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Ma'ale Adumim

Ma'ale Adumim (Hebrew: מַעֲלֵה אֲדֻמִּים; Arabic: معالي أدوميم) is an urban Israeli settlement organized as a city council in the West Bank, seven kilometers (4.3 miles) east of Jerusalem. [2] Ma'ale Adumim achieved city status in 1991. In 2015 its population was 37,555. It is located along Highway 1, which connects it to Jerusalem and the Tel Aviv Metropolitan Area. The international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law, but the Israeli government disputes this.[3]

Ma'ale Adumim
  • מַעֲלֵה אֲדֻמִּים, מעלה אדומים
  • معالي أدوميم
City (from 1991)
Hebrew transcription(s)
 • ISO 259Maˁle ʔadummim
 • Also spelledMa'ale Adummim (official)
Ma'ale Adumim
Coordinates: 31°46′30″N 35°17′53″E / 31.77500°N 35.29806°E / 31.77500; 35.29806
RegionWest Bank
DistrictJudea and Samaria Area
FoundedSeptember 21, 1975
Government
 • MayorBenny Kashriel
Area
 • Total49,177 dunams (49.177 km2 or 18.987 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)[1]
 • Total37,555
 • Density760/km2 (2,000/sq mi)
Name meaningRed ascent

Etymology

The town name Ma'ale Adumim is taken from two mentions made of an area marking the boundaries between two Israelite tribes[4] in the Book of Joshua. At 15:7, in a passage on the inheritance of the Tribe of Judah, it is stated that part of the boundary ran from Debir to Gilgal, facing the ascent of Adumim, which the text places south of the wadi. At 18:17, in a description of the inheritance by the casting of lots that fell to Tribe of Benjamin, it is stated that part of its boundaries ran from En-shemesh then to Geliloth, which likewise faced the ascent of Adummim.

The toponym literally means 'Red Ascent' or 'Bloody Ascent'[a] referring to the hue of the exposed red limestone rocks, tinted by iron oxide, that in patches line the ascent from the Dead Sea towards Jerusalem.[5][4]

History

First displacement of Bedouin tribes

The Jahalin and Sawahareh Bedouin tribes, evicted by Israel from their traditional pastoral lands in the Tel Arad area of the Negev,[6] settled in the area of what would become the Ma'ale Adumim municipality, then under Jordanian administration, after contracting with local Palestinian landowners and receiving permission to graze their livestock there. After the Israeli conquest and occupation of the West Bank in the Six-Day War in 1967, they were gradually hemmed in by restrictions, due to pressures from the development of the Israeli settlement, many ending up in tracts of land in the vicinity of the Jericho-Jerusalem road[7] or a rubbish dump near Abu Dis.[citation needed]

Initiation of Israeli settlement

As early as 1968, just after the Six-Day War, Yigal Allon had advanced a proposal to establish a settlement somewhere in the area of Ma'ale Adumim and Jericho.[8] The government of Levi Eshkol did not implement the step, because the political and diplomatic implications were significant, in that it would effectively split the West Bank. It was later opposed by Yehiel Admoni, the then head of the Jewish Agency for Israel's Settlement Department, as lying outside the scope of the Allon Plan,[9] and if the 'Red Ascent' were settled, it would further erode what land might remain over for restoring territory to the Palestinians in a future peace negotiation.[10]

The idea of making an industrial park for Jerusalem in the area of Ma'ale Adumim had been circulating for some years. In August 1974, Yisrael Galili, a major presence in the settlement project together with Meir Zorea with strong connections to Gush Emunim, aired the idea of settling it.[5][11] He had privately offered it as a recompense for settlers who had attempted to establish themselves in Sebastia, to be rebuffed when that group refused to compromise.[10] The links with Gush Emunim attested to a growing impact of Religious Zionist ideology on Israel's developing policies regarding the Palestinian territories. It is thought that the agreement to develop an industrial zone for Jerusalem there was the result of a deal struck between the National Religious Party and the government of Yitzhak Rabin, as part of a bargain between members of the coalition government, for which the green light was given on 24 November 1975. This government strategy to create "facts on the ground" was a response to the Rabat Summit decision in Morocco in October to recognize the PLO as the sole representative of the Palestinian people.[12] It was decided to permit 25 residential units to house 100 Israeli settlers/workers.[13]

Development of the settlement

Problems existed from the start, since there were no budget funds allocated for the project, and ministers opposed it either on financial grounds or out of suspicions that its creation had nothing to do with the establishment of an industrial town, but masked an intention to make a civilian settlement, something opposed by Mapam. Whatever monies were used, Yossi Sarid complained,[14] would detract from funds targeted for Israel's own impoverished development towns. The evidence suggests that the decision was inspired more by political needs, including the perceived need to placate far-right groups, rather than respond to the requirements of the city of Jerusalem.[9] Gershom Gorenberg argues that the cabinet compromise was 'a ruse' that spoke of setting up factory housing when in fact the aim was to create a fully fledged settlement afterwards.[15] Galili himself argued that a settlement between Jericho and East Jerusalem was needed to keep Jordanians away from the Holy City.[5] In an interview several decades later, the mayor of one of the larger settlements claimed that the aim of establishing Ma'ale Adumim was to 'protect Jerusalem from Arabs' and secure the road to the Jordan Valley.[16]

