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Jaffa
The Bride Of Palestine, Yafa
يافا - יפו
Ethnically cleansed days ago
 
The old city Of Jaffa, The Bride Of Palestine, looking north from 'Ajami neighborhood.               eMail to a friend
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Before Occupation
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Geography and Demography

Statistic/Fact

Value
Elevation from the sea 32 meters
Maps A detailed map of Jaffa city (almost 1 MB in size)


Map of Jaffa district and neighboring villages

Coastal shore length 5.5 (km)
Distance from other towns
Town Distance From Jaffa
al-Latrun 32 (km) west
Bab al-Wad 39 (km) west
Beersheba 105 (km) south west
al-Lydd airport 19 (km) west
Safad 162 (km) north West
Qisaryah 63 (km) north
al-Matalah 201 (km) north
Naharya 130 (km) north
Jinin 99 (km) north west via R'as al-'Ayn
Amman, Jordan 165 (km)
New York, USA 9,143 (km)
Jaffa's name though history
Inhabitants

Jaffa's Name

Canaanites

Jaffa was first founded by the Canaanites and they used to call it Yafi (gorgeous).

Ancient Egyptians Yapu or Iapu
Israelites Yafo (its current name)
Assyrians Ya-ap-pu
Greeks Yoppa
Arabs Arabs called Jaffa Yafa, and some geographic Arabic books referred it by Yefeh too.
Nearby rivers and wadies al-'Awja River terminates 9 km north of Jaffa, and Rubin River (also known by Wadi al-Sarar) terminates 13 km south of Jaffa.
City area size In 1945, Jaffa city covered an area of 9,737 dunums, which didn't include the roads, wadies, and railroads, ... etc.
District's size Jaffa's district covered an area of 334.8 square kilometers, which included 18.6 square kilometers for roads, wadies, railroads, ... etc. In 1945, Zionists owned 129.5 square kilometers from the total district size, which constituted 38.6% of the district's total size.
Villages and settlements The district of Jaffa included 23 villages within its municipality, two German colonies (Sarounah and Weil Helma), and the following Jewish colonies:- Tel Aviv, Pitach Teqva (Mlabiss), Choloun, Tel Luftinski, and Beit Yam. Click here for a detail map for the villages and the nearby colonies in the district of Jaffa.
Population
Year Total Arabs Jews
1931 51,866 44,638 7,209
1945 66,310 66,280 N/A
1947 70,760 70,760 N/A
1950 N/A 4,000 N/A
1958 56,500 6,500 50,000
1965 100,000 10,000 90,000
Before the 19th century, Jaffa's population varied between 500 to 5,000 people.
Click here for complete population break down.
Port Jaffa and Haifa ports were considered to be the major ports in Palestine, and both were publicly owned and operated by the Government of Palestine.
Before WW II, Jaffa's port was underdeveloped, and because of its treacherous sea ships often had to continue sailing north to Haifa. Usually, ships had to anchor few miles from the shore, and then unload their passengers and goods to small boats to transport them to the shoreline. As Haifa' port, Jaffa's port was developed just before WW II to receive steamers and passenger ships.
Average Temperature
Month/1944 Average* Average Hi* Average Low*
January 13 17.4 8.5
February N/A 18.6 N/A
March 14.6 20 9.1
April 17.1 22.5 11.8
May 19.1 23.3 14.9
June 22.4 27.2 18.6
July 24.6 28.7 20.4
August 24.6 29.1 20
September 23.5 28.7 18.4
October 21.7 27.2 16.2
November 18.4 22.8 13.9
December 14.7 18.7 10.7
* In centigrade.
For conversion purposes, temperature of 24 centigrade = 75 fahrenheit.
Rainfall and humidity
Year Rainfall* Humidity*
1929 727.7 76
1930 671.9 72
1931 404.7 70
1932 315.7 68
1933 308.3 71
1934 405.5 77
1935 718.0 75
1936 488.7 73
1937 N/A 75
1938 765.2 77
1939 880.3 69
1940 578.3 68
1941 525.9 68
1942 451.4 68
1943 814.7 70
1944 470.4 70
* In millimeters

Jaffa's population in details

Year Total Arab Muslims Arab Christians European Jews Others No. Of Houses
1886 17,000* 16,900 N/A*** 100 N/A N/A
1906 47,000* 42,500 N/A*** 5,500 N/A N/A
1910 70,000* 62,000 N/A*** 8,000 N/A N/A
1922 47,709 20,699 6,850 20,152 8 N/A
1931 51,866 35,506 9,132 7,209** 19 11,304
1945 66,310 50,880 15,400 N/A 30 N/A
1947 70,760 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
1950 N/A 4,000 N/A*** N/A N/A N/A
1958 56,500 6,500 N/A*** 50,00 N/A N/A
1965 100,000 10,000 N/A*** N/A 30 N/A
* These statistics also includes the villages and Jewish settlements in Jaffa district (Tel Aviv, Betach Tikvah, ..etc.)
** Excluding Tel Aviv.
*** Arab Christians statistics are included with Arab Muslims statisti
cs.

