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{{About|the ancient site|the Palestinian village|Khirbet Susya|the Israeli settlement|Susya, Har Hebron}}
{{Infobox Kibbutz
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2017}}
| name = Susya
{{Infobox settlement
| foundation = 1983
| founded_by = |name = Susya
|native_name = <br/>سوسية ]<br/>סוּסְיָא ]
| region =
|settlement_type = Village
| council = ]
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| affiliation = ]
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|pushpin_map=Israel south wb |pushpin_mapsize=250
|pushpin_map = West Bank
|latd=31 |latm=23 |lats=30.67
|pushpin_mapsize = 250
|longd=35 |longm=6 |longs=44.45
|pushpin_map_caption= Location of Susya
| website =
|coordinates = {{coord|31|23|31|N|35|6|44|E|region:PS|display=inline,title}}
|subdivision_type1 = ]
|subdivision_name1 = ]
|unit_pref=
|area_total_dunam=
|elevation_m=
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'''Susya''' ({{lang-he-n|סוּסְיָא}}) refers to the site of an ancient village of the ], in the southern ] of the ] that has come to light in recent archeological investigations, to a Palestinian village settled in the 1830s, and to a religious ]i ] ], under the jurisdiction of ], established in 1983.
'''Susya''' ({{langx|ar|سوسية}}, {{langx|he|סוּסְיָא}}; Susiyeh, Susiya, Susia) is a location in the southern ] in the ]. It houses an ] with extensive remains from the ] and ] periods,<ref name=":0" /> including the ruins of an archeologically notable ], repurposed as a ] after the ] of Palestine in the ].<ref name="Werlin" /> A ] village named ] was established near the site in the 1830s. The village lands extended over 300 hectares under multiple private Palestinian ownership,<ref name=Btselem2015>, ] 29 July 2015</ref> and the Palestinians on the site are said to exemplify a southern Hebron ] culture present in the area since the early 19th century<ref>], ], , 15 May 2002.</ref><ref name="Hasson">Nir Hasson, , '']'' 13 September 2004.</ref> whose ] involved seasonal dwellings in the area's caves and ruins of Susya.<ref name="Btselem2015" />

In 1982, an Israeli land authority, Plia Albeck, working in the Civil division of the State Attorney's Office, determined that the 300 hectares where Palestinians had been living, and which included an area with remains both of a 5th–8th century CE synagogue and of a mosque that had replaced it, were privately owned by the Palestinian Susya's villagers.<ref name="Btselem2015" /> In 1983, an ] also named ] was established next to the Palestinian village.<ref name="Btselem2015" /> In 1986, the ]<ref name="Bregman2014">{{cite book |author= Bregman, Ahron |title= Cursed Victory: A History of Israel and the Occupied Territories |year= 2014 |publisher= Penguin Books |pages=133– |isbn= 978-1-84614-735-7 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ew1PAgAAQBAJ&pg=PT133}}</ref><ref name="Friedman2010">{{cite book |author=Friedman, Thomas L. |author-link= Thomas L. Friedman |title= From Beirut to Jerusalem |year=2010 |publisher= Farrar, Straus and Giroux |pages=238– |isbn= 978-0-374-70699-9 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=877DR3un9rIC&pg=PT238}}</ref><ref name="Gordon2008">{{cite book |author= Neve Gordon |title= Israel's Occupation |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=4RX7t4X8_RMC&pg=PA107 |date=2 October 2008 |publisher= University of California Press |isbn= 978-0-520-94236-3 |pages=107–}}</ref> declared the entire area owned by Palestinians an archeological site, and the ] expelled the Palestinian owners from their dwellings and appointed Israeli settlers from the recently-built settlement to manage the site.<ref name="Btselem2015" /><ref name="Magness">Magness (2003), p. 99–104</ref> Some of the expropriated Palestinian land was incorporated into the jurisdictional area of the Israeli settlement, and an illegal ] was established on the area of the previous Palestinian village.<ref name="Btselem2015" /><ref name="unfactsheet" /> The expelled Palestinians moved a few hundred meters southeast of their original village.<ref>{{cite news |title= Civil Administration threatens to demolish most of Susiya village |publisher=] |quote= Susiya residents have lived in this region on a seasonal basis since at least the 19th century |url= http://www.btselem.org/planning_and_building/20120614_susiya}}</ref><ref>Stefano Pasta, , '']'' 10 June 2015: "Espropriati nel 1986, sotto sgombero dal 5 maggio. Fino a quell'anno i palestinesi abitavano nelle grotte a mezzo chilometro di distanza. Ne furono espropriati quando l'area fu riconosciuta sito archeologico. Andarono quindi a vivere nei terreni agricoli limitrofi di Susiya, di loro proprietà ma senza il permesso per costruire."</ref>

The Israeli government, which has issued injunctions against ]'s decisions to demolish illegal Israeli outposts, made a petition to the High Court to permit the demolition of the new Palestinian village. The state expressed a willingness to allocate what it called "Israeli government-owned lands" near ] for an alternative residence, and to assist rebuilding, considering it ideal for the displaced villagers grazing. Though the existence of the Palestinian village is attested on maps as early as 1917, confirmed by aerial photographs in 1980 that show cultivated farmland and livestock pens maintained by Palestinians on the site,<ref name="Btselem2015" /> the official view of Israel is that no historic Palestinian village ever existed there, just a few families residing seasonally, and that the area was required for archaeological work. It is notable that Jews also reside in illegal structures on the same archaeological site. The attorney for the Palestinians replied that the army was stopping Palestinians building on their own privately owned land, while permitting settlers to seize their agricultural fields.<ref name="CLevinson">Chaim Levinson, , '']'' 28 March 2015.</ref>

The population of the Palestinian community has fluctuated. It reportedly numbered 350 villagers in 2012<ref name=unfactsheet/> and 250 residents the following year,<ref name=KSBt>, ] 1 Jan 2013.</ref> constituted by 50 nuclear families (2015), up from 25 in 1986<ref name=grossman/> and 13 in 2008.<ref name=Shulman2008/> By 2018 17 families were reported to still be clinging on, working the few fields that remain to them of their former lands.<ref>], , ], 2018 {{isbn|978-0-226-56665-8}} pp.4-6.</ref>

The international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank ]; the Israeli government disputes this.<ref name=BBC_GC4>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/1682640.stm |title=The Geneva Convention |work=BBC News |date=10 December 2009 |access-date=27 September 2011 }}</ref><ref name=mfa2003>{{cite web|url=http://mfa.gov.il/MFA/MFA-Archive/2003/Pages/DISPUTED%20TERRITORIES-%20Forgotten%20Facts%20About%20the%20We.aspx|title=Disputed territories - Forgotten facts about the West Bank and Gaza strip|date=2003-02-01|publisher=Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs|access-date=22 August 2015}}</ref>

==Name==
The site is called in Arabic ''Khirbet Susiya'', also spelled ''Susiyeh'', which means "Ruin (''khirbet'') of the ] Plant (''susiya'')" after a ] widely growing there.<ref name=OConnor/>

The spelling Susya represents the Hebrew name, as decided by the Israeli Naming Committee, in consultation with the settlers.<ref>"A unique case is Susya. The existence of the ancient Jewish town was unknown in Jewish sources, but was discovered in archaeological excavations ... the settlers are not free to decide on the names chosen: the National Naming Committee at the Prime Minister's Office has that responsibility and considers various factors. The settlers, however, being well acquainted with the territory and its history, play a significant role in the decision."{{cite book |last= Feige |first= Michael |title= Settling in the Hearts: Fundamentalism, Time, and Space in Judea and Samaria |pages= 75–76 |publisher=] |year= 2009 |isbn= 978-0-8143-2750-0 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=CG_R01oa780C&pg=PA75 |access-date=8 October 2021}}</ref>


==History== ==History==
Susiya, whether it refers to the site of the synagogue or the ruins of the contiguous ancient and large settlement of some 60 dunams,<ref>Zeev Safrai, ''The Missing Century: Palestine in the fifth century:growth and decline'', Peeters Publishers 1998 p. 101</ref> is not mentioned in any ancient text, and Jewish literature failed to register an ancient Jewish town on that site. It is thought by some to correspond to the Biblical ] (Josh 15.5),<ref>Günter Stemberger, ''Jews and Christians in the Holy Land: Palestine in the fourth century'', tr. Ruth Tuschling, Continuum International Publishing Group, 2000 p. 151</ref> a proposal made by Avraham Negev.<ref>Avraham Negev, Shimon Gibson, ''Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land,'' rev. ed. Continuum International Publishing Group, 2005 p.484</ref> Others argue that, in the wake of the ] (AD 132-5), when the Romans garrisoned Khirbet el-Karmil, identified as the biblical Carmel,<ref>1 Samuel:25</ref> religious Jews uncomfortable with pagan symbols moved 2 km south-west to the present Susiya, which they perhaps already farmed, and that, while they still regarded their new community as Carmel, the name was lost when the village's fortunes declined in the early Arab period, perhaps because the new Muslim overlords would not have tolerated its economy, which was based on wine.<ref>Jerome Murphy-O'Connor, ''The Holy Land: an Oxford archaeological guide from earliest times to 1700'',5th ed. Oxford University Press US, 2008 pp.351-354, p.351</ref>


===Late Roman and Byzantine period town===
The site, in Arabic Khirbet Susiya/Susiyeh, "Ruin of the Liquorice Plant"<ref>Jerome Murphy-O'Connor, ''The Holy Land: an Oxford archaeological guide from earliest times to 1700'', 5th ed. Oxford University Press US, 2008 p. 351</ref> was first described by V. Guérin in 1869, who first recognized its importance.<ref name="negev482">Avraham Negev, ''Shimon Gibson Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land'', ibid. p. 482</ref> The spelling Susya represents the Hebrew name, determined by the Israeli Naming committee.<ref>'A unique case is Susia. The existence of the ancient Jewish town was unknown in Jewish sources, but was discovered in archaeological excavations . . . the settlers are not free to decide on the names chosen: the National naming Committee of the Prime Minister's Office has that responsibility and considers various factors. The settlers, however, being well acquainted with the territory and its history, play a significant role in the decision.' Michael Feige, ''Settling in the Hearts: Fundamentalism, Time, and Space in Judea and Samaria'', Wayne State University Press, 2009, pp. 75–76</ref> Subsequently, in the ], based on an observation in 1875 on the area of the southeastern slope of a hill west of Susiya ] and ] labeled Susieh as an 'Important public structure'. German accounts later stated that it was a remnant of an ancient church.<ref name="ariel">{{cite encyclopedia|author=Vilnai, Ze'ev|authorlink=Zev Vilnay|title=Susiya—Judea|encyclopedia=Ariel Encyclopedia|volume=Volume 6|pages=5352–5353|publisher=Am Oved|location=], Israel|year=1978}} {{he icon}}</ref> In 1937, the building to the north was identified by L. A. Meyer and A. Reifenberg as the site of a synagogue.<ref name="negev482" />
Susiya is considered an important site for the study and research of ancient Jewish village life in Palestine during ].<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|last=Werlin|first=Steven H.|url=https://brill.com/view/book/9789004298408/B9789004298408_005.xml|title=3 The Southern Hebron Hills: Susiya, Eshtemoa, Ma'on (in Judea), and Ḥ. 'Anim|date=2015-01-01|publisher=Brill|isbn=978-90-04-29840-8|pages=136|language=en}}</ref> It was the site of a monumental synagogue. The settlement on the hill contiguous to the synagogue seems to have once had a thriving economy. A fine store has been excavated from its ruins.<ref>See the drawing of the reconstruction and groundplan in Zeev Safrai, ''The economy of Roman Palestine'', Routledge, 1994, {{isbn|9780203204863}}, p. 127 (no access on Google Books as of 2021).</ref> It may have undergone a decline in the second half of the 4th century, and again in the 6th century. Some speak of abandonment though the evidence from the synagogue suggests continuity into the medieval period.<ref name="Magness" /><ref>Safrai (1998), p. .</ref>


According to Israel archaeologist Yonathan Mizrachi, the Jewish population is attested from the 4th to 6th century, after which a population change took place.<ref name="qantara" />
The site was examined by Shemarya Gutman in 1969, who uncovered in a trial dig the ] of a synagogue. He, together with Ze'ev Yeivin and Ehud Netzer, then conducted the Israeli excavations at Khirbet Suseya, (subsequently named by a Hebrew calque as Horvat Susya) over 1971-1972,<ref name="negev482" /><ref>David Amit, 'Architectural plans of Synagogues in the Southern Judean Hills and the 'Halakah'.' In Dan Urman, Paul Virgil McCracken Flesher, ''Ancient Synagogues: historical analysis and archaeological discovery'', Brill, 1998 pp. 129–156 p.132.</ref><ref>David Milson, ''Art and architecture of the synagogue in late antique Palestine: in the shadow of the church'',Brill, 2007 p.56</ref> by the Palestinian village of Susiya Al-Qadime.


====Theory: Susya as "new Carmel"====
Such remains are intriguing because so far no excavations have uncovered undisputed evidence for synagogues before the 2nd century CE in Judea. The excavated synagogue dates from the 4th to the 7th century CE,<ref>Post-byzantine according to the language of an inscription. See Zeev Safrai, ''The Missing Century: Palestine in the fifth century : growth and decline'', Peeters Publishers 1998 p.149</ref><ref>‘The synagogue is tentatively dated to the end of the 4th-beginning of the 7th.century AD, and was used as a Jewish prayer house until the 9th century.’ Avraham Negev, Shimon Gibson ''Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land,'' ibid. p.482</ref> and was in continuous use until the 9th century CE.<ref>Miriam Schmitt, Linda Kulzer, Mary Michael Kaliher ''Medieval women monastics: wisdom's wellsprings,'' Liturgical Press, 1996 p. 47, p. 49</ref> It is one of four of an architecturally unique group in the Southern Judean Hills,<ref name="amit129">David Amit, 'Architectural plans of Synagogues in the Southern Judean Hills and the 'Halakah'.' ibid p. 129.</ref> of the six synagogues identified in Judea as a whole, the lower number probably reflecting a shift in the Jewish population from Judah to ] in the 2nd and 3rd centuries.<ref>Miriam Schmitt, Linda Kulzer, Mary Michael Kaliher, ''Medieval women monastics: wisdom's wellsprings,''ibid. pp. 48–49</ref> The other three of this distinctive group are those of ], Horvat ], and 'Anim.<ref name="amit129" /> Three outstanding characteristics of the Susiya-Eshtemoa group, group are their width, entrances at the short eastern wall, and the absence of columns to support the roof <ref>David Amit, 'Architectural plans of Synagogues in the Southern Judean Hills and the 'Halakah'.' Ibid. p. 138</ref>
Susya, whether it refers to the site of the ancient synagogue or the ruins of the contiguous ancient and large settlement of some {{convert|80|dunam|m2}},<ref name=Werlin>Steven H. Werlin, , Brill, 2015 p. 136.</ref> is not mentioned in any ancient text, and Jewish literature did not register an ancient Jewish town on that site.<ref>Safrai (1998), p. 101.</ref> It is thought by some to correspond to the Biblical ] ({{bibleverse|Joshua|15:5}}), a proposal made by ].<ref>Günter Stemberger, ''Jews and Christians in the Holy Land: Palestine in the fourth century'', tr. Ruth Tuschling, Continuum International Publishing Group, 2000 p. 151</ref><ref>Negev & Gibson (2001), p. 484.</ref><ref name=Negev84>{{cite journal |last= Negev |first= Avraham |title= Excavations at Carmel (Kh. Susiya) in 1984: Preliminary Report |pages= 231-52 |journal=] |volume= 35 |number= 4 |year= 1985 |jstor= 27925998 |url= http://www.jstor.org/stable/27925998 |access-date=2 October 2020}}</ref> Part of Negev's theory is that, in the wake of the ] (132–135), when the Romans garrisoned ], identified as the ], religious Jews uncomfortable with pagan symbols moved 2&nbsp;km south-west to the present Susya (which they perhaps already farmed) and that, while they still regarded their new community as Carmel, the name was lost when the village's fortunes declined in the early Arab period, in part, it has been suggested, because the new Muslim overlords might not have tolerated its ]-based economy.<ref>1 Samuel:25</ref><ref name=OConnor/><ref name=Negev84/>
]


