nid troops from Jenin and established his personal residence in the town 37 In the mid 18th century Jenin was designated the administrative capital of the combined districts of Lajjun and Ajlun 38 There are indications that the area comprising Jenin and Nablus remained functionally autonomous under Ottoman rule and that the empire struggled to collect taxes there During the Napoleonic Campaign in Egypt which extended into Syria and Palestine in 1799 a local official from Jenin wrote a poem enumerating and calling upon local Arab leaders to resist Bonaparte without mentioning the Sultan or the need to protect the Ottoman Empire 39 In the late 19th century some members of the Jarrar family who formed part of the mallakin elite land owning families in Jenin cooperated with merchants in Haifa to set up an export enterprise there 40 During the Ottoman era Jenin was plagued by local warfare between members of the same clan 41 The French explorer Guerin visited in 1870 42 In 1882 the PEF s Survey of Western Palestine described Jenin as The capital of the district the seat of a Caimacam a town of about 3 000 inhabitants with a small bazaar The houses are well built of stone There are two families of Roman Catholics the remainder are Moslems A spring rises east of the town and is conducted to a large masonry reservoir near the west side of good squared stonework with a long stone trough This reservoir was built by And el Hady Mudir of Acre in the first half of the century north of the town is the little mosque of Ezz ed Din with a good sized dome and a minaret 43 British Mandate period nbsp View of the rubble in Jenin after a quarter of the town was dynamited by British forces in 1938 as a retaliatory attack after a British official was assassinated According to a census conducted in 1922 by the British Mandate authorities Jenin had a population of 2 637 2 307 Muslims 212 Hindus 108 Christians seven Jews and three Sikhs 44 A following census in 1931 showed a slight increase to 2 706 2 610 Muslims 103 Christians two Jews and one Druze with another 68 in nearby suburbs all Muslims 45 From 1936 Jenin became a center of rebellion against the British Mandatory authorities By the summer of 1938 residents of the city embarked on an intensified campaign of murder intimidation and sabotage that caused the British administration grave concern according to a British report to the League of Nations 46 the population had further increased to 3 100 47 The city played an important role in the 1936 39 Arab revolt in Palestine prompted by the death of Izz ad Din al Qassam in a fire fight with British colonial police at the nearby town of Ya bad months prior to the start of the revolt On 25 August 1938 the day after the British Assistant District Commissioner was assassinated in his Jenin office a large British force with explosives entered the town Despite having captured and killed the assassin British forces ordered the inhabitants to leave and blew up one quarter of the town as a form of punishment 48 Jenin was used by Fawzi al Qawuqji s Arab Liberation Army as a base The village statistics of 1945 list the population as 3 990 3 840 Muslims and 150 Christians 49 1948 War Further information Battle of Jenin 1948 In the 1948 Arab Israeli War the city was defended by the Iraqi Army then captured briefly by the forces from Israel s Carmeli Brigade during the Ten Days fighting following the cancellation of the first cease fire Prior to the battle the city s residents fled temporarily 50 The offensive was actually a feint designed to draw Arab forces away from the critical Battle for Jerusalem and gains in that sector were quickly abandoned when Arab reinforcements arrived Jordanian control In the wake of the 1948 Arab Israeli War and after the 1949 Armistice Agreements Jenin came under Jordanian rule It was annexed by Jordan in 1950 The Jenin refugee camp was founded in 1953 by Jordan to house displaced Palestinians who fled or were expelled during the 1948 War In 2014 the camp had a population of 16 000 For 19 years the city was under Jordanian control A war cemetery for Iraqi soldiers and local combatants is located on the outskirts of Jenin The Jordanian census of 1961 found 14 402 inhabitants in Jenin 51 