According to the Jerusalem Post, the site had served as a Nahal military outpost,[2] before being designated to become an Israeli labourers' camp. [7] The outpost's establishment was delayed for political reasons, despite the November decision. Yigal Allon was due to meet Henry Kissinger in Washington and any leak of a new settlement would have been inconvenient at that time. Galili said the timing for the setting up of camps on the site should coincide with Kissinger's movements, timing it so that the latter's shuttle diplomacy would find him in transit to Brussels.[17] Finally, around March 1975, following a ministerial decree to expropriate 3,000 hectares of land from the area's Palestinian villages,[18] forty members of Gush Emunim built a water tower and prefab concrete hut on the site, only to be evicted the same afternoon by Israeli troops, each prospective settler carried away by four soldiers. [19][20] This site was thereafter called by the settlers "Founder's Circle". [21][22] In 1977, Haim Sabato founded a hesder yeshiva (paramilitary field seminary)[23] there [24] and it was also designated to become a planned community, suburb and commuter town for nearby Jerusalem, to which many residents would commute daily. [25]

The boundaries of the settlement were set at some 3,500 hectares in 1979[7] and by the early 90s had extended to 4,350 hectares . [26] Writing in 2003, Cheryl Rubenberg stated that

For the bedouins, as well as for the villagers, loss of their lands meant loss of their agricultural way of life and major transformations in their social life. Today, the area available to the villages together, with a population of approximately 40,000, is some 460 hectares. The area of Ma’ale Adumim with some 26,000 settlers, is 11.5 times greater.’[26]

Displacement of Jahalin Bedouins in 1990s

In the late 1990s, approximately 1,050 Jahalin Bedouins were displaced from land that was now annexed to form part of the settlement.[27] Sewage was used as a tool for displacement. The Israeli Civil Administration disconnected one of the sewage pipes of the Ma'ale Adumim settlement on the hilltop to flood large areas around the Bedouin camp on the lower slopes of the hill. Streams and ponds of polluted matter forced the tribe to relocate.[28]

Court orders required compensation by the Israeli government and they received cash, electricity and water supplies.[27] According to the residents, they had to sell most of their livestock and their Bedouin way of life was forcibly ended.[27]

Urban plans

The chief urban planner was architect Rachel Walden. In March 1979, Ma'ale Adumim achieved local council status.[29] The urban plan for Ma'ale Adumim, finalized in 1983, encompasses a total of 35 square kilometres (14 sq mi), of which 3.7 square kilometres (1.43 sq mi) have been built so far, in a bloc that includes Ma'ale Adumim, Mishor Adumim, Kfar Adumim, and Allon.[30]

Politics

The mayor of Ma'ale Adumim is Benny Kashriel, who was recently[when?] elected to a third term by a large majority. Today, according to Nathan Thrall:

Although the bloc itself is not officially annexed to Israel, Jewish immigrants from Los Angeles or London may move directly to it, or to any other settlement, and receive a basket of government aid that includes free air travel, a financial grant, subsistence allowances for one year, rent subsidies, low-interest mortgages, Hebrew instruction, tuition benefits, tax discounts, and reduced fees at state-recognized day care centers, of which the bloc contains several.[31]

Geography

 
Artificial pond, Ma'ale Adumim

The city is surrounded on four sides by the Judean Desert [2] and is linked to Jerusalem and the Tel Aviv Metropolitan Area via Highway 1. Due to its strategic location between the northern and southern parts of the West Bank, Palestinians see this as a threat to the territorial continuity of a future Palestinian state. This claim is disputed by mayor Benny Kashriel, who claims that continuity would be attained by circling Ma'ale Adumim to the east.[32] Israeli drivers use a bypass road that exits the city to the west, entering Jerusalem through the French Hill Junction or a tunnel that goes under Mt. Scopus. These routes were built in the wake of the First and Second Intifadas when Palestinian militants shot at motorists and cars were stoned. The previous road passed through al-Eizariya and Abu Dis.

Economy

 
Ma'ale Adumim municipality

Many residents of Ma'ale Adumim are employed in Jerusalem. Others work in Mishor Adumim, Ma'ale Adumim's industrial park, which is located on the road to the Dead Sea, about ten minutes from Jerusalem. The industrial zone houses 220 businesses, [2] among them textile plants, garages, food manufacturers, aluminum and metalworking factories, and printing companies.[33]

Demographics

In 2004, over 70 percent of the residents were secular. According to the municipal spokesman, the overwhelming majority moved to the city not for ideological reasons but for lower-cost housing and higher living standards. In 2004, 48 percent of residents were under the age of 18. Ma'aleh Adumim's unemployment rate was 2.1 percent, far below the national average.[34]

Education and culture

 
Alei Higayon BeKinnor (Machanaim) synagogue on Hallil Street

In 2011, Ma'ale Adumim had 21 schools and 80 kindergartens. [2] A large portion of Ma'ale Adumim's budget is spent on education. Schools offer after-school programs, class trips, and tutoring, where needed. A special program has been developed for new immigrant children. Additional resources are invested in special education and classes for gifted children, including a special after-school program for honors students in science and math.[33] Ma'ale Adumim College was situated in the city, but is currently defunct. Religious elementary schools in Ma'ale Adumim include Ma'aleh Hatorah, Sde Chemed, and Tzemach Hasadeh. Religious high schools are Yeshiva Tichonit, Tzvia and Amit. The city has over 40 synagogues and several yeshivas, among them Yeshivat Birkat Moshe.[35] Ma'ale Adumim has won the Israel Ministry of Education prize for excellence twice. It has also won the national prize for environmental quality in recognition of its emphasis on urban planning, green space, playgrounds and outdoor sculptures.[34]

 
Children's park overlooking Judean Desert, Ma'ale Adumim

Healthcare

Medical services are provided in the city through all four Health maintenance organizations (kupot holim). There is also a large geriatric hospital, Hod Adumim, providing care for recuperating patients and chronic patients. It is also used for senior citizens residence. It has facilities for nursing, the elderly, the handicapped, through the most extreme needs.