===Ancient synagogue===
According to David Amit, the architectural design, particularly the eastern entrance and axis of prayer, which differ from the majority of Galilean synagogues, exhibits the ramifications of the earliest ] law conserved in southern Judea for generations after the Destruction of the Temple, while it forgotten in Galilee, an adherence to older traditions reflecting closer proximity to Jerusalem.<ref> David Amit, ibid pp. 148–155, pp. 148, 152</ref> The eastern orientation may be also related to the idea of dissuading heretics and Christians in the same area, who bowed to the east, in the belief that the ] lay in that direction.<ref>p. 146</ref>
] inscription]]


Susiya is the site of an archaeologically notable ancient ].<ref name=Werlin/> The site was examined by ] in 1969, who uncovered the ] of a synagogue during a trial dig. He, together with Ze'ev Yeivin and ], then conducted the Israeli excavations at Khirbet Suseya, (subsequently named by a Hebrew calque as Horvat Susya) over 1971–72,<ref name=Negev482>Negev & Gibson (2001), p. 482.</ref><ref>Amit (1998), p. .</ref><ref>{{cite book |last= Milson |first= David William |title= Art and architecture of the synagogue in late antique Palestine: in the shadow of the church |page= 56 |publisher= Brill |series= Ancient Judaism and early Christianity, Volume 5 |year= 2007 |isbn= 978-90-04-15186-4}} (No Google Books access as of Oct 2021).</ref> by the Palestinian village of Susiya Al-Qadime.
The abandoned synagogue, or its atrium or courtyard, was converted to a mosque around the 10th century.<ref name="negev482" /><ref>,''Medieval Women monastics,'' ibid. p. 47</ref> A niche on the northern wall used as a mihrab/mahrab dates to ]'s time, <ref>Daniel Jacobs, Shirley Eber, Francesca Silvani, ''Israel and the Palestinian Territories''. 2nd ed. Rough Guides, 1998 p. 414</ref> according to local tradition.<ref>David Amit, 'Architectural plans of Synagogues in the Southern Judean Hills and the 'Halakah'.' p. 132</ref> In the 12–13 centuries ]s garrisoned nearby Chermala and Eshtemoa, and, in their wake, a few families moved into the ruins to exploit the rich agricultural land.<ref>Jerome Murphy-O'Connor, ''The Holy Land: an Oxford archaeological guide from earliest times to 1700'', 5th ed. Oxford University Press US, 2008 p. 351</ref>
] at the entrance of the Susya synagogue]]
]


The excavated synagogue in Susya dates from the 4th to the 7th century CE and was in continuous use until the 9th century CE.<ref name=Safrai149>Post-Byzantine according to the language of an inscription. See Safrai (1998), p. 149.</ref><ref name=Negev>"The synagogue is tentatively dated to the end of the 4th-beginning of the 7th. century AD, and was used as a Jewish prayer house until the 9th century." Negev & Gibson (2001), p. 482.</ref> According to ], the synagogue was built in the 4th - 5th centuries and continued in use for "at least" another two centuries.<ref name=Magness/> It is one of four of an architecturally unique group in the Southern Judean Hills.<ref name=amit129>Amit (1998), p. 129.</ref><ref>Levine, Lee I. "Jewish Archaeology in Late Antiquity: art, architecture, and inscriptions", in Steven T. Katz (ed.), , Cambridge University Press, 1984 p. 540.</ref> Only six synagogues have been identified in Judea as a whole; the lower number may be accounted for by a shift in the Jewish population from Judah to ] in the 2nd and 3rd centuries. The other three of this distinctive group are those of ], Horvat ], and 'Anim.<ref name=amit129/> Three outstanding characteristics of the Susya-Eshtemoa group, are their width, entrances at the short eastern wall, and the absence of columns to support the roof.<ref>Amit (1998), p. 138.</ref>
The synagogue was built as a broadhouse, rather than along basilica lines,<ref> ‘Uniquely Jewish adaptations of Christian architecture did . .occur. The synagogues at Khirbet ], in the ],, Horvat Rimmon 1 in the southern ], at ], and Khirbet Susiya . .were built as broadhouses and not as longhouse basilicas. In these buildings, the basilica form is turned on its side, and the focal point of the synagogue is the wide wall of the hall. Benches were built round the interior walls of these synagogues, focusing attention on the centre of the room. This architecture is a continuation of the house-synagogues that literary sources suggests existed from the second and third centuries.’ Steven Fine, ''Art and Judaism in the Greco-Roman world: toward a new Jewish archaeology,'' Cambridge University Press, 2005 p.88 </ref><ref> Eric M. Meyers, ''Galilee through the centuries: cultures in conflict,'' Eisenbrauns 1999 p.233</ref>, measuring 9 by 16 metres (27 by 48 feet<ref> Avraham Negev, Shimon Gibson,''Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land,'' ibid.p.482 </ref> built in well-wrought ashlar construction, with triple doorway façade in an eastward orientation, and the ] and ] at the centre of the northern wall. There was a secondary bema in the eastern section. Unlike other synagogues in Judea this had a gallery, made while reinforcing the western wall. East of the synagogue was an open courtyard surrounded on three sides by a roofed portico. The western side opened to the synagogue’s ], and floor of narthex composed of coloured mosaics set in an interlaced pattern.<ref>''Medieval women monastics,'' p.48</ref> This model was of short duration, yielding in the late Byzantine phase (6th/7th) to the basilica form, already elsewhere dominant in synagogue architecture. <ref>David Amit, ‘Architectural plans of Synagogues in the Southern Judean Hills and the ‘Halakah’.’ p.156</ref>


According to David Amit, the architectural design, particularly the eastern entrance and axis of prayer, which differ from the majority of Galilean synagogues, exhibits the ramifications of the earliest ] law conserved in southern Judea for generations after the destruction of the Temple. This was forgotten in Galilee, but in Judea there was a closer adherence to older traditions reflecting closer proximity to Jerusalem.<ref>Amit (1998), pp. 148–155 .</ref> The eastern orientation may be also related to the idea of dissuading heretics and Christians in the same area, who bowed to the east, in the belief that the ] lay in that direction.<ref>Amit (1998), p. 146.</ref>
In contrast to most Galilean synagogues with their façade and ] ] on the same Jerusalem-oriented wall, the Judean synagogue at Susiya, as as Esthtemoa and Maon has the niche on the northern Jerusalem-oriented wall and entrances on the east side wall.<ref>Rachel Hachlili, ‘Jewish Art and Iconography in the Land of Israel,’ in Suzanne Richard (ed.), ''Near Eastern Archeology: A Reader, Eisenbrauns'', 2003 pp.445-454 p.449</ref>
]
The synagogue floor of white ]e has three mosaic panels, the eastern one a Torah Shrine, two ]s, one on a screen relief showing two lamps<ref>or incense censers. See Steven Fine, ibid. p.195</ref> suspended from a bar between the menorah’s upper branches,<ref> Rachel Hachlili, ''The menorah, the ancient seven-armed candelabrum: origin, form, and significance,'' Brill 2001, pp.67,228. For its reconstruction see p.53.</ref>, perhaps, since the Torah shrine flanked by lampstands, symbolizing both a connection between the synagogue and the Temple<ref>Steven Fine, p.195</ref> for spotlighting the bema and giving light for scriptural readings, were by the reverse mirroring of the menorah pattern in the mosaics, heightened the central significance of the Torah shrine in the hall<ref> Eric M. Meyers ''Galilee through the centuries: confluence of cultures'', Eisenbrauns, 1999 p.231</ref> a '']'', and an '']'' with columns on each side. Next to the columns is a landscape with deers ands rams. The central panel composed of geometric and floral patterns. A spoke-wheel design before the central bema, has led Gutman to believed it is the remnant of a zodiac wheel. Zodaic mosaics are important witness to the time, since they were systematically suppressed by the Church, and, their frequent construction in Palestinian synagogue floors may be an index of 'the "inculturation" of non-Jewish imagery and its resulting ]' <ref> Steven Fine, ''Art and Judaism in the Greco-Roman world,'' pp.196-7</ref>. The fragmentary state of the wheel mosaic is due to its replacement by a much cruder geometric pavement pattern, indicative of a desire to erase what later came to be thought of as objectionable imagery.<ref>Steven Fine, ibid.p.95</ref><ref> John Brian Harley, David Woodward, ''The History of Cartography: Cartography in prehistoric, ancient, and medieval Europe and the Mediterranean'', Humana Press, 1987 p.266. ‘since mosaics were disapproved of by the Jews as graven images, they were both removed. In other mosaics of the Byzantine period from the Holy Land, the zodiac is represented only by the names of its signs rather than by their graphic representations’.</ref>


The synagogue was built as a broadhouse, rather than along basilica lines,<ref>"Uniquely Jewish adaptations of Christian architecture did occur. The synagogues at ], in the ], Horvat Rimmon 1 in the southern ], at Eshtemoa, and Khirbet Susiya were built as broadhouses and not as longhouse basilicas. In these buildings, the basilica form is turned on its side, and the focal point of the synagogue is the wide wall of the hall. Benches were built round the interior walls of these synagogues, focusing attention on the centre of the room. This architecture is a continuation of the house-synagogues that literary sources suggests existed from the second and third centuries." ], ''Art and Judaism in the Greco-Roman world: toward a new Jewish archaeology'', Cambridge University Press, 2005 p. 88</ref><ref>Eric M. Meyers, ''Galilee through the centuries: cultures in conflict'', Eisenbrauns 1999 p. </ref> measuring 9 by 16 metres (27 by 48 feet)<ref name=Negev482/> built in well-wrought ashlar construction, with triple doorway façade in an eastward orientation, and the ] and ] at the centre of the northern wall. There was a secondary bimah in the eastern section. Unlike other synagogues in Judea it had a gallery, made while reinforcing the western wall. East of the synagogue was an open courtyard surrounded on three sides by a roofed portico. The western side opened to the synagogue's ], and the floor of the narthex composed of coloured mosaics set in an interlaced pattern. This model was of short duration, yielding in the late Byzantine phase (6th/7th) to the basilica form, already elsewhere dominant in synagogue architecture.<ref>Amit (1998), p. 156.</ref>
A motif that probably represented ] in the lion's den, as in the mosaics discovered at Naaran near Jericho and Ein Samsam in the Golan<ref>Steven Fine, ‘Archeology and the Interpretation of Rabbinic Literature: Some Thoughts’ in Matthew Kraus (ed.) ''How should rabbinic literature be read in the modern world? '', Gorgias Press LLC, 2006 pp.199-217 p.214</ref><ref>Eric Meyers, ''Galilee through the centuries'', ibid.p.232</ref> was also tesselated, surviving only most fragmentarily. The figure, in an ''orans'' stance, flanked by lions, was scrubbed from the mosaics in line with later trends, in what Fine calls a ‘new aesthetic’ at Khirbet Susiya, one that refurbished the designs to suppress iconographic forms thought by later generations to be objectionable. We can only reconstruct the allusion to Daniel from the remaining final Hebrew letters remaining, namely -el, {{rtl-lang|he|אל}}.<ref>Steven Fine, ibid.p.96. Fine speculates whether reluctance to erase these letters reflects a religious reluctance among iconoclasts to delete letters that spell out the ] ], for, again highlighting the distinctiveness of the synagogue, 'in no instance does an explicit Divine name appear in any Jewish synagogue inscription.'</ref>
Another unique feature is number of inscriptions. 4 in mosaics, two in ] , attesting perhaps to its conservation as a spoken language in this region<ref>David Amit, ibid.pp.152-3</ref> and two in ], and 19 fragmentary ones, some in Greek<ref> ''The Israel yearbook'', Zionist Organization of America, Jewish Agency for Israel. Economic Dept. Israel Yearbook Publications, 1981 p.120</ref> etched into the marble of the building <ref> ''Medieval women monastics: wisdom's wellsprings,'' p.48</ref>. From these dedicatory inscriptions the impression is given that the synagogue was run by donors <ref>in Aramaic''benei qartah'', in Hebrew ''benei ha’ir'' (sons of the town), especially of residents of a small agrarian village. See Stuart S. Miller, 'Sages and commoners in late antique ʼEreẓ Israel: a philological inquiry into local traditions' in Peter Schäfer, Catherine Hezser (eds.), ''The Talmud Yerushalmi and Graeco-Roman culture'', Mohr Siebeck, 1998 p.65</ref>rather than by priests (]).<ref>Meyers, ''Galilee throughout the centuries,'' ibid.p.265. The ‘rabbi’ in these epigraphs appears to be an honorific for ‘master’, and the role of such rabbis in the synagogue seems to have been that of being donors. For an early dating based on the rare ‘qedushat’ (to his holiness’) address used in ] correspondence (''qedushat mari rabbi Issi ha-cohen ha-mehubad berabi'') see Aharon Oppenheimer, ‘The Attempt of Hananiah, Son of Rabbi Joshua’s Brother, to Intercalate the Year in Babylonia’ in Peter Schäfer, Catherine Hezser (eds.), ''The Talmud Yerushalmi and Graeco-Roman culture'', ibid. pp.255-264 p.260; A'haron Oppenheimer, Nili Oppenheimer, ''Between Rome and Babylon: studies in Jewish leadership and society, ''Mohr Siebeck, 2005 p.389, sets it in the amoraic period. </ref>


In contrast to most Galilean synagogues with their façade and ] ] on the same Jerusalem-oriented wall, the Judean synagogue at Susya, (as well as Esthtemoa and Maon) has the niche on the northern Jerusalem-oriented wall and entrances on the east side wall.<ref>Rachel Hachlili, "Jewish Art and Iconography in the Land of Israel", in Suzanne Richard (ed.), ''Near Eastern Archaeology: A Reader, Eisenbrauns'', 2003 p. 449</ref> The synagogue floor of white ]e has three mosaic panels, the eastern one a Torah Shrine, two ]s, one on a screen relief showing two lamps<ref>or incense censers. See Steven Fine, p. 195</ref> suspended from a bar between the menorah's upper branches,<ref>Rachel Hachlili, ''The menorah, the ancient seven-armed candelabrum: origin, form, and significance'', Brill 2001, pp. 67, 228. For its reconstruction see p. 53.</ref> (possibly because the Torah shrine was flanked by lampstands, serving the dual purpose of symbolizing a connection between the synagogue and the Temple<ref>Steven Fine, p. 195</ref> while functioning as a spotlight for the bimah and giving light for scriptural readings). This was near the reverse mirroring of the menorah pattern in the mosaics, heightened the central significance of the Torah shrine in the hall<ref>Eric M. Meyers ''Galilee through the centuries: confluence of cultures'', Eisenbrauns, 1999 p. </ref> a '']'', and an '']'' with columns on each side. Next to the columns is a landscape with deer and rams. The central panel composed of geometric and floral patterns. A spoke-wheel design before the central bimah, has led Gutman to believe it is the remnant of a ] wheel. Zodiac mosaics are important witness to the time, since they were systematically suppressed by the Church, and, their frequent construction in Palestinian synagogue floors may be an index of 'the "inculturation" of non-Jewish imagery and its resulting ]'.<ref>Steven Fine, ''Art and Judaism in the Greco-Roman world'', pp. 196–197</ref> The fragmentary state of the wheel mosaic is due to its replacement by a much cruder geometric pavement pattern, indicative of a desire to erase what later came to be thought of as objectionable imagery.<ref>Steven Fine, p. 95</ref><ref>John Brian Harley, David Woodward, ''The History of Cartography: Cartography in prehistoric, ancient, and medieval Europe and the Mediterranean'', Humana Press, 1987 p. 266. "Since mosaics were disapproved of by the Jews as graven images, they were both removed. In other mosaics of the Byzantine period from the Holy Land, the zodiac is represented only by the names of its signs rather than by their graphic representations."</ref> The defacing of images may indicate changing Jewish attitudes to visual representations and graven images, perhaps influence by both Christian iconoclasm and Muslim ].<ref>Steven Fine, "Synagogues in the Land of Israel", in Suzanne Richard (ed.) , Eisenbrauns, 2003 p. 459.</ref>
The settlement on the hill contiguous to the synagogue seems to have once had a thriving economy. A fine store has been excavated from its ruins<ref> See the drawing of the reconstruction and groundplan in Zeev Safrai, ''The economy of Roman Palestine'', Routledge, 1994 p.127</ref>. It seems to have undergone a decline in the second half of the fourth century, and again in the sixth century. Some speak of abandonment though the evidence from the synagogue suggests continuity into the medieval period. <ref>Zeev Safrai, ''The Missing Century,''ibid. p.149</ref>


A motif that probably represented ] in the lion's den, as in the mosaics discovered at ] near ] and ] in the ]<ref>Steven Fine, "Archaeology and the Interpretation of Rabbinic Literature: Some Thoughts" in Matthew Kraus (ed.) ''How should rabbinic literature be read in the modern world?'', Gorgias Press LLC, 2006 p. 214</ref><ref>Eric Meyers, ''Galilee through the centuries'', p. </ref> was also tesselated, surviving only most fragmentarily. The figure, in an ''orans'' stance, flanked by lions, was scrubbed from the mosaics in line with later trends, in what Fine calls a "new aesthetic" at Khirbet Susiya, one that refurbished the designs to suppress iconographic forms thought by later generations to be objectionable. We can only reconstruct the allusion to Daniel from the remaining final Hebrew letters remaining, namely -el, {{lang|he|אל}}.<ref>Steven Fine,. p. 96. Fine speculates whether reluctance to erase these letters reflects a religious reluctance among iconoclasts to delete letters that spell out the ] ], for, again highlighting the distinctiveness of the synagogue, "in no instance does an explicit Divine name appear in any Jewish synagogue inscription."</ref>
== Modern era: Resettlement and conflict==


Another unique feature is number of inscriptions. Four were laid in mosaics: two in ], attesting perhaps to its conservation as a spoken language in this region<ref>Amit (1998), pp. 152–3.</ref> and two in ]. Nineteen fragmentary inscriptions, some of which were in Greek,<ref>''The Israel yearbook'', Zionist Organization of America, Jewish Agency for Israel. Economic Dept. Israel Yearbook Publications, 1981 p. 120</ref> were etched into the marble of the building. From these dedicatory inscriptions the impression is given that the synagogue was run by donors<ref>in Aramaic''benei qartah'', in Hebrew ''benei ha'ir'' (sons of the town), especially of residents of a small agrarian village. See Stuart S. Miller, "Sages and commoners in late antique ʼEreẓ Israel: a philological inquiry into local traditions" in Peter Schäfer, Catherine Hezser (eds.), ''The Talmud Yerushalmi and Graeco-Roman culture'', Mohr Siebeck, 1998 p. 65</ref> rather than by priests (]).<ref>Meyers, ''Galilee throughout the centuries'', p. The "rabbi" in these epigraphs appears to be an honorific for "master", and the role of such rabbis in the synagogue seems to have been that of being donors. For an early dating based on the rare "qedushat" (to his holiness') address used in ] correspondence (''qedushat mari rabbi Issi ha-cohen ha-mehubad berabi'') see Aharon Oppenheimer, "The Attempt of Hananiah, Son of Rabbi Joshua's Brother, to Intercalate the Year in Babylonia" in Peter Schäfer, Catherine Hezser (eds.), ''The Talmud Yerushalmi and Graeco-Roman culture'', p. 260; Aharon Oppenheimer, Nili Oppenheimer, ''Between Rome and Babylon: studies in Jewish leadership and society'', Mohr Siebeck, 2005 p. 389, sets it in the amoraic period.</ref>
The Israeli settlement, which as of 2006 has a population of 737, was established in September 1983<ref name=arij></ref><ref></ref> on 1,800 ]s of land.


===Early Islamic period village===
According to the ], this land was confiscated from the village of Yatta<ref name=arij></ref> next to the Palestinian village of Susya, from which a dozen local families had been expelled to make way for the archeological park. A major expansion began on 18th of September 1999, when its settlers expanded its boundaries northwards and eastwards, with the Palestinian Shreiteh family allegedly losing roughly 150 more dunams<ref name=arij></ref>
After the ], the archaeological evidence appears to suggest that a new Muslim population immigrated to the South ] and settled next to the Jewish population.<ref>Gideon Avni (2014) , OUP, p225</ref> According to Y. Mizrachi, a population change took place in the 7th century. Arabic inscriptions have been discovered belonging to the mosque,{{clarify|Mosque? If the modified synagogue is meant, say so. Or is there another mosque?|date=October 2020}} he adds, but have never been published.<ref name=qantara/> The village thrived until the 12th century.<ref name=qantara/>


The abandoned synagogue, or its atrium or courtyard, was converted into a mosque.<ref name=Negev482/>
The Palestinians that remain live in tents on a small rocky hill between the settlement and the archeological park<ref>Ehud Krinis, ] and ], ] June 22, 2007</ref><ref>David Dean Shulman,''Dark hope: working for peace in Israel and Palestine,'' University of Chicago Press, 2007 pp.37f.</ref><ref>'Susia is one example of depopulating and repopulating areas. Susia was a village of permanent cave homes, one among numerous such villages in the area of al-Khalil (Hebron). Twenty years ago, the cave dwellers of Susia were evacuated from their original village on the pretext of archeological digs in the area. Some of the evacuees went to live on their lands close to the Israeli settlement which was founded a short time before. Five years ago the Israeli army destroyed the caves of these families, and since then they continued to live there in impermanent and improvised housing.(Krinis and Dunayevsky 2006)’, Deborah Cowen, Emily Gilbert, ''War, Citizenship, Territory,'' Routledge, London 2007 p.322</ref> which is located within walking distance. 10 caves inhabited by Susya Palestinian families were blown up by the IDF in 1996, and some 113 tents were destroyed in 1998. It is alleged that official documents asking them to leave the area address them generically as 'intruders' (''polesh''/intruder).<ref> </ref>. Most of the rain-catching water cisterns used by the local Palestinian farmers of Susya were demolished by the Israeli army in 1999 and 2001. A local Susya resident told ],
<blockquote>'Water is life ; without water we can’t live; not us, not the animals, or the plants. Before we had some water, but after the army destroyed everything we have to bring water from far away ; it’s very difficult and expensive. They make our life very difficult, to make us leave '<ref> Vol.39, Issue 001, February/March 2009 p.7</ref></blockquote>


A ] was built in the courtyard of the former synagogue. It featured a ] in the southern wall, a second mihrab between two columns in the southern portico, and "crude" stone benches along the walls.<ref name=Magness/> Magness, assessing the evidence uncovered by the several archaeologists who dug at the site, which includes an inscription, dates the mosque to the reign of Caliph ], in the early eighth century.<ref name=Magness/>
In 2001, an Israeli shepherd and resident of Susya, Yair Har Sinai, was murdered by local Palestinians. <ref></ref>. The murderers were later arrested and one was sentenced to life imprisonment. The IDF then evicted the 300 Palestinians in the area, illegally demolishing some of their illegally-built makeshift homes. They have sought redress in an Israeli court.<ref>'The state admitted the demolition was executed illegally. Justice Procaccia said that "the state did not establish a legal procedure which would allow for a building permit, hence the state is not carrying out its duties and is creating a situation under which a human's basic existence becomes impossible." Justice Hayut pointed to the absurdity of the situation, saying "the state admits an unauthorized action was carried out, which resulted in the demolition of structures that constituted the bare minimum in living conditions." ] 08/09/2004</ref>

===Crusader/Ayyubid period village===
By 1107, a Crusader named ''Gauterius Baffumeth'' was Lord of ], and he donated the land of ''Sussia'' to the ]. In a document dated September{{nbsp}}28, 1110, ] approved and confirmed this donation.<ref>], Cartulaire général de l'orde de St-Jean de Jérusalem, 1, Paris 1896, no. 20, pp. 21–22, "... Preterea laudo et confirmo supradicto Hospitali quoddam casale, quod dedit ei Gauterius Baffumeth, et vocatur Sussia..."</ref><ref>Röhricht, 1893, RRH, pp. –13, No 57</ref> As Baffumeth was Lord of nearby Hebron, Sussia is identified with Khirbet Susya. The dates suggest that the village was inhabited since the Arab period and has carried its name since then. The document calls Susya a ''casale'' (village), a testimony to its agriculture nature.<ref name=Cathedra>{{cite journal |last= Ehrlich |first= Michael |title= Identifications of the settlement at Horvat Susiya |journal= Cathedra |date= 1996 |issue= 82 |pages= 173–4 |url= http://www.ybz.org.il/_Uploads/dbsAttachedFiles/Article_82.13.pdf}}</ref><ref>Note that in the late 19th century, it had been suggested that Sussia was a ''khirbet'' (ruined former settlement) close to ]; see: Röhricht, 1887, vol 10, p. </ref> By 1154, Susya was presumably still in the hands of the Hospitalers, as that year ], with the consent of his mother, ], confirmed the gift from Baffumeth.<ref>Röhricht, 1893, RRH, p. –75, No 293</ref>

In the 12th–13th centuries, ] troops were garrisoned at nearby Chermala (Khirbet ]) and, in their wake, a few families{{clarify |reason= Frankish settlers? If Arabs: Muslim or Christian?|date= October 2021}} moved into the ruins to exploit the rich agricultural land.<ref name=OConnor/>

According to local tradition,<ref>Amit, David. "Architectural plans of Synagogues in the Southern Judean Hills and the 'Halakah{{'"}}. p. 132</ref> the niche on the northern wall{{dubious|the niche, or mihrab, is always indicating the qibla, the direction of prayer, and in C8 that had been Mecca for 2 centuries, so: SOUTH, not north. Or is there some other confusion here?|date=October 2020}} of the synagogue-turned-mosque{{dubious |the synagogue proper was abandoned and maybe looted of stones, the mosque was in the forecourt, or am I missing smth? |date= October 2021}} that was used as a mihrab, dates to ]'s time.<ref>Daniel Jacobs, Shirley Eber, Francesca Silvani, ''Israel and the Palestinian Territories''. 2nd ed. Rough Guides, 1998 p. 414</ref>

===Mamluk period: abandonment===
Some researchers believe continuity of habitation lasted until the 13th century, while others date it to the 15th century.<ref name=Cathedra/>

===19th century explorers===
In his book ''The Land of Israel: A Journal of travel in Palestine'', ] wrote "We rode rapidly on through Susieh, a town of ruins, on a grassy slope, quite as large as the others, and with an old basilica, but less troglodyte than Attir. Many fragments of columns strewed the ground, and in most respects it was a repetition of Rafat."<ref name=Tristram>Tristram, 1865, p.</ref>

The site of ''Khirbet Susiyeh'' was first described by ] in 1869, who first recognized its importance.<ref name=OConnor>Jerome Murphy-O'Connor, ''The Holy Land: an Oxford archaeological guide from earliest times to 1700'', 5th ed. Oxford University Press US, 2008 p. 351</ref><ref name=Guerin/><ref name=Negev482/> Victor Guérin noted in 1863: "I see before me extend considerable ruins called Khirbet Sousieh. They are those of a city important bearing whose homes were generally well built, like attested by the vestiges that still remain, and possessed several buildings built in stone."<ref name=Guerin>Guérin, 1869, pp. </ref>

In 1883, the ]'s ''Survey of Western Palestine'' says "This ruin has also been at one time a place of importance...."<ref name=SWP414>Conder and Kitchener, 1883, SWP III, pp. –415</ref> In the ], based on an observation in 1874 on the area of the southeastern slope of a hill west of Susya, ] and ] noted that "This ruin has also been at one time a place of importance...." They thought the ruins were that of a ] ].<ref name=SWP414/> German accounts later stated that it was a remnant of an ancient church.<ref name=ariel>{{cite encyclopedia|author=Vilnai, Ze'ev|authorlink=Zev Vilnay|title=Susiya—Judea|encyclopedia=Ariel Encyclopedia|volume=6|pages=5352–5353|publisher=Am Oved|location=], Israel|year=1978|language=he}}</ref>

Maps of the 19th century that made the distinction sometimes depicted Susieh as a ruin and sometimes as a village.<ref name=Maps/> For example, the ] map of 1878 and the ] map of 1881 showed it as a ruin, while the earlier Zimmermann map of 1850, the ]<ref>C.W.M. van de Velde, Narrative of a journey through Syria and Palestine in 1851 and 1852, published 1854, pp. </ref> maps of 1858 and 1865, and the Osborn map of 1859 showed it as a village.<ref name="Maps">PEF map . Osborn {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304105156/http://www.jnul.huji.ac.il/dl/maps/pal/html/eng/pal002368858.htm|date=4 March 2016}} to accompany his book "Palestine, Past and Present" . Carl Zimmermann, "Atlas von Palaestina und der Sinai-Halbinsel" (Berlin, 1850), {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304091203/http://www.jnul.huji.ac.il/dl/maps/pal/html/eng/pal002369195.htm|date=4 March 2016}}. C.W.M. van de Velde, Map of the Holy Land, 1958, , also the .</ref>

===British Mandate period village===
The Bartholomew's quarter-inch map of Palestine by The ]<ref>, ca.1920</ref> and the F.J. Salmon map of 1936<ref>, Sheet 10, 1936</ref> show Susya as ruins.

In 1937, the building to the north was identified by ] and A. Reifenberg as the site of a synagogue.<ref name=Negev482/>

==Israeli-Palestinian conflict==
===Khirbet Susya (Palestinian village)===
{{main|Khirbet Susya}}

====Origins and background====
Khirbet Susya, called ''Susya al-Qadima'' ('Old Susya')<ref name=nybooks>Shulman, , '']'', 28 June 2012.</ref> was a village attached to the archaeological site at Khirbet Susiya.<ref name=RHR>, ] 7 November 2013.</ref><ref>Yaacov Hasdai, ''Truth in the Shadow of War'', Zmora, Bitan, Modan, 1979 p. 70: "Shmarya Gutman, the archaeologist, told them of the magnificent remains of the ancient synagogue ''at'' the village of Susiya in the Hebron Hills."</ref>

In the early 19th century, many residents of the two big villages in the area of South Mount Hebron, ] and ], started to immigrate to ruins and caves in the area and became 'satellite villages' (daughters) to the mother town. Reasons for the expansion were lack of land for agriculture and construction in the mother towns, which resulted in high prices of land, rivalry between the mother-towns ] wishing to control more land and resources and being a security buffer which made it more difficult for robber gangs raid the mother villages. Caves are used by local as residences, storage space and sheepfold.<ref name=Havakook25/> The affiliation between the satellite villages and mother town remained. While some of the satellites became permanent villages with communities of hundreds, others remained temporary settlements which served the shepherds and ] for several months every year.<ref name= grossman/><ref name=Havakook25>Havakook pp. 25–31</ref> In 1981–82 it was estimated 100–120 families dwelt in caves permanently in the Southern Mount Hebron region while 750–850 families lived there temporarily.<ref>Havakook p. 65</ref>

], who lived with the locals in the region for several years, writes that the community at Khirbet Susya was seasonal and didn't live in there year-round. Families of shepherds arrived after the first rain (October–November), stayed during the grazing season and left in April end or beginning of May.<ref name=Havakook>{{cite book|last1=Havakook|first1=Yaakov|title=Live in the caves of Mount Hebron|date=1985|page=56|quote=The fate and rule (לחם חוקם) for shepherds' they have to migrate with their herds following the grass and water... The large amount of natural caves met the requirements of the shepherds: they provided protection from the cold, rain, wind and other natural elements... Whoever travel in South Mount Hebron even today, when this book is written, in early 1984, in Khirbats like... Khirbet Susya (landmark 159090)}} and the alike will discover, that every year, during grazing time, families of shepherds visit the caves in these ruins, with every shepherd family returning to and living in the same cave in which that family lived in the prior season. At the end of the rainy season, the shepherds abandon the caves which they used during the grazing months, and return to their village, or may visit other grazing areas.</ref> They were known for a special kind of cheese produced in their caves,<ref>Ephraim Stern, Ayelet Leṿinzon-Gilboʻa, Joseph Aviram, , Vol. 4, Israel Exploration Society & Carta, 1993 p. 1415: "a special kind of cheese that, until recently, was processed in the caves of Khirbet Susiya."</ref>

According to Rabbis for Human Rights, in 1948, the preexisting population was augmented by an influx of ] expelled during the ] from the area of ], who purchased land in the area.<ref name=RHRexpulsion>, ] 25 June 2012</ref> In 1982 an Israel settlement planner, Plia Albeck, examined the area of Susiya, the synagogue and the Palestinian village built on and around it, and finding it legally difficult to advance Jewish settlement, wrote:
<blockquote>"The synagogue is located in an area that is known as the lands of Khirbet Susya, and around an Arab village between the ancient ruins. There is a formal registration on the land of Khirbet Susya with the Land Registry, according to which this land, amounting to approximately 3000 dunam , is privately held by many Arab owners. Therefore the area proximal to the synagogue is in all regards privately owned."<ref>, ] 25 May 2015.</ref></blockquote>
]

