Emek Refaim

Emek Refaim

Emek Refaim ( _he. עמק רפאים, literally "valley of the ghosts") is a street in the German Colony neighborhood in west Jerusalem. Emek Refaim is also used as a general name for the area. It takes its name from the biblical Valley of Rephaim which began its descent from Jerusalem here.

History

The first residents of Emek Refaim were German Templers, who settled there in the 19th century. Biblical inscriptions in German Fraktur script can still be seen on the lintels of some of the homes. As German aliens, the Templers were deported by the British during World War II for expressing Nazi sympathies. They built one and two storey houses similar in appearance to the homes they left in Baden-Württemberg.

Architecture

Many of the buildings on Emek Refaim date from Ottoman and British Mandatory times. Many of the distinctive German Templer buildings are still standing, as are elegant villas that belonged to wealthy Arabs before the establishment of the State of Israel.

Some homes in the area were abandoned by local Palestinians or expropriated after 1948 [ [http://www.juf.org/news_public_affairs/article.asp?key=6993 JUF News : The man on the roof ] ] , and many issues of property ownership and displacement have yet to be resolved. A former Arab resident of the Bauerle House, located at 10 Emek Refaim (originally built by the Templers), wrote about a painful visit to her home after 1967. [ [http://www.alnakba.org/testimony/hala.htm Bibliography ] ]

A movie theater, Smadar, on the corner of Emek Refaim and Lloyd George Street, was built during the British Mandate and known as the Regent or the Orient. At the corner of Emek Refaim, on a hill overlooking the Hinnom Valley, is the Scottish Church of St. Andrew's built in 1927 and incorporating local Armenian tile-work. Similar tiling can be seen on the facades of some buildings on Emek Refaim.

The residents of Emek Refaim have banded together to protest plans to build a hotel and residential towers in the area, destroying the historic character of the neighborhood.

ee also

*German Colony, Jerusalem

References


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