Legality

 
Aerial view
 
Map of the projected expansion of Ma'ale Adumim.[36]

According to ARIJ, Israel confiscated land from the following Palestinian villages in order to construct Ma'ale Adumim:

Peace Now, citing official government documents, stated that 0.5% of Ma'ale Adumim was privately owned Palestinian land. Israel asserts that Ma'ale Adumin was built on "state lands," or areas not registered in anyone's name, and that no private property was being seized for building.[41] Palestinians say lands from the villages of Abu Dis, al-Eizariya, Al-Issawiya, At-Tur and 'Anata were expropriated for building in Ma'ale Adumim.[42]

The Israeli human rights organisation B'Tselem criticizes: "The expropriation procedure used in Ma'ale Adummim is unprecedented in the settlement enterprise. Expropriation of land for settlement purposes is forbidden, not only under international law but also according to the long-standing, official position of Israeli governments. Most settlements were built on area that was declared state land or on land that was requisitioned - ostensibly temporarily - for military purposes. It appears that in Ma'ale Adummim, the government decided to permanently expropriate the land because it viewed the area as an integral part of Jerusalem that would forever remain under Israeli control."[43]

In 2005, a report by John Dugard for the United Nations Commission on Human Rights stated that the "three major settlement blocs—Gush Etzion, Ma'ale Adumim and Ariel—will effectively divide Palestinian territory into cantons or Bantustans."[44] Israel says the solution is a bypass road similar to those used daily by Israelis to avoid driving through hostile Arab areas. The 2007 development project in east Ma'ale Adumim was supported by Ariel Sharon in 2005.[45] Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev denied the 2007 extension plan is a violation of the roadmap peace plan, under which Israel agreed to freeze all building in the settlements.

In 2008, a project to link Ma'ale Adumim and Jerusalem, known as the E1 project—short for "East 1", as it appears on old zoning maps—was criticized by the Palestinian Authority, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and US President George W. Bush.[46] As a result, a plan for 3,500-5,000 homes in Mevaseret Adumim was frozen.[47] The new Judea and Samaria District police headquarters, formerly located in the Ras el-Amud neighborhood of Jerusalem, was completed in May 2008.[48]

Ma'ale Adumim is widely regarded by the international community as illegal under international law according to the Fourth Geneva Convention (article 49), which prohibits an occupying power transferring citizens from its own territory to occupied territory. Israel maintains that international conventions relating to occupied land do not apply to the West Bank because they were not under the legitimate sovereignty of any state in the first place.[49] This view was rejected by the International Court of Justice and the International Committee of the Red Cross.[50]

Housing shortage

 
Ma'ale Adumim yeshiva

One of the purposes of establishing Ma'ale Adumim was to supply affordable housing for young couples who could not afford the high cost of homes in Jerusalem. Although the municipal boundaries cover 48,000 dunams, the city has been suffering from an acute housing shortage since 2009 due to the freeze on new construction. As of 2011 most of the real estate market was in second-hand properties. [2]

Archaeology

  • The Byzantine monastery of Martyrius, once the most important monastic centre in the Judean Desert in the early Christian era, is located in Ma'ale Adumim.[51]

Other archaeological sites on the outskirts of Ma'ale Adumim include:

Landmarks

 
Moshe Castel Museum in Ma'ale Adumim

The Moshe Castel Museum showcases the work of Israeli artist Moshe Castel.[55]

The Tree of Life is the world's largest artistic representation of an Olive Tree. The model for the tree was a five hundred year old Olive Tree from the Garden of Gethsemane. The Tree is the artistic creation of Jerusalem artist Sam Philipe. The site is a venue for outdoor programming and weddings. [1]

Mizpe Edna is a lookout at the Shofar and Hallil junction.[citation needed]

Notes

  1. ^ This is the Arabic meaning, traditionally thought to carrying the idea of the blood of travelers spilt by bandits who waylaid them on this area of their route.[5]