In June 1986, Israel ] the Palestinian village's residential ground for an archaeological site, evicting about 25 families.<ref name=grossman>{{cite book|last1=Grossman|first1=David|title=Expansion and Desertion: The Arab Village and Its Offshoots in Ottoman Palestine|date=1994|publisher=Yad Izhak Ben-Zvi|page=226|quote=In 1986 one could still find about 25 families who lived in the caves of Khirbet Susya, but they were evicted when a tourism site was develop in that place. At the time of Susya eviction, many inhabited caves were in nearby territories. About 16 families lived in caves at Khirbet al-Fauqa (ע'וינה פוקא), and a smaller number in other khirbahs, such as Shuyukha and ], which was a large cave settlement in the early 19th century.}}</ref> The expelled Palestinians settled in caves and tin shacks nearby, on their agricultural lands<ref name=unfactsheet>{{cite web|title=Susiya: a Community at Imminent Risk of Forced Displacement|url=https://www.ochaopt.org/documents/ocha_opt_susiya_factsheet_may_2015_english.pdf|publisher=United Nations|date=June 2015|access-date=18 August 2015|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151011060714/http://www.ochaopt.org/documents/ocha_opt_susiya_factsheet_may_2015_english.pdf|archive-date=11 October 2015|df=dmy-all}}</ref> at a site now called Rujum al-Hamri,<ref>Yuval Baruch, ''Horbat Susya and Rujum el-Hajiri as a Case Study for the Development of the Village and the Rural Settlement in the Hebron Hills from the Early Roman Period to the Early Muslim Period'', (Phd Dissertation) Hebrew University 2009, cited in Stuart S. Miller, , Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2015 p. 20 n. 9</ref> to restart their lives.<ref name=nybooks/><ref name=RHR/><ref name=jfjfp2012>], , ], 14 June 2012.</ref>

The Israeli government official stance on the matter says "There was no historic Palestinian village at the archaeological site there; that the village consists of only a few seasonal residences for a few families; and the land is necessary for the continuation of archaeological work."<ref name=CLevinson/><ref>{{cite web|title=Behind the Headlines: Susiya|url=http://mfa.gov.il/MFA/ForeignPolicy/Issues/Pages/Behind-the-Headlines-Susiya.aspx|publisher=]}}</ref> According to ], an NGO which petitioned the Supreme Court to execute the demolition orders at Khirbet susya,<ref>{{cite news|title=The Law, Ass or Donkey?|url=http://www.haaretz.com/news/features/the-law-ass-or-donkey.premium-1.437023|newspaper=] |date=June 18, 2012}}</ref> the place was used as grazing area and olive agricalture seasonally before 1986. In a report, Regavim writes that travelers from the late 19th century<ref name=Tristram/> report finding ruins (while nearby ] was reported as inhabited),<ref name=Regavim/> the British ] from 1945<ref name=remember>{{cite web|title=Based on statistics collected by the Government of Palestine for the UN 1945|url=http://www.palestineremembered.com/download/VillageStatistics/VillageStatistics.xls|website=Palestine Remembered}}</ref><ref></ref> does not mention Susya<ref name=Regavim/> and a survey from 1967, done after ], refers to Khirbat Susya as ruins in contrast to nearby villages such as ], ] and more.<ref name=Regavim>{{cite web|title=Susya: The Palestinian lie - the village that didn't exist.|url=http://regavim.org.il/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/Susya-Research-The-real-story1.pdf|publisher=Regavim|access-date=14 August 2015}}</ref>

====2010s Bedouin settlement====
According to '']'', the modern Bedouin residential settlement that exists as of 2016 is the result of European aid; Spain donated the school, Germany provided solar panels, the water pumps were funded by Ireland, while Norway, Italy, Belgium, and other countries funded the children's playground. However, it was noted that the makeshift shelters have "more the feeling of a protest camp than a functioning Palestinian village. There are no streets, shops or mosques, and no permanent homes. There do not seem to be many people, either — giving some support to Regavim's claim that most of the residents live in the nearby Palestinian town of Yatta."<ref name=BoothRamshackle>{{cite news|last1=Booth|first1=William|title=Israel wants to bulldoze this ramshackle village, but Europe is providing life support|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/a-miserable-little-village-at-the-center-of-the-israeli-palestinian-conflict/2016/08/28/50ce6266-661f-11e6-b4d8-33e931b5a26d_story.html |newspaper=] |date=28 August 2016 |access-date=29 August 2016}}</ref>

These days lived{{clarify|reason=missing words.|date=October 2021}} by harvesting olives, herding sheep, growing crops, and beekeeping.<ref name=qantara>Ylenia Gostoli, , Qantara.de 27 April 2015.</ref>

====Land ownership and master plan====
A master plan was not approved and building permit were not given to Khirbet Susya because there was no sufficient proof of ownership as the documents lack geographic information and based on them, it was "not possible to make unambiguous claims of ownership over the land in question". The Jabor family supports a claim to land near Susya with Ottoman documents dated back to 1881 and the Nawaja family, who is originally from the ] area and moved to Susya in 1952,<ref>{{cite news|title=Susya residents: If the village get demolished, we'll turn to Haag|url=http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/iw/originals/2015/07/israel-palestine-area-c-susiya-demolition-us-settlements.html#|access-date=24 August 2015}}</ref> has documents as well. Their documents are problematic since the boundaries mentioned were described in terms of geography features which are hard to identify in the field.<ref name=mstrplan/>

In July 2015 it was published that, according to an internal document of findings by the Israeli Civil Administration officer Moshe Meiri, the claim to ownership of the land appears to be grounded on a valid Ottoman period title, dating back to 1881, in the possession of the Jabor family, This document has been known to Israeli officials since 1982. Though the precise extent of their land was not specified in the document, in an internal review of the case in 2015, Meiri established from the geographical features mentioned that the land covered territory now belonging to the Jabor and Nawaja families, and the villages on the basis of their Ottoman period documents claim an area that covers some 3,000 dunams (741 acres).<ref name=mstrplan>Barak Ravid, Chaim Levinson, , '']'' 26 July 2015.</ref><ref name=ToI26715>, ] 26 July 2015.</ref> In early 1986, before the first Israeli expulsion, the village was visited by U.S. consular officials, who recorded the occasion in photographs.<ref>Mairav Zonszein, . ] 10 May 2015.</ref>

====Additional expulsions====
According to ], the second expulsion took place in 1990, when Rujum al-Hamri's inhabitants were loaded onto trucks by the IDF and dumped at the Zif Junction, 15 kilometers northwards<ref name=RHR/> a roadside at the edge of a desert. Most returned and rebuilt on a rocky escarpment within their traditional agricultural and grazing territory. Their wells taken, they were forced to buy water from nearby ].<ref name=nybooks/> Palestinian residents (2012) pay 25 ] per cubic meter water brought in by tanks, which is 5 times the cost to the nearby Israeli settlement. Net consumption, at 28 litres per diem, is less than half what Palestinians consume (70 lpd) and less than the recommended WHO level.<ref name=unfactsheet/> Israel sheep-herding settlers expanded their unfenced land use at ], the "Dahlia Farm"<ref name=RHR/> a term used by Susiya Palestinians to refer to the farm run by the widow of Yair Har-Sinai.<ref>, ] 8 June 2008</ref> According to ], by 2010 settlers were cultivating roughly 40 hectares, about 15% of the land area to which they deny access to the traditional Palestinian users of that area.<ref name=KSBt/> Since 2000 Jewish settlers in Susya have denied Palestinians access to 10 cisterns in the area, or according to more recent accounts, 23,<ref name=KSBt/> and try to block their access to others.<ref>Amanda Cahill Ripley, ''The Human Right to Water and Its Application in the Occupied Palestinian Territories'', Taylor & Francis, 2011 p. 155.</ref> Soil at Susya, with a market value of NIS 2,000 per truckload, is also taken from lands belonging to the village of Yatta.<ref>Chaim Levinson, , '']'', 10 October 2012</ref>

The third expulsion occurred in June 2001, when settler civilians and soldiers drove the Palestinians of Susya out, without warning, with, reportedly violent arrests and beatings.<ref name=unfactsheet/><ref name=RHR/> On 3 July 2001, the Israeli army demolished dozens of homes in Susya and contiguous Palestinian villages, and bulldozed their cisterns, many ancient, built for gathering rainwater, and then filling them with gravel and cement to hinder their reuse.<ref name=Amnesty2009/> Donated solar panels were also destroyed, livestock killed, and agricultural land razed.{{citation needed|date=August 2015}}. On Sept 26 of the same year, by an order of the Israeli Supreme Court, these structures were ordered to be destroyed and the land returned to the Palestinians. Settlers and the IDF prevented the villagers from reclaiming their land, some 750 acres. The villagers made an appeal to the same court to be allowed to reclaim their lands and live without harassment. Some 93 events of settler violence were listed. The settlers made a counter-appeal, and one family that had managed to return to its land suffered a third eviction.<ref name=jfjfp2012/>

In 2002 an ] was established without the necessary building permit. OCHA reports that as of 2012 the Israeli Civil Administration has imposed no demolitions on this outpost, which is connected to Israel's water and electricity networks, and cites the example as putative evidence that Israeli policy is discriminating between the two communities.<ref name=unfactsheet/>

In 2006, structures without a permit were demolished illegally on the orders of a low-ranking officer, and the demolition was strongly criticized 3 years later by the High Court of Israel.{{citation needed|date=August 2015}} At around 11 pm on the 22 July 2007 ] caught sight of settlers laying irrigation pipes on another slice of Palestinian land. He called the Israeli police at Kiryat Arba to put an end to the usurpation, and, a few minutes later, dozens of settlers came, threw rocks at his car and threatened to kill him. The move to appropriate the land was blocked.<ref>], , ], 2018 {{isbn|978-0-226-56665-8}} pp.13-14.</ref> In September 2008 the Israeli army informed the Palestinians at Susya that a further 150 dunums (15 hectares), where 13 remaining rainwater cisterns are located, would be a "closed military area" to which they were denied access. Amnesty International described the resultant contrast between the Palestinian and Jewish Susyas as follows:
<blockquote>"in the nearby Israeli settlement of Sussia, whose very existence is unlawful under international law, the Israeli settlers have ample water supplies. They have a swimming pool and their lush irrigated vineyards, herb farms and lawns – verdant even at the height of the dry season – stand in stark contrast to the parched and arid Palestinian villages on their doorstep."<ref name=Amnesty2009/></blockquote>

According to Shulman, for some decades they were subject, to many violent attacks, and settler recourse to both civil and military courts, to drive them out.<ref name=nybooks/> The BBC broadcast film of settler youths beating an old woman and her family with cudgels to drive them away from their land, in 2008.<ref>Tim Franks, , ] 12 June 2008</ref> Local villages, like Palestinian Susya, have been losing land, and being cut off from each other, as the nearby settlements of ], ], Susya and ] began to be built and developed, and illegal outposts established.<ref>Julie M. Norman, ''The second Palestinian Intifada: civil resistance'', Taylor & Francis, 2010 p. 43.</ref> Shulman described the reality he observed in 2008:
<blockquote>Susya: where thirteen impoverished families are clinging tenaciously, but probably hopelessly, to the dry hilltop and the few fields that are all that remain of their vast ancestral lands.<ref name=Shulman2008>], "On Being Unfree:Fences, Roadblocks and the Iron Cage of Palestine", ] Vol. 20, No. 2, 2008, pp. 13–32</ref></blockquote>

According to ], the Palestinians that remain in the area live in tents<ref>Nasser Nawaj'ah, , ], 8 January 2015.</ref> on a small rocky hill between the settlement and the archaeological park which is located within walking distance.<ref>David Dean Shulman, ''Dark hope: working for peace in Israel and Palestine'', University of Chicago Press, 2007 pp. f.</ref><ref>"Twenty years ago, the cave dwellers of Susya were evacuated from their original village on the pretext of archaeological digs in the area. Some of the evacuees went to live on their lands close to the Israeli settlement which was founded a short time before. Five years ago the Israeli army destroyed the caves of these families, and since then they continued to live there in impermanent and improvised housing." (Krinis and Dunayevsky 2006), Deborah Cowen, Emily Gilbert, ''War, Citizenship, Territory'', Routledge, London 2007 p. 322.</ref> According to ], ten caves inhabited by Susya Palestinian families were blown up by the ] in 1996, and some 113 tents were destroyed in 1998. Amnesty International also reports that official documents asking them to leave the area address them generically as 'intruders' (''polesh''/intruder).<ref></ref> Most of the rain-catching water cisterns used by the local Palestinian farmers of Susya were demolished by the Israeli army in 1999 and 2001. A local Susya resident told ],<blockquote>Water is life; without water we can't live; not us, not the animals, or the plants. Before we had some water, but after the army destroyed everything we have to bring water from far away; it's very difficult and expensive. They make our life very difficult, to make us leave.<ref name=Amnesty2009>, ], Vol. 39, Issue 1, February/March 2009 p. 1</ref></blockquote>

While the Israeli settlement has mains power and piped water from Israel, the Palestinians depend on solar panels and wind turbine energy made possible by a Palestinian/Israeli ] – Comet - and on wells.<ref>, Comet Middle East (Comet-ME) {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091015060544/http://www.comet-me.org/act_completion.html |date=15 October 2009 }}</ref> This project has been shortlisted for the BBC World Challenge which highlighted the involvement of two Israeli physicists, Elad Orian and Noam Dotan.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091002234453/http://www.theworldchallenge.co.uk/2009-finalists-project11.php |date=2 October 2009 }}</ref> According to ], the inhabitants of Susya, are faced with a ]. If they comply with the law they cannot build cisterns and collect even the rainwater. But if they fail to work their lands, they lose it anyway.<ref>], , '']'', 14 September 2011.</ref> One small enclave that remains for a Bedouin pastoralist's family suffers from further encroachment, with one settler, according to Shulman, managing to wrest 95% of the family's land, and still intent on entering the remainder.<ref>David D. Shulman, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181103113535/https://jewishquarterly.org/2013/06/truth-lies-south-hebron/ |date=3 November 2018 }}, '']'' June 2013. "May 7th 2011. The settler in his Shabbat white, a huge knitted skullcap on his head, takes a pebble and holds it out on his fingertips to a Palestinian woman from Susya as he clucks his tongue at her, beckoning her as one would a dog. He has already taken 95% of the family's land, and now he bullies his way into the tiny patch that is left in order to harass and humiliate further. As if throwing a dog a bone, he tosses the pebble at her and laughs...."</ref>

In a ruling delivered in December 2013, the Israel High Court of Justice accepted that Yatta Palestinians had shown their legal attachment to a stretch of land between Susya and the illegal settlement of ], but requested them to withdraw their petition against the settlers who are alleged to have illegally seized these lands. The subject of a petition concerns 300 dunams of agricultural land, and a further 900 dunams of pasture of which, the Palestinians argue, they were forced by violent attacks from using for agriculture and herding. The court held that the proper option open to the Palestinians was recourse to a civil legal action.<ref>], , '']'', 23 December 2013.</ref>
Of the 120 complaints registered with Israeli police in Hebron by Palestinians of Susya, regarding alleged attacks, threats, incursions, and property damage wrought by settlers down to 2013, upwards of 95% have been dismissed, without charges being laid.<ref name=KSBt/>

====Legal fight & demolition orders====
]