Israeli occupation Further information Battle of Jenin 2002 nbsp 2018 United Nations map of the area showing the Israeli occupation arrangements nbsp A street in Jenin 2011 Jenin has been under Israeli occupation since the Six Day War in 1967 On 14 May 1989 during the early months of the First Intifada Mohammad Jibrin aged 45 died in Ramallah Hospital after being beaten by Israeli soldiers in Jenin Three months later in response to a question from a member of Knesset Defence Minister Yitzhak Rabin wrote that there was no investigation by the Military Police Investigator 52 In 1996 Israel handed over control of the city to the Palestinian National Authority in keeping with the Oslo Accords Known to Palestinians as the martyrs capital the camp s militants some 200 armed men included members of Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades Tanzim Palestinian Islamic Jihad PIJ and Hamas 53 54 By Israel s count at least 28 suicide bombers were dispatched from the Jenin camp from 2000 2003 during the Second Intifada 53 Israeli army weekly Bamahane attributes at least 31 militant attacks totaling 124 victims to Jenin during the same period more than any other city in the West Bank 55 nbsp In Jenin During the al Aqsa Intifada Israel launched Operation Defensive Shield with the stated aim of dismantling terrorist infrastructure so as to curb suicide bombings and other militant activities The army encircled and entered six major Palestinian population centers in the West Bank among them Jenin During the Battle of Jenin 2002 in April 2002 23 Israeli soldiers and 52 Palestinians including civilians 56 57 were killed 58 Human Rights Watch reported that the refugee camp which was the major battleground suffered extensive damage Witnesses stated unarmed people were shot and denied medical treatment and as a result died Human Rights Watch have regarded many killings to be unlawful such as the death of a 57 year old wheelchair bound man who was shot and run over by a tank despite having attached a white flag on his wheelchair A 37 year old man who was paralysed was crushed under the rubble of his house his family was not allowed to remove his body A 14 year old boy was killed as he travelled to purchase groceries during the temporary relief of the curfew that was imposed by the army Medical staff were shot at one nurse killed while trying to reach the wounded even after clearly being in uniform displaying the red crescent symbol 59 There have also been reports of Israeli soldiers using Palestinians as human shields one father described how a soldier rested his rifle on his 14 year old son s shoulder as he shot 60 Israel denied the entry of rescue teams and journalists into Jenin even after they withdrew Over the following years Jenin was subject to extended curfews and targeted killings During a gun battle with Islamic Jihad militants whom Israel says were firing at troops from inside the UN compound an Israeli military sniper shot and killed a UN Relief and Works Agency UNRWA employee Iain Hook 54 on November 22 2002 61 The sniper reportedly mistook a cellphone in Hook s hands for a gun or grenade 62 nbsp Downtown Jenin In the framework of the Valley of Peace initiative a joint Arab Israeli project is under way to promote tourism in the Jenin region 63 In 2010 600 new businesses opened in Jenin 64 The Canaan Fair Trade is headquartered in Jenin 65 Director of The Freedom Theatre in Jenin Juliano Mer Khamis was killed by masked gunmen in the city in April 2011 Mer Khamis co founded the theatre with Zakaria Zubeidi former military chief of the al Aqsa Brigades who had renounced violence 66 On 6 February 2020 a Palestinian policeman Tarek Badwan was shot dead by an Israeli sniper as he stood at the entrance to the Jenin police station and chatted with a colleague No explanation has been forthcoming The incident was recorded on video 67 On 17 June 2022 Israeli forces conducted a raid in the al Marah area of the city During the raid Israeli forces opened fire on a car killing three Palestinians and seriously injuring another 68 nbsp A street in Jenin On 26 January 2023 Israeli forces killed nine in a clash with Islamic Jihad militants during a raid in the city and refugee camp of Jenin 69 70 On 