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Revision as of 04:11, 10 September 2010 by LibiBamizrach (talk | contribs) (Undid revision 383908249 by 213.6.11.49 (talk))(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) This article is about the Jerusalem neighbourhood. For other uses, see Gilo (disambiguation).
Street in Gilo

Gilo (Template:Lang-he) is a large residential district on the southwestern outskirts of Jerusalem, located over the 1949 Armistice Green Line, on land captured during the Six Day War. It is one of the Ring neighborhoods. The United Nations, the European Union and the International Court of Justice consider it an illegal settlement, while Israel considers it a neighborhood within the municipal boundaries of Jerusalem. Gilo has a population of 40,000.

History

During the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, the Egyptian army positioned its artillery at Gilo, heavily shelling West Jerusalem. An attempt to advance on Jerusalem from Gilo was beaten back in a fierce battle. Kibbutz Ramat Rachel, located just north-east of Gilo, changed hands three times, ultimately remaining part of Israel, but Gilo remained on the side of the Green Line held by the Kingdom of Jordan until 1967.

In 1970, the Israeli government expropriated 12,300 dunams of land to build a ring of new neighborhoods around Jerusalem on land conquered in the Six-Day War. Gilo was established in 1973. According to an Israeli municipal planner, most Gilo land had been legally purchased by Jews before World War II, much of it during the 1930s, and that Jewish landowners had not relinquished their ownership of their land when the area was captured by the Jordanians in the 1948 War. According to other sources, the land belonged to the Palestinian villages of Sharafat, Beit Jala and Beit Safafa. With its expansion over the years, Gilo has formed a wedge between Jerusalem and Beit Jala-Bethlehem.

Geography

A view of Gilo from Beit Jala

Gilo is located on a hilltop in southwest Jerusalem, separated from Beit Jala by a deep gorge. The Tunnels Highway to Gush Etzion runs underneath it on the east, and the settlement of Har Gilo is visible on the adjacent peak. Beit Safafa and Sharafat are located north of Gilo, while Bethlehem is to the South.

Biblical Gilo

The biblical town of Gilo is mentioned in the Book of Joshua (Joshua 15:51) and the Book of Samuel (II Sam 15:12). Some scholars believe that biblical Gilo was located in the central Hebron Hills, whereas the name of the modern settlement was chosen because of its proximity to Beit Jala, possibly a corruption of Gilo. A city in the southwest part of the hill-country of Judah (Josh. 15:51), Gilo was the birthplace of Ahithophel "the Gilonite" (Josh. 15:51; 2 Sam. 15:12), and the place where he committed suicide (17:23). Gilo has been identified with Kurbet Jala, about 7 miles north of Hebron.

Demography

From its inception, Gilo has provided housing to new Jewish immigrants from around the world. Many of those who spent their first months in the country at the immigrant hostel in Gilo, including those from Iran, Syria, France and South America, chose to remain in the neighborhood. Since the large influx of Soviet Jews in the 1990s, Gilo has absorbed 15% of all immigrants of that wave settling in Jerusalem. The immigrant hostel is now the site of an urban kibbutz, Beit Yisrael. Gilo is a mixed community of religious and secular Jews, although more Haredi families are moving in.

Settlement/neighborhood debate

Because Gilo is located over the 1949 Green Line, on land occupied during the Six Day War, the United Nations, the European Union and Japan call it an "illegal settlement".

Israel disputes this, and considers it a neighborhood of Jerusalem. In an interview with the Jerusalem Post, Gilo community council director Yaffa Shitrit, invited the world "to come and see the neighborhood of Gilo and to understand the geography. We're not a settlement, we're part of the city of Jerusalem, we're a neighborhood like Katamon." Palestinians regard it as occupied territory and make no distinction between Gilo and the West Bank settlements.

Plans to expand Gilo have drawn criticism from the United States and United Kingdom. Israel maintains that it has the right to build freely in Gilo because the neighborhood is within Jerusalem municipal borders and not a West Bank settlement. In 2009, the Jerusalem Planning Committee approved construction of 900 new housing units in Gilo, sparking a fresh round of global criticism.

Attacks from Beit Jala

Concrete wall decorated with landscape mural built to shield Gilo residents from Palestinian gunfire

From 2000, Beit Jala, a predominantly Palestinian Christian town was used as a base by Fatah's Tanzim gunmen to launch sniper and mortar attacks on Gilo. The Israeli government built a concrete barrier and installed bulletproof windows in the homes and schools on the periphery of Gilo, facing Beit Jala. The attacks on Gilo subsided after Operation Defensive Shield, with the rate slowing to three incidents of gunfire that year. On August 15, 2010, following years of relative quiet, the IDF started dismantling the concrete barrier, nearly a decade after its erection.