Citations

  1. ^ "Regional Statistics". Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Benzaquen 2011.
  3. ^ "The Geneva Convention". BBC News. 10 December 2009. Retrieved 27 November 2010.
  4. ^ a b Gonen 2000, p. 43.
  5. ^ a b c d Gorenberg 2006, p. 297.
  6. ^ Ginbara 1999, p. 152-153.
  7. ^ a b c B'tselem 2013.
  8. ^ Ranta 2015, pp. 150–154, p.150.
  9. ^ a b Ranta 2015, pp. 152–153.
  10. ^ a b Gorenberg 2006, p. 298.
  11. ^ Ranta 2015, p. 151.
  12. ^ Ranta 2015, pp. 151–152.
  13. ^ Ranta 2015, pp. 153–154.
  14. ^ Gorenberg 2006, p. 306.
  15. ^ Gorenberg 2006, p. 305.
  16. ^ Shlay & Rosen 2015, p. 66.
  17. ^ Gorenberg 2006, pp. 305, 308.
  18. ^ Shalev 2009, p. 9.
  19. ^ McCarthy 2009.
  20. ^ Gorenberg 2006, p. 309.
  21. ^ Nissenbaum 2015, p. 121.
  22. ^ O'Malley 2015, p. 231.
  23. ^ Lustick 1988, p. 10.
  24. ^ Leon 2015, p. 49.
  25. ^ Allegra 2017, p. 60.
  26. ^ a b Rubenberg 2003, p. 220.
  27. ^ a b c Abdalla, Jihan. "Israel eyes landfill site for Bedouin nomads". Reuters. Retrieved 2012-06-20.
  28. ^ Weizman, Eyal (2012). Hollow Land: Israel's Architecture of Occupation. Verso Books. p. 21.
  29. ^ "Municipality of Ma'ale Adumim". Toshav.co.il. Retrieved 2008-10-25.
  30. ^ a b . Applied Research Institute of Jerusalem (ARIJ). Archived from the original on 2006-01-08. Retrieved 2006-02-10.
  31. ^ Nathan Thrall, 'A Day in the Life of Abed Salama: One man’s quest to find his son lays bare the reality of Palestinian life under Israeli rule,' New York Review of Books 19 March 2021
  32. ^ Berg, Raffi (2005-11-12). "Israel's 'Linchpin' Settlement". BBC. Retrieved 2008-10-25.
  33. ^ a b . Buyit in Israel. 2010. Archived from the original on 2012-01-15. Retrieved 2011-08-31.
  34. ^ a b c Rossner, Rena (2004-06-14). "Jerusalem Report Article". Retrieved 2008-10-25.
  35. ^ Kehillot Tehilla: Finding the Right Community July 13, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  36. ^ "HOME". Applied Research Institute - Jerusalem (ARIJ).
  37. ^ El 'Eizariya (including Al Ka’abina) Town Profile, ARIJ, p. 19
  38. ^ Abu Dis Town Profile 2018-01-06 at the Wayback Machine, ARIJ, pp. 17-18
  39. ^ Az Za'ayyem Village Profile, ARIJ, p. 16
  40. ^ 'Isawiya Town Profile, ARIJ, 2012, p. 14
  41. ^ Shragai, Nadav (2007-03-14). "Peace Now: 32% of land held for settlements is private Palestinian property". Haaretz. Retrieved 2009-07-06.
  42. ^ http://mondediplo.com/1999/11/08israel "Maaleh Adumim was established on lands taken from Palestinians, from the villages of Abu Dis, Al Izriyyeh, Al Issawiyyeh, Al Tur and Anata. Other lands had been inhabited for dozen of years by the Jahalin and Sawahareh Bedouin tribes."
  43. ^ "The Hidden Agenda: The Establishment and Expansion Plans of Ma'ale Adummim and their Human Rights Ramifications | B'Tselem". Btselem.org. Retrieved 2013-03-26.
  44. ^ Dugard, John (2005-03-03). "Question of the Violation of Human Rights in the Occupied Arab Territories, Including Palestine" (PDF). Report to the Commission on Human Rights. United Nations. Retrieved 2006-06-27.
  45. ^ "Sharon Pledges Settlement Growth". BBC. 2005-04-05. Retrieved 2008-10-25.
  46. ^ Benhorin, Yitzhak (2005-03-25). "Rice Slams Israel's Settlements Plans". Ynetnews. Retrieved 2008-10-25.
  47. ^ Lis, Jonathan (January 7, 2008). "Police delay move into new E-1 headquarters, but deny link to presidential visit". Haaretz.
  48. ^ "Middle East Progress". Archived from the original on July 19, 2012.
  49. ^ Berg, Raffi (2005-11-12). "Israel's 'linchpin' settlement". BBC News. Retrieved 2010-03-26.
  50. ^ Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory 2010-07-06 at the Wayback Machine International Court of Justice, 9 July 2004. pp. 44–45
  51. ^ "The Monastery of Martyrius at Ma'ale Adummim", Yitzhak Magen, Israel Antiquities Authority, Jerusalem 1993
  52. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-02-23. Retrieved 2008-10-25.
  53. ^ . Jericho Municipality. Archived from the original on 2008-09-17. Retrieved 2008-10-25.
  54. ^ Murphy-O'Connor, Jerome (2008). The Holy Land: An Oxford Archaeological Guide from Earliest Times to 1700. Oxford University Press US. p. 335. ISBN 978-0-19-923666-4.
  55. ^ "Moshe Castel Museum".

Sources

  • Allegra, Marco (2017). "'Outside Jerusalem and Yet So Near': Ma'ale Adumim, Jerusalem, and the Suburbanization of Israel's Settlement Policy". In Ariel, Handel; Allegra, Marco; Maggor, Erez (eds.). Normalizing Occupation: The Politics of Everyday Life in the West Bank Settlements. Indiana University Press. pp. 48–63. ISBN 978-0-253-02505-0.
  • Benzaquen, John (12 May 2011). "Neighborhood Watch: Unsettled market". Jerusalem Post.
  • "Ma'ale Adumim Area". B'tselem. 16 November 2013.
  • Ginbar, Yuval (July 1999). "On the Way to Annexation: Human Rights Violations Resulting from the Establishment and Expansion of the Ma'ale Adummim Settlement" (PDF). B'tselem.
 
Panorama of Ma'ale Adumim

External links

  • Official municipal website
  • Unofficial city website
  • Americans for Peace Now report on E-1 and Ma'ale Adumim
  • The Establishment and Expansion Plans of Ma'ale Adummim and their Human Rights Ramifications
  • Peace Now's Blunder: Erred on Ma'ale Adumim Land by 15,900 Percent
  • There is water under the desert
  • MAchat - Ma'ale Adumim English Speakers Community Website
  • [2]

