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Kafr Bir’im
Population :
1931 : 554
1944/45 : 710
Kafr
Bir’im Before 1948
The village stood on a rocky hill only
a little higher than the surrounding area, and faced north and west. A
secondary road linked it to a number of villages in the west and east and led
to the coastal highway and the highway to Safad. The village’s name may have
been a corruption of the name of the Canaanite town of Periya’m. In the late nineteenth century,
Kafr Bir’im was described as a stone-built village,
surrounded by gardens, olive trees, and vineyards. The population was estimated to be between 300 and 500. Most of the villagers were Christian; in
modern times the population consisted of 700
Christians and 10 Muslims. Their houses, made of stone and mud, were built close together. Some of the land was forested. Agriculture, irrigated from the abundant
springs, was the primary occupation of the villagers, who were especially
active in olive and fruit cultivation. In 1944/45 a
total of 3,718 dunumns was allocated to cereals and 1,101 dunums were irrigated
or used for orchards. Kafr Bir’im was an archaeological site that contained the
remains of olive presses, a synagogue, tombs, and cisterns.
Occupation and
Depopulation
Kafr
Bir’im surrendered in early November 1948, when Galilee fell to Israeli forces during
Operation Hiram (see ‘Arab al-Samniyya, Acre District). Its residents, along
with those of other border villages, were “temporarily”
expelled for “security reasons.” Some of those expelled across the
border were later allowed to return to Israel, but not to their village. Others
found hiding in caves near the village were transported to
the village of
Jish (3 km to the
southeast) and settled in its previously emptied houses. The Israeli Supreme Court ruled in
July 1952 that there was no reason to prevent their return. The army, however,
levelled the village in 1953.
Israeli
Settlements on Village Lands
The
settlement of Dovev, established in 1963, is orthwest of the village site on
village land. To the northeast, hit farther away from the site, is the
settlement of Bar’am , founded in 1949 by members of
the
Palmach.
The
Village Today
The
village has been demolished. The only standing structure is the church and its
belltower. Crumbled walls, some scattered, partially-collapsed houses, and
extensive rubble over the hillside, all overgrown with bushes and wild grasses . Some of the archaeological remains are still
visible. The village site has been closed off and the
surrounding area declared an archaeological and tourist site.
For more details please visit Kufr Bire’m home :
http://saturn.nildram.co.uk/~sharbely/index.htm
or
http://www.birem.org/
http://www.birem.org/the_full.htm
Vivid
memories from Kufr Bir’im:

This
eastern part of a ruined house in Kafr Bir’im belongs to my
father Shukrallah Rizk Khalil Mousa.
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The church of Kafar Bire’m:
