Al-Husayniyya | |
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Arabic | الحسينية |
Name meaning | Khirbat Al-Husayniyya: The ruin of el Hasanîyeh, named after Hasan ibn Ali |
Also spelled | Al-Husayniyya |
Subdistrict | Safad |
Coordinates | 33°02′23.21″N 35°35′00.53″E / 33.0397806°N 35.5834806°ECoordinates: 33°02′23.21″N 35°35′00.53″E / 33.0397806°N 35.5834806°E |
Palestine grid | 204/271 |
Population | 340 (together with Tulayl) (1945) |
Area | 5,324 dunams |
Date of depopulation | 21 April 1948 |
Cause(s) of depopulation | Influence of nearby town's fall |
Current localities | Chulata, Sde Eliezer |
Al-Husayniyya (Arabic: الحسينية) was a Palestinian village, depopulated in 1948.
On 13 May 1948, Haganah paramilitary forces committed a crime by killing more than 30 children and women, which led the rest of the people living in the village to flee and seek shelter in Lebanon and Syria.
The village was located 11 kilometres northeast of Safed, on a slightly elevated hill in the southwestern corner of the al-Hula Plain. It stood along the eastern side of a highway that led to Safad and Tiberias.
The Arab geographer Yaqut al-Hamawi noted its ancient buildings and praised one of them, which he claimed had originally been a temple and perhaps was built by Solomon.
In 1881, the Palestine Exploration Fund's Survey of Western Palestine (SWP) described the place as having "a few ruined cattle-sheds".
In the second half of the 19th century, after the Algerian followers of Abdelkader El Djezairi had been defeated by the French in Algeria, they sought refuge in another part of the Ottoman Empire. They were given lands in various locations in Ottoman Syria, including al-Husayniyya, and the nearby villages of Dayshum, Ammuqa, Marus and Tulayl.
In the 1922 census of Palestine, conducted by the British Mandate authorities, the Husainiyeh tribal area had a population of 127; all Muslims, increasing to 274 in the 1931 census; still all Muslims, in a total of 64 houses.