3 July 2023 shortly after 1 a m Israeli forces attacked the city s refugee camp using drone fired missiles and ground troops Eight Palestinians died from injuries sustained during the attack and a further eighty were injured nine of them critically 71 72 Fifty Palestinians whom Israeli forces labeled militants were arrested Israeli forces cut off telecommunications and electricity in the area and medical professionals struggled to reach the injured Israel claimed that while they were targeting suspected members of the Jenin Brigades an armed group they acknowledged that innocent people may have been injured or killed in the raid Yoav Gallant the Israeli Minister of Defense said The operation is progressing as planned and Eli Cohen the Israeli Foreign Minister said claimed the refugee camp had become a center for terrorist activity thanks to funding from Iranian sources 73 The refugee camp has a population of roughly 17 000 inhabitants and is about a quarter a square mile in size On 19 September 2023 four Palestinians were killed during another Israeli military invasion of the city among them a 15 year old Palestinian boy chased and killed for having noticed the Israeli undercover soldiers sneaking into the Jenin refugee camp 74 During the 2023 Hamas Israel war Israeli forces carried out multiple operations in Jenin On October 22 the IDF conducted an airstrike targeting an underground compound beneath the Al Ansar Mosque in the city It was reported to be the first airstrike in the West Bank since the Second Intifada The IDF stated that the strike aimed at operatives from Hamas and PIJ who were planning a terror attack 75 GeographyJenin is situated at the foot of the rugged northernmost hills Jabal Nablus of the West Bank and along the southern edge of the Jezreel Valley Marj Ibn Amer 76 which the city overlooks 77 Its highest elevation is about 250 meters above sea level and its lowest areas are 90 meters above sea level 78 Immediately southwest of Jenin is the Sahl Arraba plain Dothan Valley while further south is the Marj Sanur valley 79 About 1 5 kilometers to Jenin s east is Mount Gilboa Jabal Faqqua 80 Jenin is 42 kilometers north of Nablus 18 kilometers to the south of Afula and 51 kilometers southeast of Haifa 81 The nearest localities are Umm at Tut and Jalqamus to the southeast Qabatiya and Zababdeh to the south Burqin to the southwest Kafr Dan to the west Arranah Jalamah and the Arab Israeli village of Muqeible to the north Deir Ghazaleh to the northeast and Beit Qad and Deir Abu Da if to the east GovernmentJenin municipality was established in 1886 under the Ottoman rule with no more than 80 voters and elections were made every 4 years until 1982 when the Israeli government took control over the municipality until 1995 citation needed List of Jenin mayors 82 Andulmajeed Mansour Abdulrahman al Haj Hassan Ragheb Al Souki Al Haj Hassan Fazaa Tawfeek Mansour Bishara Atallah Hussein al Abboushi Aref Abdulrahman Fahmi al Abboushi Tahseen Abdulhadi Abdulraheem Jarrar Saleh Arif Azzouqa Hussni al Souki Ahmed Kamal allSa adi Ahmed Shawki al Mahmoud Shehab al Sanouri Abdullah Lahlouh Waleed Abu Mwais appointed Hatim Jarrar Municipal elections were held in Jenin on 15 December 2005 Six seats each were won by Hamas and the local coalition of Fatah and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine Jenin was one of several Palestinian cities where Hamas showed a dramatic growth in electoral support 83 Hadem Rida was then elected as Mayor of the city until he was arrested by the Israel Forces and spent 3 years in jail After his release he resigned from the position and went back to practice in his clinic in Jenin city Demographics nbsp Palestinian children in Jenin According to the 2017 census by the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics Jenin had a population of 49 908 1 the Jenin Refugee Camp of 10 417 1 on 373 dunams 92 acres Some 42 3 of the population of the camp was under the age of 15 Year Population Jenin City 1596 8 households 32 1821 1 500 2 000 84 1838 2 000 85 1870 2 000 86 1882 3 000 87 1922 2 637 44 1931 2 706 68 88 1945 3 990 89 90 1961 14 402 51 1997 26 681 91 2007 39 004 3 2017 49 908 1 Public institutions and landmarks nbsp Fatima Khatun