adumim, hebrew, ים, arabic, معالي, أدوميم, urban, israeli, settlement, organized, city, council, west, bank, seven, kilometers, miles, east, jerusalem, achieved, city, status, 1991, 2015, population, located, along, highway, which, connects, jerusalem, aviv, m. Ma ale Adumim Hebrew מ ע ל ה א ד מ ים Arabic معالي أدوميم is an urban Israeli settlement organized as a city council in the West Bank seven kilometers 4 3 miles east of Jerusalem 2 Ma ale Adumim achieved city status in 1991 In 2015 its population was 37 555 It is located along Highway 1 which connects it to Jerusalem and the Tel Aviv Metropolitan Area The international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law but the Israeli government disputes this 3 Ma ale Adumim מ ע ל ה א ד מ ים מעלה אדומים معالي أدوميمCity from 1991 Hebrew transcription s ISO 259Maˁle ʔadummim Also spelledMa ale Adummim official Ma ale AdumimCoordinates 31 46 30 N 35 17 53 E 31 77500 N 35 29806 E 31 77500 35 29806RegionWest BankDistrictJudea and Samaria AreaFoundedSeptember 21 1975Government MayorBenny KashrielArea Total49 177 dunams 49 177 km2 or 18 987 sq mi Population 2021 1 Total37 555 Density760 km2 2 000 sq mi Name meaningRed ascent Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 First displacement of Bedouin tribes 2 2 Initiation of Israeli settlement 2 3 Development of the settlement 2 4 Displacement of Jahalin Bedouins in 1990s 3 Urban plans 4 Politics 5 Geography 6 Economy 7 Demographics 8 Education and culture 9 Healthcare 10 Legality 11 Housing shortage 12 Archaeology 13 Landmarks 14 Notes 14 1 Citations 15 Sources 16 External linksEtymologyThe town name Ma ale Adumim is taken from two mentions made of an area marking the boundaries between two Israelite tribes 4 in the Book of Joshua At 15 7 in a passage on the inheritance of the Tribe of Judah it is stated that part of the boundary ran from Debir to Gilgal facing the ascent of Adumim which the text places south of the wadi At 18 17 in a description of the inheritance by the casting of lots that fell to Tribe of Benjamin it is stated that part of its boundaries ran from En shemesh then to Geliloth which likewise faced the ascent of Adummim The toponym literally means Red Ascent or Bloody Ascent a referring to the hue of the exposed red limestone rocks tinted by iron oxide that in patches line the ascent from the Dead Sea towards Jerusalem 5 4 HistoryFirst displacement of Bedouin tribes The Jahalin and Sawahareh Bedouin tribes evicted by Israel from their traditional pastoral lands in the Tel Arad area of the Negev 6 settled in the area of what would become the Ma ale Adumim municipality then under Jordanian administration after contracting with local Palestinian landowners and receiving permission to graze their livestock there After the Israeli conquest and occupation of the West Bank in the Six Day War in 1967 they were gradually hemmed in by restrictions due to pressures from the development of the Israeli settlement many ending up in tracts of land in the vicinity of the Jericho Jerusalem road 7 or a rubbish dump near Abu Dis citation needed Initiation of Israeli settlement As early as 1968 just after the Six Day War Yigal Allon had advanced a proposal to establish a settlement somewhere in the area of Ma ale Adumim and Jericho 8 The government of Levi Eshkol did not implement the step because the political and diplomatic implications were significant in that it would effectively split the West Bank It was later opposed by Yehiel Admoni the then head of the Jewish Agency for Israel s Settlement Department as lying outside the scope of the Allon Plan 9 and if the Red Ascent were settled it would further erode what land might remain over for restoring territory to the Palestinians in a future peace negotiation 10 The idea of making an industrial park for Jerusalem in the area of Ma ale Adumim had been circulating for some years In August 1974 Yisrael Galili a major presence in the settlement project together with Meir Zorea with strong connections to Gush Emunim aired the idea of settling it 5 11 He had privately offered it as a recompense for settlers who had attempted to establish themselves in Sebastia to be rebuffed when that group refused to compromise 10 The links with Gush Emunim attested to a growing impact of Religious Zionist ideology on Israel s developing policies regarding the Palestinian territories It is thought that the agreement to develop an industrial zone for Jerusalem there was the result of a deal struck between the National Religious Party and the government of Yitzhak Rabin as part of a bargain between members of the coalition government for which the green light was given on 24 November 1975 This government strategy to create facts on the ground was a response to the Rabat Summit decision in Morocco in October to recognize the PLO as the sole representative of the Palestinian people 12 It was decided to permit 25 residential units to house 100 Israeli settlers workers 13 Development of the settlement Problems existed from the start since there were no budget funds allocated for the project and ministers opposed it either on financial grounds or out of suspicions that its creation had nothing to do with the establishment of an industrial town but masked an intention to make a civilian settlement something opposed by Mapam Whatever monies were used Yossi Sarid complained 14 would detract from funds targeted for Israel s own impoverished development towns The evidence suggests that the decision was inspired more by political needs including the perceived need to placate far right groups rather than respond to the requirements of the city of Jerusalem 9 Gershom Gorenberg argues that the cabinet compromise was a ruse that spoke of setting up factory housing when in fact the aim was to create a fully fledged settlement afterwards 15 Galili himself argued that a settlement between Jericho and East Jerusalem was needed to keep Jordanians away from the Holy City 5 In an interview several decades later the mayor of one of the larger settlements claimed that the aim of establishing