Raml Zayta | |
Native Name: | رمل زيتة |
Native Name Lang: | ar |
Other Name: | Raml Zeita (Khirbat Qazaza) |
Settlement Type: | Village |
Pushpin Map: | Mandatory Palestine |
Pushpin Mapsize: | 200 |
Coordinates: | 32.4283°N 34.9713°W |
Grid Name: | Palestine grid |
Grid Position: | 145/203 |
Subdivision Type: | Geopolitical entity |
Subdivision Name: | Mandatory Palestine |
Subdivision Type1: | Subdistrict |
Subdivision Name1: | Tulkarm |
Established Title1: | Date of depopulation |
Established Date1: | 15 March 1948 |
Established Title2: | Repopulated dates |
Population As Of: | 1945 |
Population Total: | 140[1] |
Blank Name Sec1: | Cause(s) of depopulation |
Blank3 Name Sec1: | Current Localities |
Blank3 Info Sec1: | Sde Yitzhak,[2] Chadera |
Raml Zayta (Arabic: رمل زيتة, Raml Zeitâ), also Khirbet Qazaza, was a Palestinian Arab village located 15 km northwest of Tulkarm.[3]
In the 1931 census of Palestine it was counted with Zeita, Tulkarm, and together they had a population 1165, all Muslim, in a total of 237 houses.[4]
In the 1945 statistics, the village had a population of 140 Muslims, with a total of 14,837 dunams of land.[1] [5] The land ownership of the village before occupation in dunams:[5]
Owner | Dunams |
---|---|
Arab | 12,720 |
Jewish | 1,453 |
Public | 664 |
Total | 14,837 |
Types of land use in dunams in the village in 1945:[6] [7]
Land Usage | Arab | Jewish | Public |
---|---|---|---|
Citrus and bananas | 126 | 4 | - |
Irrigated and plantation | 27 | 4 | - |
Cereal | 12,554 | 1,441 | 111 |
Urban | - | - | - |
Cultivable | 12,707 | 1,449 | 111 |
Non-cultivable | 13 | 4 | 553 |
According to Rosemarie Esber, the village was depopulated on 15 March 1948 during the 1948 Palestine war.[8] Benny Morris lists it as one of the villages for which the causes and date of depopulation are unknown.[9]
Esber, in an interview with a refugee from Raml Zaita, Zakiya Abu Hammad, writes that according to his memories, Yishuv forces had besieged the village for about two weeks, causing a lack of food: "[The Jews] started going into people's homes and forcing them out. They told us, "You either leave or we'll kill you." Some people were killed on the roads, as they abandoned their homes... They followed us. Those who were lucky, escaped with their lives, others did not." The villages were then forced out of their town and the surrounding villagers.[8]
According to Walid Khalidi writing in 1992, an Arab family is still living in the village in one of the original houses.[2]