MosqueThe Freedom Theatre is a theatre and cinema in the Jenin refugee camp The Horse of Jenin is a famous monument built in 2003 by German artist Thomas Kilpper and young people from Jenin of scrap metal from cars destroyed by Israeli forces 92 The city has a monument honoring German pilots shot down in Jenin during the First World War which incorporates an original wooden propeller 93 An old British Mandate landing strip Muqeible Airfield is located in Jenin The Khalil Suleiman Hospital is located in Jenin The main and largest mosque of Jenin is the Fatima Khatun Mosque built in 1566 citation needed Another mosque in Jenin is the Al Ansar Mosque 94 Holy sites The ancient cemetery in Jenin houses the tomb of Sheikh Izz al Din a Sufi saint of the Rifa i order According to local traditions he was a descendant of Ali Zayn al Abidin the grandson of Muhammad and the sixth Sh ia Imam According to a local tradition Sheikh Izz al Din fought alongside Saladin against the Crusaders The tomb possibly predates the cemetery which served as a burial site for the people of Jenin and the Turabay dynasty Another tomb in the same cemetery is al Sheikh Tarabiya where the Turabay emir Ahmad ibn Turabay ibn Ali al Harithi is buried 95 Education and culture nbsp Arab American University in Jenin The Arab American University is located in Jenin s vicinity Cinema Jenin is the largest movie theater in the area The cinema which reopened in 2010 after a 23 year intermission has indoor and outdoor screens a film library and educational facilities 96 Strings of Freedom is an orchestra in Jenin founded by an Arab citizen of Israel Wafaa Younis who travels form her home in central Israel to teach music to the local youth 97 References a b c d e Preliminary Results of the Population Housing and Establishments Census 2017 PDF Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics PCBS Report State of Palestine February 2018 pp 64 82 Retrieved 2023 10 24 Jenin City Welcome To Palestine Retrieved 2022 06 18 a b 2007 Locality Population Statistics Archived 2010 12 10 at the Wayback Machine Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics a b c d e f Zertal Adam 2016 The Manasseh Hill Country Survey From Nahal Iron to Nahal Shechem Vol 3 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 13756 1 OCLC 54694679 Jenin is well identified with a number of important sites in the el Amarna letters The Land of Ginah is mentioned EA 250 which is probably the E7 of the Execration Texts Posener s group in the Bible there is Ein Ganim see Kallai s opinion in EB VI 207 208 and Beth Hagan I Kgs 9 27 in the Book of Judith it appears as Ginei Jdt 3 11 and Ginae of the Roman period appears in Josephus Ant XX vi 1 War III iii 4 in the Moslem and the Crusader sources it appears under many names Geninum Le Grand Gerin Major Gallina Gerinum Magnum These identifications refer to the tell and or the settlement of Jenin a b c d e Tasneem Ghalib Khader Atatrah 2010 Assessment of Traditional Home Practices Carried by Palestinian Mothers During the Neonatal Period in Jenin District Deanship of Graduated Studies Al Quds University Etymology Jenin was known in ancient times as the Canaanite village of Ein Ganim or Tel Jenin Tel Jenin its name in Arabic is located at the center of what is today Jenin s business center The city of Ein Ganim is mentioned in the Hebrew bible as the city of the Levites of the Tribe of Issachar After some years the city s name was changed to Giant In the book of Judith the settlement is mentioned as Gini The Jewish historian Josephus also mentioned Ganim as a city in northern Samaria The Arabic name Jenin ultimately derives from this ancient name Shaban Dawlat Ahmad Mustafa 2009 The Economic and Social life in Jenin city From 1281 Hijre 1864 AD 1337 Hijre 1918 AD Thesis thesis The name of Jenin city is repeated in several sources including the Bible and was called by Ein Ganim Ishtori Haparchi Kaftor wa Ferach vol 2 3rd edition published by ed Avraham Yosef Havatzelet chapter 11 Jerusalem 2007 p 65 note 168 Hebrew a b c d Tzori Nehemia 1972 07 01 New Light on En Gannim Palestine Exploration Quarterly 104 2 134 138 doi 10 1179 peq 1972 104 2 134 ISSN 0031 0328 Conder C R 1881 Palmer E H ed Survey of Western Palestine