Ma ale Adumim was to protect Jerusalem from Arabs and secure the road to the Jordan Valley 16 According to the Jerusalem Post the site had served as a Nahal military outpost 2 before being designated to become an Israeli labourers camp 7 The outpost s establishment was delayed for political reasons despite the November decision Yigal Allon was due to meet Henry Kissinger in Washington and any leak of a new settlement would have been inconvenient at that time Galili said the timing for the setting up of camps on the site should coincide with Kissinger s movements timing it so that the latter s shuttle diplomacy would find him in transit to Brussels 17 Finally around March 1975 following a ministerial decree to expropriate 3 000 hectares of land from the area s Palestinian villages 18 forty members of Gush Emunim built a water tower and prefab concrete hut on the site only to be evicted the same afternoon by Israeli troops each prospective settler carried away by four soldiers 19 20 This site was thereafter called by the settlers Founder s Circle 21 22 In 1977 Haim Sabato founded a hesder yeshiva paramilitary field seminary 23 there 24 and it was also designated to become a planned community suburb and commuter town for nearby Jerusalem to which many residents would commute daily 25 The boundaries of the settlement were set at some 3 500 hectares in 1979 7 and by the early 90s had extended to 4 350 hectares 26 Writing in 2003 Cheryl Rubenberg stated that For the bedouins as well as for the villagers loss of their lands meant loss of their agricultural way of life and major transformations in their social life Today the area available to the villages together with a population of approximately 40 000 is some 460 hectares The area of Ma ale Adumim with some 26 000 settlers is 11 5 times greater 26 Displacement of Jahalin Bedouins in 1990s In the late 1990s approximately 1 050 Jahalin Bedouins were displaced from land that was now annexed to form part of the settlement 27 Sewage was used as a tool for displacement The Israeli Civil Administration disconnected one of the sewage pipes of the Ma ale Adumim settlement on the hilltop to flood large areas around the Bedouin camp on the lower slopes of the hill Streams and ponds of polluted matter forced the tribe to relocate 28 Court orders required compensation by the Israeli government and they received cash electricity and water supplies 27 According to the residents they had to sell most of their livestock and their Bedouin way of life was forcibly ended 27 Urban plansThe chief urban planner was architect Rachel Walden In March 1979 Ma ale Adumim achieved local council status 29 The urban plan for Ma ale Adumim finalized in 1983 encompasses a total of 35 square kilometres 14 sq mi of which 3 7 square kilometres 1 43 sq mi have been built so far in a bloc that includes Ma ale Adumim Mishor Adumim Kfar Adumim and Allon 30 PoliticsThe mayor of Ma ale Adumim is Benny Kashriel who was recently when elected to a third term by a large majority Today according to Nathan Thrall Although the bloc itself is not officially annexed to Israel Jewish immigrants from Los Angeles or London may move directly to it or to any other settlement and receive a basket of government aid that includes free air travel a financial grant subsistence allowances for one year rent subsidies low interest mortgages Hebrew instruction tuition benefits tax discounts and reduced fees at state recognized day care centers of which the bloc contains several 31 Geography nbsp Artificial pond Ma ale AdumimThe city is surrounded on four sides by the Judean Desert 2 and is linked to Jerusalem and the Tel Aviv Metropolitan Area via Highway 1 Due to its strategic location between the northern and southern parts of the West Bank Palestinians see this as a threat to the territorial continuity of a future Palestinian state This claim is disputed by mayor Benny Kashriel who claims that continuity would be attained by circling Ma ale Adumim to the east 32 Israeli drivers use a bypass road that exits the city to the west entering Jerusalem through the French Hill Junction or a tunnel that goes under Mt Scopus These routes were built in the wake of the First and Second Intifadas when Palestinian militants shot at motorists and cars were stoned The previous road passed through al Eizariya and Abu Dis Economy nbsp Ma ale Adumim municipalityMany residents of Ma ale Adumim are employed in Jerusalem Others work in Mishor Adumim Ma ale Adumim s industrial park which is located on the road to the Dead Sea about ten minutes from Jerusalem The industrial zone houses 220 businesses 2 among them textile plants garages food manufacturers aluminum and metalworking factories and printing companies 33 DemographicsIn 2004 over 70 percent of the residents were secular According to the municipal spokesman the overwhelming majority moved to the city not for ideological reasons but for lower cost housing and higher living standards In 2004 48 percent of residents were under the age of 18 Ma aleh Adumim s unemployment rate was 2 1 percent far below the national average 34 Education and culture nbsp Alei Higayon BeKinnor Machanaim synagogue on Hallil StreetIn 2011 Ma ale Adumim had 21 schools and 80 kindergartens 2 A large portion of Ma ale Adumim s budget is spent on education Schools offer after school programs class trips and tutoring where needed A special program has been developed for new immigrant children Additional resources are invested in special education and classes for gifted children including a special after school program for honors students in science and math 33 Ma ale Adumim College was situated in the city but is currently defunct Religious elementary schools in Ma ale Adumim include Ma aleh Hatorah Sde Chemed and Tzemach Hasadeh Religious high schools are Yeshiva Tichonit Tzvia and Amit The city has over 40 synagogues and several yeshivas among them Yeshivat Birkat Moshe 35 Ma ale Adumim has won the Israel Ministry of Education prize for excellence twice It has also won the national prize for environmental