Official Name: | Katzrin |
Settlement Type: | Town |
Seal Type: | Emblem of Katzrin |
Leader Title: | Mayor |
Leader Name: | Dmitry Apartzev |
Mapsize: | 300px |
Pushpin Label Position: | bottom |
Pushpin Map: | Israel Golan#Israel#Syria |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Golan Heights, internationally recognized as Syrian territory occupied by Israel |
Subdivision Type1: | Israeli District |
Subdivision Name1: | Northern District |
Subdivision Type2: | Israeli Subdistrict |
Subdivision Name2: | Golan |
Subdivision Type3: | Syrian Governorate |
Subdivision Name3: | Quneitra Governorate |
Subdivision Type4: | Syrian District |
Subdivision Name4: | Quneitra District |
Subdivision Type5: | Syrian Subdistrict |
Subdivision Name5: | Quneitra Subdistrict |
Established Title: | Founded |
Established Date: | 1977 |
Unit Pref: | Metric |
Coordinates: | 32.992°N 35.691°W |
Elevation M: | 339 |
Katzrin (Hebrew: קַצְרִין; also Qatzrin, Arabic: قصرين|qaṣrīn) is an Israeli settlement organized as a local council in the Golan Heights.[1] Known as the "capital of the Golan",[2] it is the second-largest locality there after Majdal Shams, and the largest Israeli settlement.[1] [3] In it had a population of . It is the seat of Golan Regional Council.
The international community considers Israeli settlements in the Golan Heights illegal under international law, though the Israeli government disputes this.[4]
To the south of Katzrin is the Sea of Galilee, to the north Mount Hermon, and to the west are the Upper Galilee hills of Israel.[5] [6]
The site was occupied from the Middle Bronze Age, continuing into the Iron Age, the Hellenistic and Roman periods (during the latter it was once destroyed), while the most substantial structural remains date from the Late Roman, Byzantine and Early Islamic periods (3rd–4th to mid-8th centuries), when the site was a Jewish village with a synagogue.[7]
The ancient Jewish settlement served as an important trading location in the region but started to decline with the change of trading routes after the Islamic conquest. The village was destroyed in an earthquake in CE 746–749.[8] [9] As a result of the earthquake the declining Jewish community most probably abandoned the location.
During the Mamluk period (13th–14th centuries), it was a Muslim village, and a mosque was built upon the ruins of the synagogue.[7] [8]
In the 1880s, Kisrin, at the east edge of the modern town, was described as "a small Bedawin winter village, with a group of beautiful oak trees and old ruins".[10] From the late 19th century to 1967, the village was occupied by Bedouin and a settled population.[7] Since 1920 and until the independence of Syria in 1944, the area was under the jurisdiction of the French mandate. The Syrian farm of Fakhoura was just to the north-east and had about 250 inhabitants before its depopulation in 1967.[11]
The Israeli settlement of Katzrin was established in 1977 as a planned urban center for the Golan based on a decision of the Israeli government in November 1973. Construction began in 1976.[12] In 1981, under the Golan Heights Law, Israel applied Israeli civil law in the Golan Heights (including Katzrin). This law was condemned internationally and by the United Nations Security Council.[13] [14] [15] Katzrin serves as a district town[16] that provides educational, administrative and cultural services to the surrounding region.[17]
The early residents were young couples and professionals from Tel Aviv and Haifa.[12] At the end of the 1980s, many Jews from the former Soviet Union settled in Katzrin. Today, a third of the city's residents are Jews from the Soviet Union and their descendants. Religious educators also moved to Katzrin, establishing a religious day school and a premilitary academy.[18] Katzrin is divided into six neighbourhoods: Gamla, Naveh, Kedma, Afek, Batra, and Chen.[17] Building of infrastructure for an additional neighbourhood, Yovel, began in 2018.
There are also 30 Druze families and a few Sunni Muslim families living in the town.
See also: Golan Brewery. The Golan Heights Winery is located in Katzrin. In 2008, the large Chinese solar company Suntech Power and Israeli company Solarit Doral built Israel's largest solar power station, a 50 kW rooftop project near the town, and connected it to the electric grid.[19] [20] The Mey Eden mineral water bottling plant and the Golan Olive Oil Mill are in Katzrin. Golan Olive Oil produces some 50 tons of olive oil, sold locally and exported. During the olive harvest season, which begins in October, visitors can watch the processing procedure, from crushing to bottling.[2]
A tourist attraction in Katzrin is the Magic of the Golan, a special effects movie screened at the local mall that depicts the spectacular scenery of the region.[21]
Near Katzrin in 2015, Afek Oil & Gas, a subsidiary of Genie Energy Ltd. and controls Genie Energy Ltd.'s oil and gas exploratory project in Northern Israel and the Golan Heights region, discovered significant oil and natural gas reserves.[22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28] As of October 2015, an estimate of the volume of resources and to what extent they may be extractable is unknown.[29]
Ohalo College, a teacher training college, moved to Katzrin in 1988.[30] In 2010, the college opened a department devoted to sustainable development and renewable energy. Students explore the interrelationship of different renewable energy sources and their impact on the sustainability of development in the Golan and Galilee.[31] Katzrin has twelve preschools (including three for special needs children); two elementary schools (one religious and one secular) and a comprehensive regional high school Nofey Golan with over 1,000 students.[17]
Before 1967, the antiquities site on the outskirts of Katzrin was a closed military zone and off-limits to archaeological research.[7] Investigation by Israeli archaeologists commenced in 1972.[7] Katzrin ancient village and synagogue was reconstructed and opened to the public as a "Talmudic village" set in a national park.[7] The Golan Antiquities Museum in Katzrin houses archeological findings from the region and screens an audiovisual presentation about Gamla, a Jewish town in the Golan Heights that fought the Romans in the 1st century.[32]
Katzrin has a friendship agreement with Mikulov, Czech Republic. In 2012, a Czech delegation visiting Israel and the Golan Heights attended a cornerstone ceremony for Mikulov Park in Katzrin attended by the Czech Deputy Ambassador to Israel. Special features of the park are a miniature replica of the clock tower of Mikulov and an audio station where visitors can learn about the history of Mikulov.[33]