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Tami Menashe Settlement

  • nakba memory museum
  • Jan 27
  • 1 min read

Updated: Jun 15

Tami Menashe is a moshav in occupied Palestine, established in 1953 by the General Zionist Movement. It spans an area of 1,800 dunams and consists of 62 farms, 5 subsidiary farms, and a residential annex. The moshav was founded on the lands of the Palestinian village of Abu al-Fadl, whose residents were displaced during the 1948 war. The building that previously served as the headquarters of Hasan Salama is located within the agricultural lands belonging to the village. It was named after Menashe Merovich, a member of Beilus and a politician, who was nicknamed "the last member of Beilus" because he was the last surviving member of Beilus. The early settlers arrived in 1953 and primarily engaged in poultry and livestock farming, as well as citrus and apricot cultivation. In 2006, part of the moshav’s agricultural lands was transferred for the construction of a residential neighborhood. Sources: Due to the scarcity of Arabic sources, we relied on "Israeli" sources: the Hebrew website of the settlement / the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics. The village of Abu al-Fadl is referenced from the Palestine in Memory website.

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