quality in recognition of its emphasis on urban planning green space playgrounds and outdoor sculptures 34 nbsp Children s park overlooking Judean Desert Ma ale AdumimHealthcareMedical services are provided in the city through all four Health maintenance organizations kupot holim There is also a large geriatric hospital Hod Adumim providing care for recuperating patients and chronic patients It is also used for senior citizens residence It has facilities for nursing the elderly the handicapped through the most extreme needs Legality nbsp Aerial view nbsp Map of the projected expansion of Ma ale Adumim 36 According to ARIJ Israel confiscated land from the following Palestinian villages in order to construct Ma ale Adumim 4 217 dunams from al Eizariya 37 1 031 dunams from Abu Dis 38 406 dunams from az Za ayyem 39 2 dunams from Isawiya 40 Peace Now citing official government documents stated that 0 5 of Ma ale Adumim was privately owned Palestinian land Israel asserts that Ma ale Adumin was built on state lands or areas not registered in anyone s name and that no private property was being seized for building 41 Palestinians say lands from the villages of Abu Dis al Eizariya Al Issawiya At Tur and Anata were expropriated for building in Ma ale Adumim 42 The Israeli human rights organisation B Tselem criticizes The expropriation procedure used in Ma ale Adummim is unprecedented in the settlement enterprise Expropriation of land for settlement purposes is forbidden not only under international law but also according to the long standing official position of Israeli governments Most settlements were built on area that was declared state land or on land that was requisitioned ostensibly temporarily for military purposes It appears that in Ma ale Adummim the government decided to permanently expropriate the land because it viewed the area as an integral part of Jerusalem that would forever remain under Israeli control 43 In 2005 a report by John Dugard for the United Nations Commission on Human Rights stated that the three major settlement blocs Gush Etzion Ma ale Adumim and Ariel will effectively divide Palestinian territory into cantons or Bantustans 44 Israel says the solution is a bypass road similar to those used daily by Israelis to avoid driving through hostile Arab areas The 2007 development project in east Ma ale Adumim was supported by Ariel Sharon in 2005 45 Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev denied the 2007 extension plan is a violation of the roadmap peace plan under which Israel agreed to freeze all building in the settlements In 2008 a project to link Ma ale Adumim and Jerusalem known as the E1 project short for East 1 as it appears on old zoning maps was criticized by the Palestinian Authority US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and US President George W Bush 46 As a result a plan for 3 500 5 000 homes in Mevaseret Adumim was frozen 47 The new Judea and Samaria District police headquarters formerly located in the Ras el Amud neighborhood of Jerusalem was completed in May 2008 48 Ma ale Adumim is widely regarded by the international community as illegal under international law according to the Fourth Geneva Convention article 49 which prohibits an occupying power transferring citizens from its own territory to occupied territory Israel maintains that international conventions relating to occupied land do not apply to the West Bank because they were not under the legitimate sovereignty of any state in the first place 49 This view was rejected by the International Court of Justice and the International Committee of the Red Cross 50 Housing shortage nbsp Ma ale Adumim yeshivaOne of the purposes of establishing Ma ale Adumim was to supply affordable housing for young couples who could not afford the high cost of homes in Jerusalem Although the municipal boundaries cover 48 000 dunams the city has been suffering from an acute housing shortage since 2009 due to the freeze on new construction As of 2011 update most of the real estate market was in second hand properties 2 ArchaeologyMain articles Monastery of Martyrius Inn of the Good Samaritan and Laura of Euthymius The Byzantine monastery of Martyrius once the most important monastic centre in the Judean Desert in the early Christian era is located in Ma ale Adumim 51 Other archaeological sites on the outskirts of Ma ale Adumim include Khan el Hatruri 34 also known as the Good Samaritan Inn traditionally associated with an inn mentioned in a parable by Jesus in Luke 10 30 37 52 The remains of the Monastery of St Euthymius built in the 5th century and destroyed by the Mamluk sultan Baybars 53 It is known in Arabic as Khan al Ahmar since the buildings were repurposed in the 13th century as a caravanserai for Muslim pilgrims on the route between Jerusalem and Mecca via Nabi Musa 54 Landmarks nbsp Moshe Castel Museum in Ma ale AdumimThe Moshe Castel Museum showcases the work of Israeli artist Moshe Castel 55 The Tree of Life is the world s largest artistic representation of an Olive Tree The model for the tree was a five hundred year old Olive Tree from the Garden of Gethsemane The Tree is the artistic creation of Jerusalem artist Sam Philipe The site is a venue for outdoor programming and weddings 1 Mizpe Edna is a lookout at the Shofar and Hallil junction citation needed Notes This is the Arabic meaning traditionally thought to carrying the idea of the blood of travelers spilt by bandits who waylaid them on this area of their route 5 Citations Regional Statistics Israel Central Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 22 February 2023 a b c d e f Benzaquen 2011 The Geneva Convention BBC News 10 December 2009 Retrieved 27 November 2010 a b Gonen 2000 p 43 a b c d Gorenberg 2006 p 297 Ginbara 1999 p 152 153 sfn error no target CITEREFGinbara1999 help a b c B tselem 2013 sfn error no target CITEREFB tselem2013 help Ranta 2015 pp 150 154 p 150 a b Ranta 2015 pp 152 153 a b Gorenberg 2006 p 298 Ranta 2015 p 151 Ranta 2015 pp 151 152 Ranta 2015 pp 153 154 Gorenberg 2006 p 306 Gorenberg 2006 p 305 Shlay amp Rosen 