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Before Occupation

Statistic/Fact

Value
Mayor Jaffa's last mayor was Dr. Yosef Haykal.
City's income and expenses
Year Income* Expenses*
1927 29,148 28,880
1929 36,546 36,097
1933 65,732 51,424
1935 96,659 91,810
1936 49,039 66,882
1939 50,273 47,458
1941 84,670 75,892
1943 119,340 99,995
1944 201,639 193,585
* In Palestinian Pound
Agriculture Jaffa was well known for its cash crops as citrus and Bananas. In 1945, Arabs planted 146,316 dunums with Citrus, while 66,403 dunums were planted by Jews.
Industries Jaffa was the most advanced city in Palestine in the development of its commercial, banking, fishing, and agriculture industries. Jaffa had many factories specializing in cigarette making, cement making, tile and roof tile production, iron casting, cotton processing plants, traditional handmade carpets, leather products, wood box industry for Jaffa orange, textile, presses and publications. It should also be noted that the majority of all publications and newspapers in Palestine were published in Jaffa.

Since Israeli still maintains and enforces the "Law Of Absentees", all Jaffa's industries, farms, buses, cars, railroads, cattle, real states, ... etc. have been looted and became the property of the "Jewish state". When similar injustices were perpetrated against Europe's Jewish citizens (by the Germans and the Swiss during WWII), the Jews of the world demanded justice for their looted art works and properties. The question which begs to be asked is :-

Are the Palestinian people entitled for compensation for their looted properties?

Port's
imports and exports
Year Tons Imported Tons Exported
1926 121,552 45,554
1927 95,322 31,073
1928 113,269 330,699
1929 129,625 75,841
1930 133,241 100,862
1931 151,975 77,873
1932 221,123 106,824
1933 348,767 96,888
1934 486,974 120,967
1935 402,525 171,819
1936 135,493 115,302
1937 126,842 152,427
1938 113,042 149,766
1939 112,711 153,856
1940 43,025 58,704
1941 24,641 1,971
1942 3,219 1,980
1943 22,464 10,776
1944 8,886 7,493
Fishing industry
Season Quantity in Tons Worth in British Pound
1921 140 7,277
1922 147 13,760
1929-1930 306 15,325 *
1935-1936 670 23,028
1937-1938 705 26,318 **
1940-1941 550 19,946
1942-1943 573 119,190
1943-1944 957 250,890
1944-1945 1,056 292,570 ***
* Palestine total fishing for this year was 951 tons, which was worth 46,102 British Pounds.
** Palestine total fishing for this year was 1,699 tons, which was worth 59,651 British Pounds.
*** This was the only yearly statistic which did not include Tel Aviv's totals.
Newspapers

Name

Notes
Filisteen Founded in 1909 by 'Issa Doud al-'Issa and Yousef al-'Issa. This newspaper was considered to be the largest newspapers in Palestine before al-Nakba, and al-Nakba it resumed publication in Jerusalem, and it 1967 was shut down.
al-Salam Founded in 1920 by Naseem Maloul, Its name means Peace.
al-Jazeerah Founded in 1924 by Hassan and Mahamoud al-Dajani. Is name means Island.
Sout al-Haq Founded in 1927 by Fihmi al-Husseini. Its name means The Voice of Truth.
al-Jamia' al-Islamyyah An islamic related paper, which was founded in 1932 by Suliman al-Taji al-Farouki.
al-Difa' Founded in 1934 by Ibrahim al-Shanti. Its name means Defense.
Haqiqat al-'Amr Founded in 1937 by the Histadrut in Tel Aviv.
al-Jihad Founded in 1939 by Muhammad al-Maslami
al-Sha'b Founded in 1947 by Hilmi Hanoun and Idmound Rouck. Its name means The People.
al-Youm Founded in 1949 by the Histadrut and its editor was Dr. Abu al-Thu'yb. Its name means Today.
al-Huryyah Founded by Heirout part (now the Likud party). Its name means Liberty.
Sada al-Taribyah Semi monthly newspaper founded in 1952. Its name means The Echo Of Education.
al-Youm le 'Awladuna Semi monthly newspaper for kids founded in 1960. Its name means A Day For Our Children.
al-T'awun Founded in 1961 by Dar al-Nasher al-'Arabi. Its name means Collaboration.
Magazines

Name

Notes
al-'Asma'i Founded in 1909 by Hana 'Abdallah al-'Issa, which was the first magazine to be published in Palestine.
al-Haqq Founded in 1923 by Fihmi al-Husseini. Its name means The Truth.
al-Nashra al-Tijaryyeh Founded in 1924 by Jaffa's chamber of commerce. Its name means The Commercial Publication.
al-Tahreer Founded in either 1935 or 1936 by Iskandar al-Halabi and Muhammad Yousef al-Din al-Irani. Its name means Liberation.
Markets/Suqs

Suq Name

Notes
Bistriss-Iskandar 'Awad Named after the affluent Lebanese families, Bistriss and Iskandar 'Awad. The Suq used to start from the government building and it ended just before Jamal Basha avenue.
al-Dayr Belongs to the Waqf of the Roman Orthodox monastery.
al-Huboub For grain and agricultural products Suq.
al-Manshyyah It was located in al-Manshyyah neighborhood.
al-Maslakh The meat market.
al-Balabseh The merchants who founded this Suq trace their roots back to Balbees, Egypt.
al-Is'aaf The most modern Suq in Jaffa which was built on Jaffa's old cemetery.
Neighborhoods
Name Notes
The old city Located in the center of the city, which including al-Tabyeh, al-Qal'ah (the castle), and al-Naqeeb.
al-Manshyyah Located North of the city center, which was built after the WW I. The neighborhood was destroyed during the 1948 war.
'Irsheed Located south of al-Manshyyah, which was founded by Egyptians from Rasheed, Egypt.
al-'Ajami Located south of city center.
al-Jabalyyah A neighborhood south of al-'Ajami.
'Ihrayyesh A neighborhood North of al-'Ajami.
al-Nuzha The most modern section of Jaffa located west of city center, and it was built after WW I.
al-Malakan N/A
Residential areas The residential areas of Darweesh* (south), al-'Aryaneh, Abu Kabeer* (2 km west), Hamad* (north of Abu Kabeer), Sabeel Abu al-Nabut, al-Turki, Tall al-Reesh (west of city center) ...etc.

* These residential areas were founded by Egyptians soldiers who stayed behind after Ibrahim Basha's (son of Muhammad Ali) Palestine campaign, which ended in 1841.

Click here, for detail map description of all Jaffa neighborhoods.

Schools
Boys School Notes
al-'Amouryah
High School*
Named after Abu 'Ubayda Ibn al-Jarah, the conqueror of Palestine in 18 Hijra, whose shrine is located in 'Imwas. The high school was founded in 1937, and was located in al-Nuzha neighborhood. The school had a library that used to contain 4,700 books.
al-'Amouryah*
Elementary
Located next al-'Amouryah High School, and it had a library that contained 133 books.
al-Marwanyah* N/A
al-Ameriyah* N/A
al-'Ayoubyah* The school was founded in 1938, and it was located in al-'Ajami neighborhood. The schools library used to contain 991 books.
Hassan 'Arafa** Founded in 1940-1941 in al-'Ajami neighborhood. The school carries the name of its founder, a wealthy merchant by the name of Hassan 'Arafa, and it had an attendance of 404 students, and a library that contained 1,331 books.
al-Amawyah** Elementary school founded on October 10th, 1945
al-'Abasiyih** Elementary school that was founded on December 15th , 1946.
al-Riyad** An elementary school founded on December 1st , 1946, and it was named after the neighborhood that it was located in.
al-Yarmouk** Elementary school founded on November 1st, 1947
Tariq Ibn Ziyad** An elementary school founded on October 10th, 1947.
al-Fisalyah*** An elementary school located in the al-Manshyyah neighborhood, which had an attendance of 122 boys.
al-Islahyah*** An elementary school located in the Abu Kabeer neighborhood, which had an enrollment of 196 boys, and its library contained 524 books.