Schools and institutions

Beit HaOr, a center for autistic children, opened in Gilo in March 2008. The Ilan home for handicapped adults is located in Gilo. Gilo has 35 synagogues. In 2009, the Gilo community center, one of the largest in the country, introduced a new hybrid water heating system that saves energy and greatly reduces pollution. Park Gilo has a large adventure playground for children.

Archaeology

A site dating to the period of Israelite settlement known as Iron Age I (12001000 BCE) was identified and excavated at Gilo. The site revealed a small planned settlement with dwellings along the perimeter of the site, together with pottery dating to the twelfth century BCE. The southern part of the Iron Age site at Gilo is believed to be one of the earliest Israelite sites from this period. The site was surrounded by a defensive wall and divided into large yards, possibly sheep pens, with houses at the edges. Buildings at the site are amongst the earliest examples of the pillared four room house characteristic of Iron Age Israelite architecture, featuring a courtyard divided by stone pillars, a rectangular back room and rooms along the courtyard. The foundations of a structure built of large stones were also uncovered, possibly a fortified defense tower. During the construction of Gilo, archaeologists discovered a fortress and agricultural implements from the period of the First Temple period above the shopping center in Rehov Haganenet. Between Givat Canada and Gilo Park, they unearthed the remains of a farm and graves from the Second Temple period. Roman and Byzantine remains have also been found at various sites.

See also

References

  1. Israel demolishes security barrier at Gilo (BBC, August 16, 2010)
  2. Ban deplores Israeli decision to expand Jerusalem settlement (UN News Centre, 17 November 2009)
  3. ^ PHILLIPS, LEIGH (2009-11-19). "EU rebukes Israel for Jerusalem settlement expansion". EUobserver.com. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
  4. Colonisation : Israël veut construire 700 nouveaux logements à Jérusalem-Est (LEMONDE.FR December 28, 2009)
  5. ^ KERSHNER, ISABEL (2009-11-17). "Plan to Expand Jerusalem Settlement Angers U.S." The New York Times. Retrieved 24 February 2010.
  6. BEN-DAVID, LENNY (2007-12-15). "The strategic significance of Har Homa (op-ed)". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
  7. A history of Jerusalem's highest neighborhood
  8. Rosenthal, Donna (2003). The Israelis: ordinary people in an extraordinary land. Simon & Schuster, New York. p. 397 note 16. ISBN 0684869721. “According to former Jerusalem municipal planner, Israel Kimhi…”
  9. ^ Shaul Ephraim Cohen (1993). The politics of planting: Israeli-Palestinian competition for control of land in the Jerusalem periphery (Illustrated ed.). University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226112764, 9780226112763. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)
  10. Ashkenasi, Abraham (1999). Abraham Ashkenasi (ed.). The future of Jerusalem. P. Lang. p. 293. ISBN 0820435058, 9780820435053. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)"Gilo It was established in 1973 on Beit Safafa, Sharafat and Beit Jala land..."
  11. Arafat's media do support Jerusalem bus bombing - Likud of Holland
  12. Gilo & Har Choma
  13. ^ LIDMAN, MELANIE (2009-11-29). "Housing on the horizon?". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
  14. Giloh (WebBible Encyclopedia) - ChristianAnswers.Net
  15. Jerusalem neighborhoods: Gilo
  16. [http://unispal.un.org/UNISPAL.NSF/0/7D01FC0B49D062A0852576720043BEC3 SECRETARY-GENERAL DEPLORES ISRAEL'S SETTLEMENT EXPANSION DECISION] 17 November 2009
  17. McGlynn, John (2008-12-28). "Japan, Israeli Settlements, and the Future of a Palestinian State". The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus (52-1-09). Retrieved 2010-02-25.
  18. Gilo residents issue invitation to the world
  19. Klein Halevi, Yossi (2000-12-22). "The War Within East Jerusalem (op-ed)". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
  20. http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2009/11/18/world/international-uk-palestinians-israel.html?scp=2&sq=gilo&st=cse. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  21. http://www.gojerusalem.com/discover/article_1240/Gilo-neighborhood-receives-approval-to-build-900-housing-units
  22. Gilo Waits for Deliverance As Mideast Violence Goes On
  23. Fields of Fire, Time Magazine
  24. It's Back-to-School Day for Israeli children on Gilo's front line, Los Angeles Times
  25. Shooting and buying, Haaretz
  26. Gilo Parts With the Concrete Barrier After a Decade, Ynet
  27. Alut newsletter
  28. Gilo Residence of the Ilan Foundation
  29. Our Jerusalem: Pain and sorrow are not a sign of weakness
  30. Hybrid water heating system to be dedicated at Gilo community center
  31. Israel hot spots: Jerusalem information
  32. ^ Mazar, Amihai, (1994) “The Iron Age I” in Ben-Tor, Amnon (Ed.), “The Archaeology of Ancient Israel”, pp. 286-295, Yale University Press, ISBN 0300059191
  33. Jerusalem neighborhoods

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