2015 p 66 Gorenberg 2006 pp 305 308 Shalev 2009 p 9 McCarthy 2009 Gorenberg 2006 p 309 Nissenbaum 2015 p 121 O Malley 2015 p 231 Lustick 1988 p 10 Leon 2015 p 49 Allegra 2017 p 60 a b Rubenberg 2003 p 220 a b c Abdalla Jihan Israel eyes landfill site for Bedouin nomads Reuters Retrieved 2012 06 20 Weizman Eyal 2012 Hollow Land Israel s Architecture of Occupation Verso Books p 21 Municipality of Ma ale Adumim Toshav co il Retrieved 2008 10 25 a b The Expansion of Ma ale Adumim Applied Research Institute of Jerusalem ARIJ Archived from the original on 2006 01 08 Retrieved 2006 02 10 Nathan Thrall A Day in the Life of Abed Salama One man s quest to find his son lays bare the reality of Palestinian life under Israeli rule New York Review of Books 19 March 2021 Berg Raffi 2005 11 12 Israel s Linchpin Settlement BBC Retrieved 2008 10 25 a b Maaleh Adumim real estate Buyit in Israel 2010 Archived from the original on 2012 01 15 Retrieved 2011 08 31 a b c Rossner Rena 2004 06 14 Jerusalem Report Article Retrieved 2008 10 25 Kehillot Tehilla Finding the Right Community Archived July 13 2011 at the Wayback Machine HOME Applied Research Institute Jerusalem ARIJ El Eizariya including Al Ka abina Town Profile ARIJ p 19 Abu Dis Town Profile Archived 2018 01 06 at the Wayback Machine ARIJ pp 17 18 Az Za ayyem Village Profile ARIJ p 16 Isawiya Town Profile ARIJ 2012 p 14 Shragai Nadav 2007 03 14 Peace Now 32 of land held for settlements is private Palestinian property Haaretz Retrieved 2009 07 06 http mondediplo com 1999 11 08israel Maaleh Adumim was established on lands taken from Palestinians from the villages of Abu Dis Al Izriyyeh Al Issawiyyeh Al Tur and Anata Other lands had been inhabited for dozen of years by the Jahalin and Sawahareh Bedouin tribes The Hidden Agenda The Establishment and Expansion Plans of Ma ale Adummim and their Human Rights Ramifications B Tselem Btselem org Retrieved 2013 03 26 Dugard John 2005 03 03 Question of the Violation of Human Rights in the Occupied Arab Territories Including Palestine PDF Report to the Commission on Human Rights United Nations Retrieved 2006 06 27 Sharon Pledges Settlement Growth BBC 2005 04 05 Retrieved 2008 10 25 Benhorin Yitzhak 2005 03 25 Rice Slams Israel s Settlements Plans Ynetnews Retrieved 2008 10 25 Lis Jonathan January 7 2008 Police delay move into new E 1 headquarters but deny link to presidential visit Haaretz Middle East Progress Archived from the original on July 19 2012 Berg Raffi 2005 11 12 Israel s linchpin settlement BBC News Retrieved 2010 03 26 Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory Archived 2010 07 06 at the Wayback Machine International Court of Justice 9 July 2004 pp 44 45 The Monastery of Martyrius at Ma ale Adummim Yitzhak Magen Israel Antiquities Authority Jerusalem 1993 Tours from Jerusalem Archived from the original on 2009 02 23 Retrieved 2008 10 25 Historical Sites Jericho Municipality Archived from the original on 2008 09 17 Retrieved 2008 10 25 Murphy O Connor Jerome 2008 The Holy Land An Oxford Archaeological Guide from Earliest Times to 1700 Oxford University Press US p 335 ISBN 978 0 19 923666 4 Moshe Castel Museum SourcesAllegra Marco 2017 Outside Jerusalem and Yet So Near Ma ale Adumim Jerusalem and the Suburbanization of Israel s Settlement Policy In Ariel Handel Allegra Marco Maggor Erez eds Normalizing Occupation The Politics of Everyday Life in the West Bank Settlements Indiana University Press pp 48 63 ISBN 978 0 253 02505 0 Benzaquen John 12 May 2011 Neighborhood Watch Unsettled market Jerusalem Post Ma ale Adumim Area B tselem 16 November 2013 Ginbar Yuval July 1999 On the Way to Annexation Human Rights Violations Resulting from the Establishment and Expansion of the Ma ale Adummim Settlement PDF B tselem Gonen Rivka 2000 Biblical Holy Places An Illustrated Guide Paulist Press ISBN 978 0 809 13974 3 Gorenberg Gershom 2006 The Accidental Empire Israel and the Birth of the Settlements 1967 1977 Henry Holt amp Co ISBN 9781466800540 Lustick Ian S 1988 For the Land and the Lord Jewish Fundamentalism in Israel Council on Foreign Relations ISBN 978 0 876 09036 7 Leon Nissim 2015 The Significance of the Yom Kippur War as a Turnibg Point in the Religious Zionist Society In Lebel Udi Lewin Eyal eds The 1973 Yom Kippur War and the Reshaping of Israeli Civil Military Relations Lexington Books pp 37 53 ISBN 978 1 498 51372 2 Nissenbaum Dion 2015 A Street Divided Stories From Jerusalem s Alley of God St Martin s Press ISBN 978 1 466 88489 2 McCarthy Rory 24 August 2009 How settlements in the West Bank are creating a new reality brick by brick The Guardian O Malley Padraig 2015 The Two State Delusion Israel and Palestine A Tale of Two Narratives Penguin ISBN 978 0 698 19218 8 Ranta Ronald 2015 Political Decision Making and Non Decisions The Case of Israel and the Occupied Territories Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 137 44799 9 Rubenberg Cheryl 2003 The Palestinians In Search of a Just Peace Lynne Rienner Publishers ISBN 978 1 588 26225 7 Shalev Nir December 2009 The Hidden Agenda Establishment and Expansion Plans of Ma ale Adummim and their Human Rights Ramifications PDF B tselem Bimkom pp 1 58 Shlay Anne B Rosen Gillad 2015 Jerusalem The Spatial Politics of a Divided Metropolis John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 745 69600 3 nbsp Panorama of Ma ale AdumimExternal links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ma ale Adumim Official municipal website Unofficial city website Americans for Peace Now report on E 1 and Ma ale Adumim The Establishment and Expansion Plans of Ma ale Adummim and their Human Rights Ramifications History of Ma aleh Adummim UrbanIsrael Site About Ma ale Adumim Historical Social and Cultural Links Peace Now s Blunder Erred on Ma ale Adumim Land by 15 900 Percent There is water under the desert MAchat Ma ale Adumim English Speakers Community Website 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ma 27ale Adumim amp oldid 1173881523, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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