After 1985, when the population was expelled, attempts by the Palestinian of Susya to rebuild their village have been razed by Israel four times, in 1991, 1997 and twice in 2001.<ref>Laurent Zecchini, "La colonisation israélienne en marche à Susiya, village palestinien de Cisjordanie", '']'' 23 January 2012.</ref> Since it is classified within Area C of the West Bank, it lies under Israeli military occupation and control. Though they own much of the land, Israel denies building permits to Susya's residents and therefore they build without permission from Israeli authorities.<ref>Anne Barker, , ], Monday, 2 July 2012</ref> The master plan for Susya was denied by the Israeli Civil Administration as opposed to the Israeli settlement of Susya, and Palestinians are required to obtain permits from the Israeli Civil Administration.<ref>, ] 7 May 2015: "The village residents requested the order as part of their petition to the court against the Civil Administration's decision to reject the master plan they had drawn up for the village. In the petition, Att. Qamar Mashraki from Israeli NGO Rabbis for Human Rights argued on behalf of the residents that their plan had been rejected for improper considerations, and that this constituted a double standard in planning and blatant discrimination against the Palestinian population. The state's treatment of Khirbet Susiya and its residents illustrates its systemic use of planning laws to prevent Palestinians in Area C, which is under full Israeli control, from construction and development that meet their needs: most Palestinians in the area live in villages where the Israeli authorities have refused to draw up master plans and connect them to water and power supplies, under various pretexts. With no other choice, the residents eventually build homes without permits and subsequently live under constant threat of demolition and expulsion. This policy is intended to serve the goal, explicitly declared by Israeli officials in the past, of taking over land in the southern Hebron hills in order to formally annex it to Israel in a permanent-status agreement with the Palestinians, and annex it de facto until such a time. In implementing this policy, Israel is acting in contradiction to its obligation to care for the needs of West Bank residents as the occupying power there.... The Israeli authorities' policy towards the residents of Khirbet Susiya starkly contrasts their generous planning policy towards Israeli settlers in the area. The settlers of Susiya and its outposts enjoy full provision of services and infrastructure and are in no danger of their homes being demolished – despite the fact that the outposts are illegal under Israel law and in the settlement itself, according to figures published by settler organization Regavim, 23 homes were built on privately-owned Palestinian land."</ref><ref>, ] 4 June 2015.</ref><ref>{{cite news|last1=Levinson|first1=Chaim|title=A tale of two West Bank building permit requests|url=http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.560136 |work=] |date=26 November 2013 |access-date=7 July 2015}}: "The small Palestinian village of Susya, located next to the southern Hebron Hills settlement of the same name, had no permits for its buildings either. And that's still the case, since last month the Civil Administration rejected Susya residents' request for approval of a master plan that would have made their homes legal..."</ref>

In 2008 the Supreme Court turned down the villagers' request for a staying order on planned demolition. According to Shulman, the State attorney claimed that the Palestinians of Susya were a security threat to the settlers, and had to be moved. When asked by the judges where they would move to, the State replied:'We don't know. They are unfortunates, ''miskenim''.'.<ref name=Shulman2008/>

In 2011, Israel executed 4 waves of demolition, affecting 41 structures, including 31 residential tents or shacks and two water cisterns. As a result, 37 people, including 20 children, were displaced and a further 70 affected.<ref name=unfactsheet/> On 24 November 2011 bulldozers razed two tents where the Mughnem family dwells on their own land in Susya.<ref>], , '']'', 28 November 2011</ref>

The Jewish settlers of Susya and the Israeli pro-settler association ] Regavim petitioned the High Court to demolish Palestinian Susya, defining the villagers as 'trespassers' living in 'illegal outposts', terms usually applied to illegal Jewish outposts on the West Bank.<ref name=DtWelle>Kate Laycock at ], 5 July 2012.</ref>

On 14 June an Israeli court issued 6 demolition orders covering 50 buildings including tent dwellings, ramshackle huts, sheep pens, latrines, water cisterns, a wind-and-sun powered turbine, and the German-funded solar panels in most of the Palestinian village of Susya.<ref name=DtWelle/>
Over 500 people from Tel Aviv, Beer Sheva, and Jerusalem came to mount a peaceful protest on 22 June.<ref name=nybooks/>

On 26 June 2013, the ], raided Palestinian Susya and handed out 40 demolition orders for many structures, tents, hothouses, a water well and a solar panel, established on humanitarian grounds by the ]. Nearby Israeli settlers built two additional and unauthorized houses in the ] outpost, without interference.<ref>Chaim Levinson, , '']'', 27 June 2013.</ref>

A local Palestinian declared to the Hebrew press:

<blockquote>They’re calling our village an illegal outpost. These lands are ours from before there was a State of Israel. My father is older than your state—and I am an illegal alien on my own land. I ask where is justice? Your courts distinguish between the settler and the Palestinian…We’re surrounded by illegal outposts that have everything—infrastructures of water and electricity— despite the fact that these settlements are illegal even under Israeli law. And now you want to expel this old man from his home once again? To expel all of us who own these lands, who have lived on them for generations in this space that is ours, which is all we know?<ref name=nybooks/></blockquote>

In an exchange in the ] with ] ], who noted that Plia Albeck, a pro-settler former government official had admitted that in 1982 that Susya was surrounded by an Arab village, and that the land is registered at the Israeli Lands Authority as under private Arab title, a Rabbi from the ], Deputy Defense Minister and new head of Israel's Civil Administration, ], publicly denied that Susya exists, asserting that attempts to protect the village were a ploy by leftists to take over Area C.{{citation needed|date=August 2015}}

"There has never been an Arab village called Susya," Ben Dahan said, calling the village "a ploy by leftist organizations to take over Area C ".

On 24 August, a further demolition took place. On 29 August 2012 the ] destroyed a sheepfold and two tents, one a dwelling and the other for storage, donated to the villagers of Palestinian Susya by the United Nations' ].<ref>], , '']'', 30 August 2012.</ref>

In May 2015, the Israel High Court approved the demolition of Palestinian Susya. The implementation of the plan was expected to leave 450 villagers homeless.<ref>, ] 4 May 2015.</ref> A delegation of diplomats from 28 European countries visited Susya in June and urged Israel not to evict its 300 Palestinian residents, a move that would endanger in their view the two-state solution.

====International involvement====
Israeli plans to demolish the Palestinian village have become an international ].<ref>Peter Beaumont, , ] 21 July 2015.</ref> According to ], before fifteen senior EU diplomats visiting the area on 8 August 2012, Susya villager Nasser Nawaja'a complained that "(t)here are in this village octogenarians who are older than the State of Israel . . . How can they be told that their residence here is illegal?" The EU declared at the time it does not expect that the demolition order will be executed.<ref>], , '']'', 9 August 2012.</ref> An Israeli officer objected to this narrative, saying, "It would be absolutely false to present these people as having lived there since the time of Noah's Ark and suddenly the big bad Israelis come and destroy the place. We are a bit sad that some of the Europeans and the Americans are falling into that trap."<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/israel/11753198/Stop-demolition-of-Palestinian-village-European-foreign-ministers-tell-Israel.html|title=EU warns Israel over West Bank bulldozing|first1=Robert|last1=Tait|newspaper=] (UK)|date=21 July 2015|page=15}}</ref>

In July the US State Department urged Israel to refrain from any demolitions and asked it to seek a peaceful resolution with villagers,<ref>Itamar Sharon/JTA, , ] 17 July 2015.</ref> and the ] issued a strongly worded admonition urging Israel to abandon plans for the "forced transfer of population and demolition of Palestinian housing and infrastructure" in Khirbet Susiya.

The EU funded the construction of buildings in Area C which is under interim Israeli jurisdiction, built without permits and which cost tens of millions of Euros. EU documents show the intention is to "pave the way for development and more authority of the PA over Area C". A spokesman said it was justified on humanitarian grounds while Ari Briggs, International Director of Regavim, said the project is a 'Trojan horse' with political aims. As of 2016 the existing infrastructure is the result of European aid: Spain donated the school, Germany provided solar panels; the water pumps were funded by Ireland, while Norway, Italy Belgium and other countries funded the children's playground, however, the makeshift shelters have "more the feeling of a protest camp than a functioning Palestinian village.'The author claims that the settler NGO Regavim's assertion that the people of Susya live in Yatta on the basis of the fact that Susya has 'no streets, shops or mosques, and no permanent homes. There do not seem to be many people, either."<ref name=BoothRamshackle/>

===Susya (Israeli settlement)===
In 1982 the Israeli government together with the ] furnished a plan to establish a settlement on the site, part of 8 new settlements envisioned for the area, with funding of 20 million shekels providing for between 50 and 60 Jewish families.<ref>, A/38/409 14 October 1983 ], citing the ] 6 September 1982.</ref>
]

Work on the Israeli settlement of ] began from May through to September in the following year.<ref name=domino>], {{Webarchive |url= https://web.archive.org/web/20150709093207/http://domino.un.org/UNISPAL.NSF/eed216406b50bf6485256ce10072f637/b658e2f2d24bc43885256c780054b750 |date=9 July 2015 }}, United Nations, New York 1984.</ref> on 1,800 ]s of land.<ref name=domino/><ref name=arij>{{cite web |title= Expanding the settlement of Susya |date=18 September 1999 |publisher=] |url= https://www.poica.org/editor/case_studies/view.php?recordID=616 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20120406175628/http://www.poica.org/editor/case_studies/view.php?recordID=616 |archive-date=6 April 2012 |url-status=dead}}</ref> A major expansion began on 18 September 1999, when its boundaries expanded northwards and eastwards, with the Palestinian Shreiteh family allegedly losing roughly 150 more dunams.<ref name=arij/>{{Primary source inline|date=August 2015}}

In 2008, the largest and most advanced goat pen and dairy was inaugurated at Susya with an investment of 3.5 million ILS. It can contain 1500 goats and milk 48 of them at a time.<ref>{{cite news|title=Azit, the settler goat|url=http://www.nrg.co.il/online/1/ART1/693/350.html|newspaper=] |date=6 February 2008}}</ref> By Regavim's own calculations, by 2015, 23 Jewish/Israeli homes have been built on private Palestinian property in Susya.<ref>Chaim Levinson, , '']'', 3 May 2015.</ref>

Former Christian ] who have converted to Judaism have settled in Susya, which has reportedly developed into one of the strongholds for South African converts who perform ].<ref>Judy Maltz, ] 30 September 2021.</ref>

===Violence===
On 7 June 1991, Palestinians and an Israeli settler Baruch Yellin had a dispute over grazing rights. A ] spokesman said Yellin shot one Palestinian dead after he had been attacked with sticks by a Palestinian. According to the Palestinian eyewitnesses, Jabar Hawad al-Nawajah was told not to graze near the settlement, and then Yellin rode off, returned with a M-16 rifle and shot a dozen of his sheep. A relative of the shepherd, Mahmoud al-Nawajah, came over to the scene and was then shot in the stomach and died.<ref>Peter Ford , ] 13 June 1991</ref> The full circumstances were never clarified.<ref>Ami Pedahzur, ''Jewish Terrorism in Israel'', Columbia University Press, 2011 p. 183.</ref>

On 23 March 1993, Musa Suliman Abu Sabha<ref name=ap930323>], {{Dead link|date=February 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}, ], 23 March 1993 p. 7, refers that Army radio had identified him to be a Jawad Jamil Khalil Husiya, 19, of ].</ref> a Palestinian was arrested outside Susya by two guards, Moshe Deutsch and Yair Har-Sinai, on suspicion that he was planning an attack on Jews.<ref name=ap930323/> Taken for questioning, he stabbed in the shoulder or back one of the guards, Moshe Deutsch, while the two were in a car, and, wrestled to the ground, was bound hand and foot. Another settler from nearby Susya, Yoram Shkolnik<ref>Ami Pedahzur, ''Jewish Terrorism in Israel'', .</ref> shot him eight times, killing him.<ref name=ap930323/> According to the IDF a grenade was found on the body while other reports claimed the grenade was removed from him prior to the shooting.<ref>Doug Struck, , '']'', 24 March 1993.</ref> In 2001, Yair Har-Sinai was killed in a brawl<ref>David Shulman, ''Dark Hope'', University of Chicago Press, 2007 p. , writes: "Yair Har-Sinai ... terrorized the Palestinians of South Hebron until he was killed in a brawl some years ago."</ref> with local Palestinians. A Palestinian, Jihad Najar, was convicted of murder and received a sentence of life imprisonment.<ref>Efrat Weiss, , ], 12 October 2007.</ref> The IDF then evicted the 300 Palestinians in the area, demolishing some of their makeshift homes. They have sought redress in an Israeli court, which ruled that illegal demolitions had taken place, the state had failed to provide procedures to enable the plaintiffs to obtain building permits, and was creating a situation in which elementary human rights to life were being denied.<ref>"The state admitted the demolition was executed illegally. Justice Procaccia said that 'the state did not establish a legal procedure which would allow for a building permit, hence the state is not carrying out its duties and is creating a situation under which a human's basic existence becomes impossible.' Justice Hayut pointed to the absurdity of the situation, saying 'the state admits an unauthorized action was carried out, which resulted in the demolition of structures that constituted the bare minimum in living conditions.{{'"}} Yuval Yoaz, , '']'', 08/09/2004.</ref>

Jewish residents of Susya have harassed local Palestinians, destroyed their property,<ref>Shulman, 2007, .</ref> and hindered them from gathering their crops from olive groves.<ref>], , '']'', 5 September 2010.</ref> In 2009 ], was indicted for the 2007 murder of a Palestinian shepherd from Susya.<ref>, '']''. 12 November 2009</ref><ref>, ]. 12 November 2009</ref>

===Archaeological park===
In 1986, the locals were evicted from their homes which became an archaeological park.<ref name=unfactsheet/>

In 2011, an illegal Israeli ] with 3 wooden huts was set up on the archaeological site.<ref name=RHR/><ref name=jfjfp2012/><ref>], , '']'' 4 March 2011.</ref>

In 2012, the park was declared national heritage site.<ref name=Regavim/> Palestinians from Susiya have tried to purchase an admission ticket to the now archaeological Susya a handful of times. They say they have been denied entry each time.<ref>Dani Rosenberg, Yoav Gross, , Gesher Multicultural Film Fund uploaded to Youtube 26 June 2012</ref><ref>Allison Deger, , ] 20 April 2015.</ref>

According to ], a fire broke out and was extinguished by five firefighters before damaging the inside of the archaeological park in July 2020.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Major fire breaks out at Susya archaeological site in Hebron hills|url=https://m.jpost.com/israel-news/major-fire-breaks-out-at-susya-archaeological-site-in-hebron-hills-636938/amp|access-date=2020-08-12|website=The Jerusalem Post {{!}} JPost.com|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=danilfineman|date=2020-07-30|title=Main fireplace breaks out at Susya archaeological website in Hebron hills|url=https://danilfineman.com/major-fire-breaks-out-at-susya-archaeological-site-in-hebron-hills/|access-date=2020-08-12|website=Danilfineman|language=en-US}}</ref>

==See also==
*] - covers entire ]/]
**] - covers the modern ]
*] (born 1952), Israeli Jewish left-wing human rights activist, active among the Bedouin of the South Hebron Hills


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist}} {{Reflist|2}}

==Bibliography==
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*{{cite book|last1=Robinson|first1=E.|authorlink1=Edward Robinson (scholar)|last2=Smith|first2=E.|authorlink2=Eli Smith|year=1841|url=https://archive.org/details/biblicalresearc00smitgoog |title=Biblical Researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea: A Journal of Travels in the year 1838 |location=Boston|publisher=]|volume=2}} (Robinson and Smith, 1841, vol 2, pp. –5,
*{{cite journal |author= Röhricht, R. |author-link=Reinhold Röhricht |title= Studien zur mittelalterlichen Geographie und Topographie Syriens |journal=] |volume= 10 |pages= 195–344 |year= 1887 |url= https://archive.org/details/zeitschriftdesde09deut}}
*{{cite book|last=Röhricht|first=R. |author-link=Reinhold Röhricht|title= (RRH) Regesta regni Hierosolymitani (MXCVII-MCCXCI)|url=https://archive.org/details/regestaregnihie00rhgoog|year=1893|publisher=Libraria Academica Wageriana|location=Berlin|language=Latin}} )
*{{cite book |last= Safrai |first= Zeev |author-link= Ze'ev Safrai |title= The Missing Century: Palestine in the fifth century: growth and decline |publisher= Peeters Publishers |series= Palaestina antiqua, Vol. 9 |year= 1998 |isbn= 9789068319859 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=GQ-1OsGWvw8C}}
*Shalem, Nathan, ''The desert of Juda '', 1967–8, Israel.
*{{cite book|last=Tristram|first=H.B. |author-link=Henry Baker Tristram|year=1865|url=https://archive.org/details/landisraelajour01trisgoog|title= Land of Israel, A Journal of travel in Palestine, undertaken with special reference to its physical character|location=London|publisher=]}}
*{{cite book|last1=Werlin|first1=Steven H.|title=Ancient Synagogues of Southern Palestine, 300–800 C.E.: Living on the Edge|date=2015|publisher=The Brill Reference Library of Judaism|pages=136–181|isbn=9789004298408|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VdR0CgAAQBAJ&pg=PA136}}

{{Refend}}


==External links== ==External links==
*Survey of Western Palestine, Map 25: , ],
* {{he icon}}
*
* {{in lang|he}}
*, Comet Middle East (Comet-ME)
*, Palestine Solidarity Project
*, from ]
*{{cite news |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/a-miserable-little-village-at-the-center-of-the-israeli-palestinian-conflict/2016/08/28/50ce6266-661f-11e6-b4d8-33e931b5a26d_story.html |title=A miserable little village at the center of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict |first=William |last=Booth |date=28 August 2016 |newspaper=] }}


{{Har Hebron Regional Council}} {{Har Hebron Regional Council}}
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{{Ancient synagogues|state=expanded}}
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Latest revision as of 21:43, 25 November 2024

This article is about the ancient site. For the Palestinian village, see Khirbet Susya. For the Israeli settlement, see Susya, Har Hebron.