Arabic and English Name Lists Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund 147 Heb ע ין ג נ ים en Ganim the spring of gardens Kmail A Jubran J Sabbah W amp Jenin P 2017 Coupling GIS based MCA and AHP techniques for Hospital Site Selection PDF International Journal of Computer Science and Information Security IJCSIS 15 12 The name of Jenin was derived from Ein Ganim meaning the spring of Ganim and referring to the region s plentiful spring a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Kohl et al 2007 p 339 Shmuel Aḥituv 1984 Canaanite Toponyms in Ancient Egyptian Documents The Magnes Press p 103 Dodson 2016 p 81 Joshua 19 21 Joshua 21 27 29 2 Kings 9 27 Josephus Flavius Jewish War Book 3 Chapter 3 4 5 Fordham edu Archived from the original on 2023 04 29 Retrieved 2012 12 31 via Ancient History Sourcebook Josephus 37 after 93 CE Galilee Samaria and Judea in the First Century CE Now as to the country of Samaria it lies between Judea and Galilee it begins at a village that is in the great plain called Ginea and ends at the Acrabbene toparchy and is entirely of the same nature with Judea Safrai Zeev 2018 Seeking out the Land Land of Israel traditions in ancient Jewish Christian and Samaritan literature 200 BCE 400 CE Leiden ISBN 978 90 04 33482 3 OCLC 1022977764 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Josephus Antiquities XX VI 1 Josephus the Jewish War II 232 236 Antiquities XX 118 122 אילן טל 2017 נעם ורד אילן טל eds בין יוספוס לחז ל כרך א האגדות האבודות של ימי הבית השני Josephus and the Rabbis Volume I The Lost Tales of the Second Temple Period in Hebrew Jerusalem יד יצחק בן צבי pp 521 525 ISBN 978 965 217 403 1 Farrar F W Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on Luke 9 accessed 11 June 2018 Dauphin 1998 p 750 a b c d Sharon 2017 p 172 a b Khalidi W 1992 All That Remains The Palestinian Villages Occupied and Depopulated by Israel in 1948 Washington D C Institute for Palestine Studies ISBN 0 88728 224 5 Boas Adrian 2006 Archaeology of the Military Orders A Survey of the Urban Centres Rural Settlements and Castles of the Military Orders in the Latin East c 1120 1291 Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 42284 5 Cited in le Strange 1890 p 464 a b c d e f Sharon 2017 p 174 Ayalon and Sharon 1986 p 168 Cited in le Strange 1890 p 41 Rhode 1979 p 24 Sharon 2017 pp 176 177 a b Hutteroth and Abdulfattah 1977 p 160 Abu Husayn 1985 p 188 Sharon 2017 p 173 Sharon 2017 p 177 a b Sharon 2017 p 178 Abu Husayn 1985 pp 195 196 Doumani 1995 p 39 Quataert 2005 p 107 Yazbak 1998 p 150 Hamed Salem The Archaeology of Warfare Local Chiefdoms and Settlement Systems in the Jenin Region during the Ottoman Period of Palestine Near Eastern Archaeology 71 4 214 Retrieved 14 April 2016 Guerin 1874 pp 327 332 Conder and Kitchener 1882 SWP II pp 44 45 a b Barron 1923 Table IX Sub district of Jenin p 29 Palestine Census 1931 Corera Gordon The British in Jenin Retrieved 14 April 2016 Village Statistics PDF 1938 p 28 The British in Jenin History Today July 2002 Gordon Corera pp 2 4 Village Statistics PDF 1945 p 16 Gelber Yoav 2004 Independence Versus Nakba Kinneret Zmora Bitan Dvir Publishing ISBN 965 517 190 6 p 220 a b Government of Jordan Department of Statistics 1964 p 8 Archived 2018 01 20 at the Wayback Machine Talmor Ronny translated by Ralph Mandel 1990 The Use of Firearms By the Security Forces in the Occupied Territories B Tselem download pp 76 78 a b Lee Ken June 24 2003 Jenin rises from the dirt BBC Retrieved September 21 2008 United Nations Yearbook 2002 Bernan Press 2002 ISBN 978 92 1 100904 0 Retrieved September 9 2009 permanent dead link Kiron Omri Al Peleg Daniel September 4 2009 BeGeder Hatzlaha Hebrew title Bamahane in Hebrew 3003 31 32 Krauss Joseph Weary West Bank fighters watch Gaza assault from afar AFP The Jordan Times Fifty four Palestinians and 23 Israeli soldiers were killed in the melee Katz Yaakov 2010 07 14 IDF mulls entry to West Bank cities by Jewish Israelis JPost BBC NEWS Middle East UN says no massacre in Jenin August 2002 Retrieved 14 April 2016 CIVILIAN CASUALTIES AND UNLAWFUL KILLINGS IN JENIN HRW SUMMARY HRW Israel admits killing British UN worker BBC News November 23 2002 Fisher Ian 2002 11 24 Israel admits one of its soldiers killed U N officer in Jenin The New York Times November 24 Retrieved June 7 2012 An Israeli soldier then fired at Mr Hook inside the compound when he saw an object which resembles a pistol in his hand the statement read globalaffairs es Retrieved 14 April 2016 The Economic Impact of Israeli Arab Visitors to the West Bank Archived from the original on 2016 05 05 Retrieved 2017 09 09 Canaan Fair Trade Archived from the original on 13 February 2017 Retrieved 14 April 2016 Juliano Mer Khamis The Economist 14 April 2011 Retrieved 14 April 2016 Gideon Levy Alex Levac What the Israeli army does to soldiers who shoot Palestinians Haaretz 19 November 2021 Three Palestinians killed by Israeli forces in Jenin raid Al Jazeera 17 June 2022 Retrieved 17 June 2022 Israeli forces kill nine in Jenin clash with Palestinian gunmen marking West Bank s deadliest day in over a year CNN 26 January 2023 Retrieved 26 January 2023 Nine Palestinians killed in Jenin Israeli forces thwart terror attack The Jerusalem Post JPost com Retrieved 2023 01 26 Kershner Isabel 2023 07 03 Israel Launches Biggest Air Attack on West Bank in Nearly Two Decades The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 07 03 Jenin Israeli military launches major operation in West Bank city BBC News 2023 07 02 Retrieved 2023 07 03 Palestinians in occupied West Bank say Israel bombing innocent people in raid on Jenin refugee camp CBS News www cbsnews com 2023 07 03 Retrieved 2023 07 03 Al Jazeera Staff Palestinian boy discovers undercover Israeli forces they kill him DCIP www aljazeera com Retrieved 2023 09 23 Israel strikes militant compound under West Bank mosque military says Reuters 2023 10 22 Retrieved 2023 10 22 Zeitoun Mark 2008 Power and Water in the Middle East The Hidden Politics of the Palestinian Israeli Water Conflict I B Tauris p 88 ISBN 978 0 85771 585 2 von Tischendorf Constantin 1853 Travels in the East Longman Brown Green and Longmans p 226 Environmental Profile for the West Bank Jenin District Applied Research Institute Jerusalem 1996 p 67 Great Britain Naval Intelligence Division 28 October 2013 Palestine amp Transjordan Routledge p 17 ISBN 978 1 136 20939 0 Hammel Eric 2001 Six Days in June How Israel Won the 1967 Arab Israeli War Pacifica Military History p 373 ISBN 978 1 890988 26 5 permanent dead link Lewensohn Avraham 1979 Israel Tourguide Tourguide Bet A Lewensohn p 244 List of Mayors of Jenin Archived 2008 10 07 at the Wayback Machine Jenin Municipality Palestinian Municipal Elections the Left is advancing while Hamas capitalizes on the decline of Fatah Archived 2006 03 22 at the Wayback Machine Nasser Ibrahim December 22 2005 Scholz 1822 p 266 cited in Robinson and Smith 1841 vol 3 p 155 Robinson and Smith 1841 vol 3 p 155 Guerin 1874 p 328 Conder and Kitchener 1882 SWP II p 44 Mills 1932 p 68 Government of Palestine Department of Statistics Village Statistics April 1945 Quoted in Hadawi 1970 p 54 Government of Palestine Department of Statistics 1945 p 16 Archived 2018 09 05 at the Wayback Machine Palestinian Population by Locality Subspace and Age Groups in Years Jenin Governorate PDF Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics PCBS 1997 p 21 Retrieved December 25 2010 Gani Aisha 2014 03 03 Jenin s Freedom theatre from death and destruction a message of hope The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2023 10 30 Palestinians and Their Society 1880 1946Author Sarah Graham Brown Israel Carries Out Air Strike On Hamas And Islamic Jihad Terrorist Compound In Al Ansar Mosque india com 22 October 2023 Retrieved 22 October 2023 Tal Uri 2023 Muslim Shrines in Eretz Israel History Religion Traditions Folklore Jerusalem Yad Izhak Ben Zvi pp 112 113 ISBN 978 965 217 452 9 Jenin cinema reopens with film of hope Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 14 April 2016 Kershner Isabel 2009 03 29 Concert for Holocaust Survivors Is Condemned The New York Times Retrieved June 1 2010 BibliographyAbu Husayn Abdul Rahim 1985b Provincial Leaderships in Syria 1575 1650 Beirut American University of Beirut ISBN 9780815660729 Ayalon D Sharon M 1986 Studies in Islamic history and civilization in honour of Professor David Ayalon Illustrated ed Brill Publishers ISBN 978 965 264 014 7 