Kafr Naffakh
{{Short description|Abandoned Syrian village in the Golan Heights}}
{{use mdy dates|date=November 2023}}
{{Infobox settlement
| name = Kafr Naffakh
| native_name = ﻛﻔﺮ ﻧﻔﺎخ
| native_name_lang = ar
| other_name = {{Script/Hebrew|כפר נפח}}
| settlement_type = Village
| pushpin_map = Syria Golan
| coordinates = {{coord|33|3|44|N|35|44|27|E}}
| subdivision_type = Country
| subdivision_name = {{SYR}}
| subdivision_type1 = Governorate
| subdivision_name1 = Quneitra
| subdivision_type2 = District
| subdivision_name2 = Quneitra
| subdivision_name3 = Golan Heights
| subdivision_type3 = Region
| extinct_date = June 10, 1967
| extinct_title = Destroyed
| population_as_of = 1960
}}
Kafr Naffakh ({{langx|ar|ﻛﻔﺮ ﻧﻔﺎخ}}) is an abandoned Syrian village in the central Golan Heights.{{cite map|url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/16/CIA_map_of_the_Israel_occupied_Golan_Heights_and_vicinity%2C_October_1994_%28cropped%29.png|title=Golan Heights and vicinity}}
History
Sites and artifacts were found in the village that show human settlement as early as the Roman and Hellenistic eras, during which the village sat next to a central route that connected Syrian cities to the Mediterranean coast. During the Roman era, the village was used as a station for providing services to passengers on the main road. Such a station – "Mutatio" – was placed approximately every six kilometres along the main roads throughout the Roman Empire.{{sfn|Dauphin|Gibson|1994|p=7}} In 2020, an archaeological dig discovered a 1,700-year-old boundary stone on which "Kfar Naffakh" was written in Greek letters. This indicates that the village's name during the Byzantine era was "Naffakh".{{cite news|title=1,700-year-old boundary stone bearing name 'Kfar Nafah' found in Golan Heights|url=https://www.jns.org/1700-year-old-boundary-stone-bearing-the-name-kfar-nafah-found-in-golan-heights/|website=Jewish News Syndicate|date=2020-10-27}}
Transhumance shaped settlement in the Golan for centuries because of its harsh winters. The winters "forced tribespeople until the 19th century to live in hundreds of rudimentary 'winter villages' in their tribal territory. Starting in the second part of the 19th century, villages like Kafr Naffakh became "fixed and formed the nucleus of fully sedentary life in the 20th century Golan."Roy Marom, “[https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0zf1p3d1 Sukayk and al-Summāqah: Mamluk Rural Geography in the Northern Jawlān/Golan Heights in the Light of Qāytbāy’s Endowment Deeds],” in Kate Raphael and Mustafa Abbasi (ed.s), The Golan in the Mamluk and Ottoman Periods: an Archaeological and Historical Study: Excavations at Naʿarān and Farj, In Honour of Moshe Hartal, Yigal Ben Ephraim and Shuqri ‘Arraf, Annual of the Nelson Glueck School of Biblical Archaeology Hebrew Union College—Jewish Institute of Religion Volume xiv (2024): 69-70.
During the 19th century, the village was repopulated by Turkmen settlers,{{cite map|url=https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/17/Demographic_map_of_the_Golan_Heights_-_Before_1967_-_Legend.png|title=Demographic map of the Golan Heights}} who used the ruins of the place to build their houses. Over the years, the village was also inhabited by residents of other origins and by 1960, it had a total of 664 residents. In 1967, with the advance of the IDF in the Golan Heights, the village's residents left their homes and it was abandoned.
During the Syrian rule in the Golan Heights, the village sat on the central route from Quneitra - Daughters of Jacob Bridge, being more or less in the centre of the road. There were centres and bases of the Syrian army in the vicinity of the village, including in Naffakh and Alika. After Israel conquered the Golan Heights in June 1967, the abandoned village served as a temporary settlement nucleus in the Golan Heights. Today, there are several IDF bases in the vicinity of the abandoned village, including Camp Yitzhak (Camp Naffakh).{{cite news|first=Ruth|last=Schuster|title=Name of Israeli Army Base Goes Back 1,700 Years|url=https://www.haaretz.com/archaeology/2020-10-30/ty-article/.premium/name-of-israeli-army-base-goes-back-1-700-years/0000017f-da7c-d42c-afff-dffe91b90000|website=Haaretz|date=Oct 30, 2020}}
The ruins of the village are located near the HaShiryon Junction connecting Highway 91 and Route 978, and slightly west of Naffakh is also the junction connecting the Petroleum Road and Highway 91.
References
{{Reflist}}
Sources
- {{cite journal|first1=Claudine|last1=Dauphin|author-link=Claudine Dauphin|first2=Shimon|last2=Gibson|author2-link=Shimon Gibson|title=יישובים עתיקים וסביבתם בלב הגולן – תוצאותיהן של עשר שנות סקר (1988-1978)|url=https://files.ybz.org.il/periodicals/Cathedra/73/Article_73.4.pdf|journal=Cathedra|volume=73|date=September 1994}}
External links
- [https://www.hadashot-esi.org.il/report_detail_eng.aspx?id=1201&mag_id=115 Description of the findings of the archaeological excavation in Naffakh.]
{{Quneitra Governorate}}
Category:Destroyed populated places
Category:Former populated places in the Golan Heights