Village in Hebron
Susya
سوسية Arabic
סוּסְיָא Hebrew
Village
Susya is located in the West BankSusyaSusyaLocation of Susya
Coordinates: 31°23′31″N 35°6′44″E / 31.39194°N 35.11222°E / 31.39194; 35.11222
GovernorateHebron
Time zoneUTC+2 (IST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (IDT)

Susya (Arabic: سوسية, Hebrew: סוּסְיָא; Susiyeh, Susiya, Susia) is a location in the southern Hebron Governorate in the West Bank. It houses an archaeological site with extensive remains from the Second Temple and Byzantine periods, including the ruins of an archeologically notable synagogue, repurposed as a mosque after the Muslim conquest of Palestine in the 7th century. A Palestinian village named Susya was established near the site in the 1830s. The village lands extended over 300 hectares under multiple private Palestinian ownership, and the Palestinians on the site are said to exemplify a southern Hebron cave-dwelling culture present in the area since the early 19th century whose transhumant practices involved seasonal dwellings in the area's caves and ruins of Susya.

In 1982, an Israeli land authority, Plia Albeck, working in the Civil division of the State Attorney's Office, determined that the 300 hectares where Palestinians had been living, and which included an area with remains both of a 5th–8th century CE synagogue and of a mosque that had replaced it, were privately owned by the Palestinian Susya's villagers. In 1983, an Israeli settlement also named Susya was established next to the Palestinian village. In 1986, the Israeli Defense Ministry's Civil Administration declared the entire area owned by Palestinians an archeological site, and the Israeli Defense Forces expelled the Palestinian owners from their dwellings and appointed Israeli settlers from the recently-built settlement to manage the site. Some of the expropriated Palestinian land was incorporated into the jurisdictional area of the Israeli settlement, and an illegal Israeli outpost was established on the area of the previous Palestinian village. The expelled Palestinians moved a few hundred meters southeast of their original village.

The Israeli government, which has issued injunctions against the Israeli Supreme Court's decisions to demolish illegal Israeli outposts, made a petition to the High Court to permit the demolition of the new Palestinian village. The state expressed a willingness to allocate what it called "Israeli government-owned lands" near Yatta for an alternative residence, and to assist rebuilding, considering it ideal for the displaced villagers grazing. Though the existence of the Palestinian village is attested on maps as early as 1917, confirmed by aerial photographs in 1980 that show cultivated farmland and livestock pens maintained by Palestinians on the site, the official view of Israel is that no historic Palestinian village ever existed there, just a few families residing seasonally, and that the area was required for archaeological work. It is notable that Jews also reside in illegal structures on the same archaeological site. The attorney for the Palestinians replied that the army was stopping Palestinians building on their own privately owned land, while permitting settlers to seize their agricultural fields.

The population of the Palestinian community has fluctuated. It reportedly numbered 350 villagers in 2012 and 250 residents the following year, constituted by 50 nuclear families (2015), up from 25 in 1986 and 13 in 2008. By 2018 17 families were reported to still be clinging on, working the few fields that remain to them of their former lands.

The international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law; the Israeli government disputes this.

Name

The site is called in Arabic Khirbet Susiya, also spelled Susiyeh, which means "Ruin (khirbet) of the Liquorice Plant (susiya)" after a wild plant species widely growing there.

The spelling Susya represents the Hebrew name, as decided by the Israeli Naming Committee, in consultation with the settlers.

History

Late Roman and Byzantine period town

Susiya is considered an important site for the study and research of ancient Jewish village life in Palestine during Late Antiquity. It was the site of a monumental synagogue. The settlement on the hill contiguous to the synagogue seems to have once had a thriving economy. A fine store has been excavated from its ruins. It may have undergone a decline in the second half of the 4th century, and again in the 6th century. Some speak of abandonment though the evidence from the synagogue suggests continuity into the medieval period.

According to Israel archaeologist Yonathan Mizrachi, the Jewish population is attested from the 4th to 6th century, after which a population change took place.

Theory: Susya as "new Carmel"

Susya, whether it refers to the site of the ancient synagogue or the ruins of the contiguous ancient and large settlement of some 80 dunams (80,000 m), is not mentioned in any ancient text, and Jewish literature did not register an ancient Jewish town on that site. It is thought by some to correspond to the Biblical Carmel (Joshua 15:5), a proposal made by Avraham Negev. Part of Negev's theory is that, in the wake of the Second Revolt (132–135), when the Romans garrisoned Khirbet el-Karmil, identified as the biblical Carmel, religious Jews uncomfortable with pagan symbols moved 2 km south-west to the present Susya (which they perhaps already farmed) and that, while they still regarded their new community as Carmel, the name was lost when the village's fortunes declined in the early Arab period, in part, it has been suggested, because the new Muslim overlords might not have tolerated its wine-based economy.

View of Susya

Ancient synagogue

Susya synagogue mosaic with Hebrew inscription

Susiya is the site of an archaeologically notable ancient synagogue. The site was examined by Shmarya Guttman in 1969, who uncovered the narthex of a synagogue during a trial dig. He, together with Ze'ev Yeivin and Ehud Netzer, then conducted the Israeli excavations at Khirbet Suseya, (subsequently named by a Hebrew calque as Horvat Susya) over 1971–72, by the Palestinian village of Susiya Al-Qadime.

Burial stone at the entrance of the Susya synagogue
Susya synagogue

The excavated synagogue in Susya dates from the 4th to the 7th century CE and was in continuous use until the 9th century CE. According to Jodi Magness, the synagogue was built in the 4th - 5th centuries and continued in use for "at least" another two centuries. It is one of four of an architecturally unique group in the Southern Judean Hills. Only six synagogues have been identified in Judea as a whole; the lower number may be accounted for by a shift in the Jewish population from Judah to Galilee in the 2nd and 3rd centuries. The other three of this distinctive group are those of Eshtemoa, Horvat Maon, and 'Anim. Three outstanding characteristics of the Susya-Eshtemoa group, are their width, entrances at the short eastern wall, and the absence of columns to support the roof.

According to David Amit, the architectural design, particularly the eastern entrance and axis of prayer, which differ from the majority of Galilean synagogues, exhibits the ramifications of the earliest halakhic law conserved in southern Judea for generations after the destruction of the Temple. This was forgotten in Galilee, but in Judea there was a closer adherence to older traditions reflecting closer proximity to Jerusalem. The eastern orientation may be also related to the idea of dissuading heretics and Christians in the same area, who bowed to the east, in the belief that the Shekinah lay in that direction.

Interior of the synagogue

The synagogue was built as a broadhouse, rather than along basilica lines, measuring 9 by 16 metres (27 by 48 feet) built in well-wrought ashlar construction, with triple doorway façade in an eastward orientation, and the bimah and niche at the centre of the northern wall. There was a secondary bimah in the eastern section. Unlike other synagogues in Judea it had a gallery, made while reinforcing the western wall. East of the synagogue was an open courtyard surrounded on three sides by a roofed portico. The western side opened to the synagogue's narthex, and the floor of the narthex composed of coloured mosaics set in an interlaced pattern. This model was of short duration, yielding in the late Byzantine phase (6th/7th) to the basilica form, already elsewhere dominant in synagogue architecture.

In contrast to most Galilean synagogues with their façade and Torah shrine on the same Jerusalem-oriented wall, the Judean synagogue at Susya, (as well as Esthtemoa and Maon) has the niche on the northern Jerusalem-oriented wall and entrances on the east side wall. The synagogue floor of white tesserae has three mosaic panels, the eastern one a Torah Shrine, two menorahs, one on a screen relief showing two lamps suspended from a bar between the menorah's upper branches, (possibly because the Torah shrine was flanked by lampstands, serving the dual purpose of symbolizing a connection between the synagogue and the Temple while functioning as a spotlight for the bimah and giving light for scriptural readings). This was near the reverse mirroring of the menorah pattern in the mosaics, heightened the central significance of the Torah shrine in the hall a lulav, and an etrog with columns on each side. Next to the columns is a landscape with deer and rams. The central panel composed of geometric and floral patterns. A spoke-wheel design before the central bimah, has led Gutman to believe it is the remnant of a zodiac wheel. Zodiac mosaics are important witness to the time, since they were systematically suppressed by the Church, and, their frequent construction in Palestinian synagogue floors may be an index of 'the "inculturation" of non-Jewish imagery and its resulting Judaization'. The fragmentary state of the wheel mosaic is due to its replacement by a much cruder geometric pavement pattern, indicative of a desire to erase what later came to be thought of as objectionable imagery. The defacing of images may indicate changing Jewish attitudes to visual representations and graven images, perhaps influence by both Christian iconoclasm and Muslim aniconism.

A motif that probably represented Daniel in the lion's den, as in the mosaics discovered at Naaran near Jericho and Ein Samsam in the Golan was also tesselated, surviving only most fragmentarily. The figure, in an orans stance, flanked by lions, was scrubbed from the mosaics in line with later trends, in what Fine calls a "new aesthetic" at Khirbet Susiya, one that refurbished the designs to suppress iconographic forms thought by later generations to be objectionable. We can only reconstruct the allusion to Daniel from the remaining final Hebrew letters remaining, namely -el, אל.

Another unique feature is number of inscriptions. Four were laid in mosaics: two in Hebrew, attesting perhaps to its conservation as a spoken language in this region and two in Aramaic. Nineteen fragmentary inscriptions, some of which were in Greek, were etched into the marble of the building. From these dedicatory inscriptions the impression is given that the synagogue was run by donors rather than by priests (kōhen).

Early Islamic period village

After the Islamic conquest, the archaeological evidence appears to suggest that a new Muslim population immigrated to the South Hebron hills and settled next to the Jewish population. According to Y. Mizrachi, a population change took place in the 7th century. Arabic inscriptions have been discovered belonging to the mosque, he adds, but have never been published. The village thrived until the 12th century.

The abandoned synagogue, or its atrium or courtyard, was converted into a mosque.

A mosque was built in the courtyard of the former synagogue. It featured a mihrab in the southern wall, a second mihrab between two columns in the southern portico, and "crude" stone benches along the walls. Magness, assessing the evidence uncovered by the several archaeologists who dug at the site, which includes an inscription, dates the mosque to the reign of Caliph Al-Walid I, in the early eighth century.

Crusader/Ayyubid period village

By 1107, a Crusader named Gauterius Baffumeth was Lord of Hebron, and he donated the land of Sussia to the Hospitalers. In a document dated September 28, 1110, Baldwin I approved and confirmed this donation. As Baffumeth was Lord of nearby Hebron, Sussia is identified with Khirbet Susya. The dates suggest that the village was inhabited since the Arab period and has carried its name since then. The document calls Susya a casale (village), a testimony to its agriculture nature. By 1154, Susya was presumably still in the hands of the Hospitalers, as that year Baldwin III, with the consent of his mother, Melisende, confirmed the gift from Baffumeth.

In the 12th–13th centuries, Crusader troops were garrisoned at nearby Chermala (Khirbet al-Karmil) and, in their wake, a few families moved into the ruins to exploit the rich agricultural land.

According to local tradition, the niche on the northern wall of the synagogue-turned-mosque that was used as a mihrab, dates to Saladin's time.

Mamluk period: abandonment

Some researchers believe continuity of habitation lasted until the 13th century, while others date it to the 15th century.

19th century explorers

In his book The Land of Israel: A Journal of travel in Palestine, Henry Baker Tristram wrote "We rode rapidly on through Susieh, a town of ruins, on a grassy slope, quite as large as the others, and with an old basilica, but less troglodyte than Attir. Many fragments of columns strewed the ground, and in most respects it was a repetition of Rafat."

The site of Khirbet Susiyeh was first described by V. Guérin in 1869, who first recognized its importance. Victor Guérin noted in 1863: "I see before me extend considerable ruins called Khirbet Sousieh. They are those of a city important bearing whose homes were generally well built, like attested by the vestiges that still remain, and possessed several buildings built in stone."

In 1883, the Palestine Exploration Fund's Survey of Western Palestine says "This ruin has also been at one time a place of importance...." In the Survey of Western Palestine, based on an observation in 1874 on the area of the southeastern slope of a hill west of Susya, H.H. Kitchener and Claude Conder noted that "This ruin has also been at one time a place of importance...." They thought the ruins were that of a Byzantine monastery. German accounts later stated that it was a remnant of an ancient church.

Maps of the 19th century that made the distinction sometimes depicted Susieh as a ruin and sometimes as a village. For example, the Palestine Exploration Fund map of 1878 and the Guérin map of 1881 showed it as a ruin, while the earlier Zimmermann map of 1850, the van de Velde maps of 1858 and 1865, and the Osborn map of 1859 showed it as a village.

British Mandate period village

The Bartholomew's quarter-inch map of Palestine by The Edinburgh Geographical Institute and the F.J. Salmon map of 1936 show Susya as ruins.

In 1937, the building to the north was identified by L. A. Meyer and A. Reifenberg as the site of a synagogue.

Israeli-Palestinian conflict

Khirbet Susya (Palestinian village)

Main article: Khirbet Susya

Origins and background

Khirbet Susya, called Susya al-Qadima ('Old Susya') was a village attached to the archaeological site at Khirbet Susiya.

In the early 19th century, many residents of the two big villages in the area of South Mount Hebron, Yatta and Dura, started to immigrate to ruins and caves in the area and became 'satellite villages' (daughters) to the mother town. Reasons for the expansion were lack of land for agriculture and construction in the mother towns, which resulted in high prices of land, rivalry between the mother-towns chamulas wishing to control more land and resources and being a security buffer which made it more difficult for robber gangs raid the mother villages. Caves are used by local as residences, storage space and sheepfold. The affiliation between the satellite villages and mother town remained. While some of the satellites became permanent villages with communities of hundreds, others remained temporary settlements which served the shepherds and fallāḥīn for several months every year. In 1981–82 it was estimated 100–120 families dwelt in caves permanently in the Southern Mount Hebron region while 750–850 families lived there temporarily.

Yaakov Havakook, who lived with the locals in the region for several years, writes that the community at Khirbet Susya was seasonal and didn't live in there year-round. Families of shepherds arrived after the first rain (October–November), stayed during the grazing season and left in April end or beginning of May. They were known for a special kind of cheese produced in their caves,

According to Rabbis for Human Rights, in 1948, the preexisting population was augmented by an influx of Palestinian refugees expelled during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War from the area of Ramat Arad, who purchased land in the area. In 1982 an Israel settlement planner, Plia Albeck, examined the area of Susiya, the synagogue and the Palestinian village built on and around it, and finding it legally difficult to advance Jewish settlement, wrote:

"The synagogue is located in an area that is known as the lands of Khirbet Susya, and around an Arab village between the ancient ruins. There is a formal registration on the land of Khirbet Susya with the Land Registry, according to which this land, amounting to approximately 3000 dunam , is privately held by many Arab owners. Therefore the area proximal to the synagogue is in all regards privately owned."

Map of Kh. Susya and Rujum al-Hamri from 1936

In June 1986, Israel expropriated the Palestinian village's residential ground for an archaeological site, evicting about 25 families. The expelled Palestinians settled in caves and tin shacks nearby, on their agricultural lands at a site now called Rujum al-Hamri, to restart their lives.

The Israeli government official stance on the matter says "There was no historic Palestinian village at the archaeological site there; that the village consists of only a few seasonal residences for a few families; and the land is necessary for the continuation of archaeological work." According to Regavim, an NGO which petitioned the Supreme Court to execute the demolition orders at Khirbet susya, the place was used as grazing area and olive agricalture seasonally before 1986. In a report, Regavim writes that travelers from the late 19th century report finding ruins (while nearby Semua was reported as inhabited), the British census from 1945 does not mention Susya and a survey from 1967, done after Six-Day War, refers to Khirbat Susya as ruins in contrast to nearby villages such as At-Tuwani, Yatta and more.

2010s Bedouin settlement

According to The Washington Post, the modern Bedouin residential settlement that exists as of 2016 is the result of European aid; Spain donated the school, Germany provided solar panels, the water pumps were funded by Ireland, while Norway, Italy, Belgium, and other countries funded the children's playground. However, it was noted that the makeshift shelters have "more the feeling of a protest camp than a functioning Palestinian village. There are no streets, shops or mosques, and no permanent homes. There do not seem to be many people, either — giving some support to Regavim's claim that most of the residents live in the nearby Palestinian town of Yatta."

These days lived by harvesting olives, herding sheep, growing crops, and beekeeping.

Land ownership and master plan

A master plan was not approved and building permit were not given to Khirbet Susya because there was no sufficient proof of ownership as the documents lack geographic information and based on them, it was "not possible to make unambiguous claims of ownership over the land in question". The Jabor family supports a claim to land near Susya with Ottoman documents dated back to 1881 and the Nawaja family, who is originally from the Tel Arad area and moved to Susya in 1952, has documents as well. Their documents are problematic since the boundaries mentioned were described in terms of geography features which are hard to identify in the field.

In July 2015 it was published that, according to an internal document of findings by the Israeli Civil Administration officer Moshe Meiri, the claim to ownership of the land appears to be grounded on a valid Ottoman period title, dating back to 1881, in the possession of the Jabor family, This document has been known to Israeli officials since 1982. Though the precise extent of their land was not specified in the document, in an internal review of the case in 2015, Meiri established from the geographical features mentioned that the land covered territory now belonging to the Jabor and Nawaja families, and the villages on the basis of their Ottoman period documents claim an area that covers some 3,000 dunams (741 acres). In early 1986, before the first Israeli expulsion, the village was visited by U.S. consular officials, who recorded the occasion in photographs.

Additional expulsions

According to David Shulman, the second expulsion took place in 1990, when Rujum al-Hamri's inhabitants were loaded onto trucks by the IDF and dumped at the Zif Junction, 15 kilometers northwards a roadside at the edge of a desert. Most returned and rebuilt on a rocky escarpment within their traditional agricultural and grazing territory. Their wells taken, they were forced to buy water from nearby Yatta. Palestinian residents (2012) pay 25 NIS per cubic meter water brought in by tanks, which is 5 times the cost to the nearby Israeli settlement. Net consumption, at 28 litres per diem, is less than half what Palestinians consume (70 lpd) and less than the recommended WHO level. Israel sheep-herding settlers expanded their unfenced land use at Mitzpe Yair, the "Dahlia Farm" a term used by Susiya Palestinians to refer to the farm run by the widow of Yair Har-Sinai. According to B'tselem, by 2010 settlers were cultivating roughly 40 hectares, about 15% of the land area to which they deny access to the traditional Palestinian users of that area. Since 2000 Jewish settlers in Susya have denied Palestinians access to 10 cisterns in the area, or according to more recent accounts, 23, and try to block their access to others. Soil at Susya, with a market value of NIS 2,000 per truckload, is also taken from lands belonging to the village of Yatta.

The third expulsion occurred in June 2001, when settler civilians and soldiers drove the Palestinians of Susya out, without warning, with, reportedly violent arrests and beatings. On 3 July 2001, the Israeli army demolished dozens of homes in Susya and contiguous Palestinian villages, and bulldozed their cisterns, many ancient, built for gathering rainwater, and then filling them with gravel and cement to hinder their reuse. Donated solar panels were also destroyed, livestock killed, and agricultural land razed.. On Sept 26 of the same year, by an order of the Israeli Supreme Court, these structures were ordered to be destroyed and the land returned to the Palestinians. Settlers and the IDF prevented the villagers from reclaiming their land, some 750 acres. The villagers made an appeal to the same court to be allowed to reclaim their lands and live without harassment. Some 93 events of settler violence were listed. The settlers made a counter-appeal, and one family that had managed to return to its land suffered a third eviction.

In 2002 an Israeli outpost was established without the necessary building permit. OCHA reports that as of 2012 the Israeli Civil Administration has imposed no demolitions on this outpost, which is connected to Israel's water and electricity networks, and cites the example as putative evidence that Israeli policy is discriminating between the two communities.

In 2006, structures without a permit were demolished illegally on the orders of a low-ranking officer, and the demolition was strongly criticized 3 years later by the High Court of Israel. At around 11 pm on the 22 July 2007 Ezra Nawi caught sight of settlers laying irrigation pipes on another slice of Palestinian land. He called the Israeli police at Kiryat Arba to put an end to the usurpation, and, a few minutes later, dozens of settlers came, threw rocks at his car and threatened to kill him. The move to appropriate the land was blocked. In September 2008 the Israeli army informed the Palestinians at Susya that a further 150 dunums (15 hectares), where 13 remaining rainwater cisterns are located, would be a "closed military area" to which they were denied access. Amnesty International described the resultant contrast between the Palestinian and Jewish Susyas as follows:

"in the nearby Israeli settlement of Sussia, whose very existence is unlawful under international law, the Israeli settlers have ample water supplies. They have a swimming pool and their lush irrigated vineyards, herb farms and lawns – verdant even at the height of the dry season – stand in stark contrast to the parched and arid Palestinian villages on their doorstep."

According to Shulman, for some decades they were subject, to many violent attacks, and settler recourse to both civil and military courts, to drive them out. The BBC broadcast film of settler youths beating an old woman and her family with cudgels to drive them away from their land, in 2008. Local villages, like Palestinian Susya, have been losing land, and being cut off from each other, as the nearby settlements of Carmel, Maon, Susya and Beit Yatir began to be built and developed, and illegal outposts established. Shulman described the reality he observed in 2008:

Susya: where thirteen impoverished families are clinging tenaciously, but probably hopelessly, to the dry hilltop and the few fields that are all that remain of their vast ancestral lands.

According to B'tselem, the Palestinians that remain in the area live in tents on a small rocky hill between the settlement and the archaeological park which is located within walking distance. According to Amnesty International, ten caves inhabited by Susya Palestinian families were blown up by the IDF in 1996, and some 113 tents were destroyed in 1998. Amnesty International also reports that official documents asking them to leave the area address them generically as 'intruders' (polesh/intruder). Most of the rain-catching water cisterns used by the local Palestinian farmers of Susya were demolished by the Israeli army in 1999 and 2001. A local Susya resident told Amnesty International,

Water is life; without water we can't live; not us, not the animals, or the plants. Before we had some water, but after the army destroyed everything we have to bring water from far away; it's very difficult and expensive. They make our life very difficult, to make us leave.

While the Israeli settlement has mains power and piped water from Israel, the Palestinians depend on solar panels and wind turbine energy made possible by a Palestinian/Israeli NGO – Comet - and on wells. This project has been shortlisted for the BBC World Challenge which highlighted the involvement of two Israeli physicists, Elad Orian and Noam Dotan. According to David Hirst, the inhabitants of Susya, are faced with a catch-22. If they comply with the law they cannot build cisterns and collect even the rainwater. But if they fail to work their lands, they lose it anyway. One small enclave that remains for a Bedouin pastoralist's family suffers from further encroachment, with one settler, according to Shulman, managing to wrest 95% of the family's land, and still intent on entering the remainder.

In a ruling delivered in December 2013, the Israel High Court of Justice accepted that Yatta Palestinians had shown their legal attachment to a stretch of land between Susya and the illegal settlement of Mitzpe Yair, but requested them to withdraw their petition against the settlers who are alleged to have illegally seized these lands. The subject of a petition concerns 300 dunams of agricultural land, and a further 900 dunams of pasture of which, the Palestinians argue, they were forced by violent attacks from using for agriculture and herding. The court held that the proper option open to the Palestinians was recourse to a civil legal action. Of the 120 complaints registered with Israeli police in Hebron by Palestinians of Susya, regarding alleged attacks, threats, incursions, and property damage wrought by settlers down to 2013, upwards of 95% have been dismissed, without charges being laid.

Legal fight & demolition orders

A Palestinian demonstration against the demolition of the village of Susya

After 1985, when the population was expelled, attempts by the Palestinian of Susya to rebuild their village have been razed by Israel four times, in 1991, 1997 and twice in 2001. Since it is classified within Area C of the West Bank, it lies under Israeli military occupation and control. Though they own much of the land, Israel denies building permits to Susya's residents and therefore they build without permission from Israeli authorities. The master plan for Susya was denied by the Israeli Civil Administration as opposed to the Israeli settlement of Susya, and Palestinians are required to obtain permits from the Israeli Civil Administration.

In 2008 the Supreme Court turned down the villagers' request for a staying order on planned demolition. According to Shulman, the State attorney claimed that the Palestinians of Susya were a security threat to the settlers, and had to be moved. When asked by the judges where they would move to, the State replied:'We don't know. They are unfortunates, miskenim.'.

In 2011, Israel executed 4 waves of demolition, affecting 41 structures, including 31 residential tents or shacks and two water cisterns. As a result, 37 people, including 20 children, were displaced and a further 70 affected. On 24 November 2011 bulldozers razed two tents where the Mughnem family dwells on their own land in Susya.

The Jewish settlers of Susya and the Israeli pro-settler association NGO Regavim petitioned the High Court to demolish Palestinian Susya, defining the villagers as 'trespassers' living in 'illegal outposts', terms usually applied to illegal Jewish outposts on the West Bank.

On 14 June an Israeli court issued 6 demolition orders covering 50 buildings including tent dwellings, ramshackle huts, sheep pens, latrines, water cisterns, a wind-and-sun powered turbine, and the German-funded solar panels in most of the Palestinian village of Susya. Over 500 people from Tel Aviv, Beer Sheva, and Jerusalem came to mount a peaceful protest on 22 June.

On 26 June 2013, the Israeli Civil Administration, raided Palestinian Susya and handed out 40 demolition orders for many structures, tents, hothouses, a water well and a solar panel, established on humanitarian grounds by the European Union. Nearby Israeli settlers built two additional and unauthorized houses in the Mitzpeh Avigayil outpost, without interference.

A local Palestinian declared to the Hebrew press:

They’re calling our village an illegal outpost. These lands are ours from before there was a State of Israel. My father is older than your state—and I am an illegal alien on my own land. I ask where is justice? Your courts distinguish between the settler and the Palestinian…We’re surrounded by illegal outposts that have everything—infrastructures of water and electricity— despite the fact that these settlements are illegal even under Israeli law. And now you want to expel this old man from his home once again? To expel all of us who own these lands, who have lived on them for generations in this space that is ours, which is all we know?

In an exchange in the Knesset with Joint List Member Dov Khenin, who noted that Plia Albeck, a pro-settler former government official had admitted that in 1982 that Susya was surrounded by an Arab village, and that the land is registered at the Israeli Lands Authority as under private Arab title, a Rabbi from the Jewish Home Party, Deputy Defense Minister and new head of Israel's Civil Administration, Eli Ben Dahan, publicly denied that Susya exists, asserting that attempts to protect the village were a ploy by leftists to take over Area C.

"There has never been an Arab village called Susya," Ben Dahan said, calling the village "a ploy by leftist organizations to take over Area C ".

On 24 August, a further demolition took place. On 29 August 2012 the IDF destroyed a sheepfold and two tents, one a dwelling and the other for storage, donated to the villagers of Palestinian Susya by the United Nations' Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.

In May 2015, the Israel High Court approved the demolition of Palestinian Susya. The implementation of the plan was expected to leave 450 villagers homeless. A delegation of diplomats from 28 European countries visited Susya in June and urged Israel not to evict its 300 Palestinian residents, a move that would endanger in their view the two-state solution.

International involvement

Israeli plans to demolish the Palestinian village have become an international cause célèbre. According to Amira Hass, before fifteen senior EU diplomats visiting the area on 8 August 2012, Susya villager Nasser Nawaja'a complained that "(t)here are in this village octogenarians who are older than the State of Israel . . . How can they be told that their residence here is illegal?" The EU declared at the time it does not expect that the demolition order will be executed. An Israeli officer objected to this narrative, saying, "It would be absolutely false to present these people as having lived there since the time of Noah's Ark and suddenly the big bad Israelis come and destroy the place. We are a bit sad that some of the Europeans and the Americans are falling into that trap."

In July the US State Department urged Israel to refrain from any demolitions and asked it to seek a peaceful resolution with villagers, and the European Union issued a strongly worded admonition urging Israel to abandon plans for the "forced transfer of population and demolition of Palestinian housing and infrastructure" in Khirbet Susiya.

The EU funded the construction of buildings in Area C which is under interim Israeli jurisdiction, built without permits and which cost tens of millions of Euros. EU documents show the intention is to "pave the way for development and more authority of the PA over Area C". A spokesman said it was justified on humanitarian grounds while Ari Briggs, International Director of Regavim, said the project is a 'Trojan horse' with political aims. As of 2016 the existing infrastructure is the result of European aid: Spain donated the school, Germany provided solar panels; the water pumps were funded by Ireland, while Norway, Italy Belgium and other countries funded the children's playground, however, the makeshift shelters have "more the feeling of a protest camp than a functioning Palestinian village.'The author claims that the settler NGO Regavim's assertion that the people of Susya live in Yatta on the basis of the fact that Susya has 'no streets, shops or mosques, and no permanent homes. There do not seem to be many people, either."

Susya (Israeli settlement)

In 1982 the Israeli government together with the World Zionist Organization furnished a plan to establish a settlement on the site, part of 8 new settlements envisioned for the area, with funding of 20 million shekels providing for between 50 and 60 Jewish families.

Susya main synagogue

Work on the Israeli settlement of Susya began from May through to September in the following year. on 1,800 dunams of land. A major expansion began on 18 September 1999, when its boundaries expanded northwards and eastwards, with the Palestinian Shreiteh family allegedly losing roughly 150 more dunams.

In 2008, the largest and most advanced goat pen and dairy was inaugurated at Susya with an investment of 3.5 million ILS. It can contain 1500 goats and milk 48 of them at a time. By Regavim's own calculations, by 2015, 23 Jewish/Israeli homes have been built on private Palestinian property in Susya.

Former Christian Afrikaners who have converted to Judaism have settled in Susya, which has reportedly developed into one of the strongholds for South African converts who perform aliyah.

Violence

On 7 June 1991, Palestinians and an Israeli settler Baruch Yellin had a dispute over grazing rights. A Gush Emunim spokesman said Yellin shot one Palestinian dead after he had been attacked with sticks by a Palestinian. According to the Palestinian eyewitnesses, Jabar Hawad al-Nawajah was told not to graze near the settlement, and then Yellin rode off, returned with a M-16 rifle and shot a dozen of his sheep. A relative of the shepherd, Mahmoud al-Nawajah, came over to the scene and was then shot in the stomach and died. The full circumstances were never clarified.

On 23 March 1993, Musa Suliman Abu Sabha a Palestinian was arrested outside Susya by two guards, Moshe Deutsch and Yair Har-Sinai, on suspicion that he was planning an attack on Jews. Taken for questioning, he stabbed in the shoulder or back one of the guards, Moshe Deutsch, while the two were in a car, and, wrestled to the ground, was bound hand and foot. Another settler from nearby Susya, Yoram Shkolnik shot him eight times, killing him. According to the IDF a grenade was found on the body while other reports claimed the grenade was removed from him prior to the shooting. In 2001, Yair Har-Sinai was killed in a brawl with local Palestinians. A Palestinian, Jihad Najar, was convicted of murder and received a sentence of life imprisonment. The IDF then evicted the 300 Palestinians in the area, demolishing some of their makeshift homes. They have sought redress in an Israeli court, which ruled that illegal demolitions had taken place, the state had failed to provide procedures to enable the plaintiffs to obtain building permits, and was creating a situation in which elementary human rights to life were being denied.

Jewish residents of Susya have harassed local Palestinians, destroyed their property, and hindered them from gathering their crops from olive groves. In 2009 Yaakov Teitel, was indicted for the 2007 murder of a Palestinian shepherd from Susya.

Archaeological park

In 1986, the locals were evicted from their homes which became an archaeological park.

In 2011, an illegal Israeli settler outpost with 3 wooden huts was set up on the archaeological site.

In 2012, the park was declared national heritage site. Palestinians from Susiya have tried to purchase an admission ticket to the now archaeological Susya a handful of times. They say they have been denied entry each time.

According to the Jerusalem Post, a fire broke out and was extinguished by five firefighters before damaging the inside of the archaeological park in July 2020.

See also

References

  1. ^ Werlin, Steven H. (1 January 2015). 3 The Southern Hebron Hills: Susiya, Eshtemoa, Ma'on (in Judea), and Ḥ. 'Anim. Brill. p. 136. ISBN 978-90-04-29840-8.
  2. ^ Steven H. Werlin, Ancient Synagogues of Southern Palestine, 300–800 C.E.: Living on the Edge, Brill, 2015 p. 136.
  3. ^ A Chronicle of Dispossession: Facts about Susiya, B'tselem 29 July 2015
  4. Oren Yiftachel, Neve Gordon, "The Lurking Shadow of Expulsion", 15 May 2002.
  5. Nir Hasson, "Should 250 Cave Dwellers Interfere With the Fence?", Haaretz 13 September 2004.
  6. Bregman, Ahron (2014). Cursed Victory: A History of Israel and the Occupied Territories. Penguin Books. pp. 133–. ISBN 978-1-84614-735-7.
  7. Friedman, Thomas L. (2010). From Beirut to Jerusalem. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. pp. 238–. ISBN 978-0-374-70699-9.
  8. Neve Gordon (2 October 2008). Israel's Occupation. University of California Press. pp. 107–. ISBN 978-0-520-94236-3.
  9. ^ Magness (2003), p. 99–104
  10. ^ "Susiya: a Community at Imminent Risk of Forced Displacement" (PDF). United Nations. June 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 October 2015. Retrieved 18 August 2015.
  11. "Civil Administration threatens to demolish most of Susiya village". B'tselem. Susiya residents have lived in this region on a seasonal basis since at least the 19th century
  12. Stefano Pasta, "Cisgiordania, Susiya: i pastori palestinesi che tutte le mattine temono l'arrivo dei bulldozer", La Repubblica 10 June 2015: "Espropriati nel 1986, sotto sgombero dal 5 maggio. Fino a quell'anno i palestinesi abitavano nelle grotte a mezzo chilometro di distanza. Ne furono espropriati quando l'area fu riconosciuta sito archeologico. Andarono quindi a vivere nei terreni agricoli limitrofi di Susiya, di loro proprietà ma senza il permesso per costruire."
  13. ^ Chaim Levinson, "Israel seeks to demolish Palestinian village on 'archaeological' grounds", Haaretz 28 March 2015.
  14. ^ "Khirbet Susiya", B'tselem 1 Jan 2013.
  15. ^ Grossman, David (1994). Expansion and Desertion: The Arab Village and Its Offshoots in Ottoman Palestine. Yad Izhak Ben-Zvi. p. 226. In 1986 one could still find about 25 families who lived in the caves of Khirbet Susya, but they were evicted when a tourism site was develop in that place. At the time of Susya eviction, many inhabited caves were in nearby territories. About 16 families lived in caves at Khirbet al-Fauqa (ע'וינה פוקא), and a smaller number in other khirbahs, such as Shuyukha and Khirbet Zanuta, which was a large cave settlement in the early 19th century.
  16. ^ David Dean Shulman, "On Being Unfree:Fences, Roadblocks and the Iron Cage of Palestine", Manoa Vol. 20, No. 2, 2008, pp. 13–32
  17. David Shulman, Freedom and Despair: Notes from the South Hebron Hills, University of Chicago Press, 2018 ISBN 978-0-226-56665-8 pp.4-6.
  18. "The Geneva Convention". BBC News. 10 December 2009. Retrieved 27 September 2011.
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  20. ^ Jerome Murphy-O'Connor, The Holy Land: an Oxford archaeological guide from earliest times to 1700, 5th ed. Oxford University Press US, 2008 p. 351
  21. "A unique case is Susya. The existence of the ancient Jewish town was unknown in Jewish sources, but was discovered in archaeological excavations ... the settlers are not free to decide on the names chosen: the National Naming Committee at the Prime Minister's Office has that responsibility and considers various factors. The settlers, however, being well acquainted with the territory and its history, play a significant role in the decision."Feige, Michael (2009). Settling in the Hearts: Fundamentalism, Time, and Space in Judea and Samaria. Wayne State University Press. pp. 75–76. ISBN 978-0-8143-2750-0. Retrieved 8 October 2021.
  22. See the drawing of the reconstruction and groundplan in Zeev Safrai, The economy of Roman Palestine, Routledge, 1994, ISBN 9780203204863, p. 127 (no access on Google Books as of 2021).
  23. Safrai (1998), p. 149.
  24. ^ Ylenia Gostoli, "Archaeology of a dispossession", Qantara.de 27 April 2015.
  25. Safrai (1998), p. 101.
  26. Günter Stemberger, Jews and Christians in the Holy Land: Palestine in the fourth century, tr. Ruth Tuschling, Continuum International Publishing Group, 2000 p. 151
  27. Negev & Gibson (2001), p. 484.
  28. ^ Negev, Avraham (1985). "Excavations at Carmel (Kh. Susiya) in 1984: Preliminary Report". Israel Exploration Journal. 35 (4): 231-52 . JSTOR 27925998. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  29. 1 Samuel:25
  30. ^ Negev & Gibson (2001), p. 482.
  31. Amit (1998), p. 132.
  32. Milson, David William (2007). Art and architecture of the synagogue in late antique Palestine: in the shadow of the church. Ancient Judaism and early Christianity, Volume 5. Brill. p. 56. ISBN 978-90-04-15186-4. (No Google Books access as of Oct 2021).
  33. Post-Byzantine according to the language of an inscription. See Safrai (1998), p. 149.
  34. "The synagogue is tentatively dated to the end of the 4th-beginning of the 7th. century AD, and was used as a Jewish prayer house until the 9th century." Negev & Gibson (2001), p. 482.
  35. ^ Amit (1998), p. 129.
  36. Levine, Lee I. "Jewish Archaeology in Late Antiquity: art, architecture, and inscriptions", in Steven T. Katz (ed.), The Cambridge History of Judaism: Vol. 4, The Late Roman-Rabbinic Period, Cambridge University Press, 1984 p. 540.
  37. Amit (1998), p. 138.
  38. Amit (1998), pp. 148–155 .
  39. Amit (1998), p. 146.
  40. "Uniquely Jewish adaptations of Christian architecture did occur. The synagogues at Khirbet Shema, in the Upper Galilee, Horvat Rimmon 1 in the southern Shephelah, at Eshtemoa, and Khirbet Susiya were built as broadhouses and not as longhouse basilicas. In these buildings, the basilica form is turned on its side, and the focal point of the synagogue is the wide wall of the hall. Benches were built round the interior walls of these synagogues, focusing attention on the centre of the room. This architecture is a continuation of the house-synagogues that literary sources suggests existed from the second and third centuries." Steven Fine, Art and Judaism in the Greco-Roman world: toward a new Jewish archaeology, Cambridge University Press, 2005 p. 88
  41. Eric M. Meyers, Galilee through the centuries: cultures in conflict, Eisenbrauns 1999 p. 233
  42. Amit (1998), p. 156.
  43. Rachel Hachlili, "Jewish Art and Iconography in the Land of Israel", in Suzanne Richard (ed.), Near Eastern Archaeology: A Reader, Eisenbrauns, 2003 p. 449
  44. or incense censers. See Steven Fine, p. 195
  45. Rachel Hachlili, The menorah, the ancient seven-armed candelabrum: origin, form, and significance, Brill 2001, pp. 67, 228. For its reconstruction see p. 53.
  46. Steven Fine, p. 195
  47. Eric M. Meyers Galilee through the centuries: confluence of cultures, Eisenbrauns, 1999 p. 231
  48. Steven Fine, Art and Judaism in the Greco-Roman world, pp. 196–197
  49. Steven Fine, p. 95
  50. John Brian Harley, David Woodward, The History of Cartography: Cartography in prehistoric, ancient, and medieval Europe and the Mediterranean, Humana Press, 1987 p. 266. "Since mosaics were disapproved of by the Jews as graven images, they were both removed. In other mosaics of the Byzantine period from the Holy Land, the zodiac is represented only by the names of its signs rather than by their graphic representations."
  51. Steven Fine, "Synagogues in the Land of Israel", in Suzanne Richard (ed.) Near Eastern Archaeology: A Reader, Eisenbrauns, 2003 p. 459.
  52. Steven Fine, "Archaeology and the Interpretation of Rabbinic Literature: Some Thoughts" in Matthew Kraus (ed.) How should rabbinic literature be read in the modern world?, Gorgias Press LLC, 2006 p. 214
  53. Eric Meyers, Galilee through the centuries, p. 232
  54. Steven Fine,. p. 96. Fine speculates whether reluctance to erase these letters reflects a religious reluctance among iconoclasts to delete letters that spell out the Divine name El, for, again highlighting the distinctiveness of the synagogue, "in no instance does an explicit Divine name appear in any Jewish synagogue inscription."
  55. Amit (1998), pp. 152–3.
  56. The Israel yearbook, Zionist Organization of America, Jewish Agency for Israel. Economic Dept. Israel Yearbook Publications, 1981 p. 120
  57. in Aramaicbenei qartah, in Hebrew benei ha'ir (sons of the town), especially of residents of a small agrarian village. See Stuart S. Miller, "Sages and commoners in late antique ʼEreẓ Israel: a philological inquiry into local traditions" in Peter Schäfer, Catherine Hezser (eds.), The Talmud Yerushalmi and Graeco-Roman culture, Mohr Siebeck, 1998 p. 65
  58. Meyers, Galilee throughout the centuries, p.265 The "rabbi" in these epigraphs appears to be an honorific for "master", and the role of such rabbis in the synagogue seems to have been that of being donors. For an early dating based on the rare "qedushat" (to his holiness') address used in amoraim correspondence (qedushat mari rabbi Issi ha-cohen ha-mehubad berabi) see Aharon Oppenheimer, "The Attempt of Hananiah, Son of Rabbi Joshua's Brother, to Intercalate the Year in Babylonia" in Peter Schäfer, Catherine Hezser (eds.), The Talmud Yerushalmi and Graeco-Roman culture, p. 260; Aharon Oppenheimer, Nili Oppenheimer, Between Rome and Babylon: studies in Jewish leadership and society, Mohr Siebeck, 2005 p. 389, sets it in the amoraic period.
  59. Gideon Avni (2014) The Byzantine-Islamic Transition in Palestine: An Archaeological Approach, OUP, p225
  60. J. Delaville Le Roulx, Cartulaire général de l'orde de St-Jean de Jérusalem, 1, Paris 1896, no. 20, pp. 21–22, "... Preterea laudo et confirmo supradicto Hospitali quoddam casale, quod dedit ei Gauterius Baffumeth, et vocatur Sussia..."
  61. Röhricht, 1893, RRH, pp. 12–13, No 57
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  63. Note that in the late 19th century, it had been suggested that Sussia was a khirbet (ruined former settlement) close to Majdal Yaba; see: Röhricht, 1887, vol 10, p. 243
  64. Röhricht, 1893, RRH, p. 74–75, No 293
  65. Amit, David. "Architectural plans of Synagogues in the Southern Judean Hills and the 'Halakah'". p. 132
  66. Daniel Jacobs, Shirley Eber, Francesca Silvani, Israel and the Palestinian Territories. 2nd ed. Rough Guides, 1998 p. 414
  67. ^ Tristram, 1865, p.387
  68. ^ Guérin, 1869, pp. 172–173
  69. ^ Conder and Kitchener, 1883, SWP III, pp. 414–415
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  71. ^ PEF map sheet 25. Osborn map Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine to accompany his book "Palestine, Past and Present" . Carl Zimmermann, "Atlas von Palaestina und der Sinai-Halbinsel" (Berlin, 1850), sheet 7 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine. C.W.M. van de Velde, Map of the Holy Land, 1958, section 7, also the 1865 edition.
  72. C.W.M. van de Velde, Narrative of a journey through Syria and Palestine in 1851 and 1852, published 1854, pp. 77–80
  73. Bartholomew's quarter-inch map of Palestine with orographical colouring, ca.1920
  74. F.J. Salmon, Commissioner for Lands & Surveys, Palestine 1936, Sheet 10, 1936
  75. ^ Shulman, "I Am an Illegal Alien on My Own Land", The New York Review of Books, 28 June 2012.
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  78. ^ Havakook pp. 25–31
  79. Havakook p. 65
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  81. Ephraim Stern, Ayelet Leṿinzon-Gilboʻa, Joseph Aviram, , Vol. 4, Israel Exploration Society & Carta, 1993 p. 1415: "a special kind of cheese that, until recently, was processed in the caves of Khirbet Susiya."
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  103. Nasser Nawaj'ah, "How can you weather the storm when you're barred from building a home?", B'tselem, 8 January 2015.
  104. David Dean Shulman, Dark hope: working for peace in Israel and Palestine, University of Chicago Press, 2007 pp. 37 f.
  105. "Twenty years ago, the cave dwellers of Susya were evacuated from their original village on the pretext of archaeological digs in the area. Some of the evacuees went to live on their lands close to the Israeli settlement which was founded a short time before. Five years ago the Israeli army destroyed the caves of these families, and since then they continued to live there in impermanent and improvised housing." (Krinis and Dunayevsky 2006), Deborah Cowen, Emily Gilbert, War, Citizenship, Territory, Routledge, London 2007 p. 322.
  106. Amnesty International. Israel-rapport 17.09.2001
  107. Susya Sustainable Energy Project, Comet Middle East (Comet-ME) Archived 15 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  108. BBC World Challenge Archived 2 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine
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  110. David D. Shulman, "Truth and Lies in South Hebron" Archived 3 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine, Jewish Quarterly June 2013. "May 7th 2011. The settler in his Shabbat white, a huge knitted skullcap on his head, takes a pebble and holds it out on his fingertips to a Palestinian woman from Susya as he clucks his tongue at her, beckoning her as one would a dog. He has already taken 95% of the family's land, and now he bullies his way into the tiny patch that is left in order to harass and humiliate further. As if throwing a dog a bone, he tosses the pebble at her and laughs...."
  111. Amira Hass, "High Court asks Palestinians to drop land case against settlers", Haaretz, 23 December 2013.
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  135. Ami Pedahzur, Jewish Terrorism in Israel, p. 184.
  136. Doug Struck, "Jews react to slayings with bullets Cycle of reprisals claims another life", The Baltimore Sun, 24 March 1993.
  137. David Shulman, Dark Hope, University of Chicago Press, 2007 p. 61, writes: "Yair Har-Sinai ... terrorized the Palestinians of South Hebron until he was killed in a brawl some years ago."
  138. Efrat Weiss, "6 years later: Life sentence for Palestinian who murdered Israeli", Ynetnews, 12 October 2007.
  139. "The state admitted the demolition was executed illegally. Justice Procaccia said that 'the state did not establish a legal procedure which would allow for a building permit, hence the state is not carrying out its duties and is creating a situation under which a human's basic existence becomes impossible.' Justice Hayut pointed to the absurdity of the situation, saying 'the state admits an unauthorized action was carried out, which resulted in the demolition of structures that constituted the bare minimum in living conditions.'" Yuval Yoaz, "Court: Palestinian homes in southern Hebron Hills can stay", Haaretz, 08/09/2004.
  140. Shulman, 2007, pp. 57–63.
  141. Gideon Levy, "Adding insult to injury", Haaretz, 5 September 2010.
  142. "Alleged Jewish terrorist: I know God is pleased", Haaretz. 12 November 2009
  143. Teitel indicted for murder, attempted murder, Ynetnews. 12 November 2009
  144. Gideon Levy, "West Bank chaos, just a stone's throw away", Haaretz 4 March 2011.
  145. Dani Rosenberg, Yoav Gross, "Sysia", Gesher Multicultural Film Fund uploaded to Youtube 26 June 2012
  146. Allison Deger, "A tale of two Susiyas, or how a Palestinian village was destroyed under the banner of Israeli archeology", Mondoweiss 20 April 2015.
  147. "Major fire breaks out at Susya archaeological site in Hebron hills". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  148. danilfineman (30 July 2020). "Main fireplace breaks out at Susya archaeological website in Hebron hills". Danilfineman. Retrieved 12 August 2020.

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