Barron J B ed 1923 Palestine Report and General Abstracts of the Census of 1922 Government of Palestine Chatty D 2006 Nomadic societies in the Middle East and North Africa entering the 21st century Illustrated ed Brill Publishers ISBN 978 90 04 14792 8 Conder C R Kitchener H H 1882 The Survey of Western Palestine Memoirs of the Topography Orography Hydrography and Archaeology Vol 2 London Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund Dauphin C 1998 La Palestine byzantine Peuplement et Populations BAR International Series 726 in French Vol III Catalogue Oxford Archeopress ISBN 0 86054 905 4 Doumani B 1995 Rediscovering Palestine merchants and peasants in Jabal Nablus 1700 1900 Illustrated ed University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 20370 9 Government of Jordan Department of Statistics 1964 First Census of Population and Housing Volume I Final Tables General Characteristics of the Population PDF Government of Palestine Department of Statistics 1945 Village Statistics April 1945 Guerin V 1874 Description Geographique Historique et Archeologique de la Palestine in French Vol 2 Samarie pt 1 Paris L Imprimerie Nationale Hadawi S 1970 Village Statistics of 1945 A Classification of Land and Area ownership in Palestine Palestine Liberation Organization Research Center Hadidi Adnan 1995 Studies in the history and archaeology of Jordan Volume 3 Illustrated ed Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 7102 1372 3 Hutteroth Wolf Dieter Abdulfattah Kamal 1977 Historical Geography of Palestine Transjordan and Southern Syria in the Late 16th Century Erlanger Geographische Arbeiten Sonderband 5 Erlangen Germany Vorstand der Frankischen Geographischen Gesellschaft ISBN 3 920405 41 2 Kohl Philip L Kozelsky Mara Ben Yehuda Nachman 2007 Selective remembrances archaeology in the construction commemoration and consecration of national pasts Illustrated ed University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 45059 9 Le Strange G 1890 Palestine Under the Moslems A Description of Syria and the Holy Land from A D 650 to 1500 Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund Mills E ed 1932 Census of Palestine 1931 Population of Villages Towns and Administrative Areas Jerusalem Government of Palestine Negev Avraham Gibson Shimon 2005 Archaeological encyclopedia of the Holy Land 4th revised illustrated ed Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8264 8571 7 Palmer E H 1881 The Survey of Western Palestine Arabic and English Name Lists Collected During the Survey by Lieutenants Conder and Kitchener R E Transliterated and Explained by E H Palmer Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund Quataert D 2005 The Ottoman Empire 1700 1922 2nd illustrated revised ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83910 5 Rhode H 1979 The Administration and Population of the Sancak of Safad in the Sixteenth Century PhD Columbia University Robinson E Smith E 1841 Biblical Researches in Palestine Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea A Journal of Travels in the year 1838 Vol 3 Boston Crocker amp Brewster Scholz J M A 1822 Reise in die Gegend zwischen Alexandrien und Paratonium die libysche Wuste Siwa Egypten F Fleischer Sharon M 2017 Corpus Inscriptionum Arabicarum Palaestinae Volume Six J 1 Leiden and Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 32515 9 Yazbak M 1998 Haifa in the late Ottoman period 1864 1914 a Muslim town in transition Illustrated ed Brill Publishers ISBN 978 90 04 11051 9 Dodson Aidan 2016 1st pub 2014 Amarna Sunrise Egypt from Golden Age to Age of Heresy Cairo New York City American University in Cairo Press ISBN 978 1 61797 560 8 External links nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Jenin Welcome To Jinin Survey of Western Palestine Map 8 IAA Wikimedia commons A project aimed at reopening a movie theater for the residents of Jenin and the refugee camp Peace and Prosperity in the West Bank in depth report on NOW on PBS Heart of Jenin documentary on PBS wide angle Portals nbsp Cities nbsp Palestine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jenin amp oldid 1217601198, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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