* Government school
** City school. Note that all city schools have cumulatively 39 instructors.
*** Private school
Notes
1)Cumulatively, all Government schools had an enrollment of 1,698 boys, and 54 instructors.
2)Cumulatively the last five city schools had an enrollment of 1,120 boys, and there libraries contained 766 books.
3)Jaffa also contained another undocumented 3 boys school and 6 mixed foreign schools.

Click here, for general school statistics.

Girls School Notes
al-Zahra'
High School*
Named after Madinat al-Zahra' nearby Qurtobah, Andalusia (Southern Spanish province), which was founded 1938 in al-Nuzha neighborhood. The school also used to have a library that contained 1,659 books.
Banat Yaffa* Located in al-Manshyyah neighborhood.
Khawlah Bent al-'Azhar* Located in al-Manshyyah neighborhood.
'Ameirah Subhyah* Located in al-'Ajami neighborhood.
'Asma' Bent al-Sideeq* Located in al-'Ajami neighborhood.
al-'Adawyah** An elementary school founded on October 10th, 1943, which had an enrollment of 468 students who were teaching them 14 instructors, and a library that had 538 books.
* Government school, and cumulatively had 1,604 students, and 45 instructors.
** City school.

Click here, for general school statistics.

Mosques

Name

Notes
al-Tabyeh The oldest mosque located in al-Tabyeh neighborhood in the Old City
al-Shaykh Raslan Located in the old city next to the Latin Monastery.
Hassan Basha Located on the road leading to the port near al-Manshiyyah neighborhood. The mosque is still standing, but it is abandoned and need serious renovations guys! The mosque was named after its founder the Algerian Hassan Basha who was the governor of Jaffa before WW I.
al-Bahr Located next to Hassan Basha mosque.
al-Kabeer Also known by al-Nabut mosque, named after the former Turkish governor of Jaffa. Marble columns from khirbats nearby Qissarya and al-Majdal 'Asqalan have been cannibalized for the mosque's construction.
al-Dabagh Located in the old city and named after the family which founded it (an affluent Jaffa family).
al-'Ajami Located in al-'Ajami neighborhood.
'Irsheed Located in 'Irsheed neighborhood.
al-'Jabalyyah Located in al-'Jabalyyah neighborhood.
al-Siksik Located west of the city center.
Hassan Biek Located in al-Manshyyah neighborhood.
al-Nuzha Located in al-Nuzha neighborhood.

It should be note that there were more mosques in the residential areas located between the plantations areas (bayarat) and Jaffa City.

Churches and Monasteries Jaffa had ten churches and three Monasteries.
  • Each of the Christian sects in Jaffa maintained a church of its own: Roman Catholics, Maronites, Armenian, Qebtic, Scottish, and Anglican Lutherans.
  • The Roman Orthodox maintained a church, a monastery for Saint Michael, and another church known by Saint George.
  • The Latin sect maintained a church, a monastery for Saint Peter, and another one for Saint Anthony as well.
Hospitals

Name

Notes
al-Dajani Founded by Dr. Fou'ad al-Dajani in the early 30s. It had 50 beds and served 2,221 patients in 1944.
Government Founded during the Ottoman period in al-'Ajami neighborhood. In 1944, it had 160 beds, and served 2,939 patients.
French Founded in 1876 in al-'Ajami neighborhood, and in 1944 it had 57 beds, and served 869 patients.
British The hospital was located in al-'Ajami neighborhood, and in 1944 it had 160 beds, and served 2,939 patients.
German The hospital was in operation until WW II and until then it used to have 20 beds.
Archeological sites

Name

Notes
Tel Yafa Contains the remains of a tower, graves, and written materials nearby Sabeel Abu Nbut neighborhood.
Tel Muqdad Located at the termination point of al-'Awja River (9 km north of Jaffa), which contained an ancient tower and building foundations.
Tel al-Qusylah Located south of al-Haram (Seidna al 'Ali) village
Tel Jareishah Also know by Tel Napoleon because it was the camping grounds of Napoleon during Jaffa's siege in 1799. This Tel contained an ancient cemetery.
al-Haddar Located near al-'Awja river which contained the remains of dams and water mills.
al-Khirbah Contained inscriptions and ancient mosaics.
Tel al-Raqeet Elevated 40 meters above see level and located 4 km north of the al-'Awja river termination point (just west of Keiryat Sha'ol)
Tel Abee Zeitun Located near al-Haddar (see above location) near the al-'Awja river.
Rashboun Also known by khirbat al-Muntar, located East of 'Arsouf.
Khirbat al-Hadrah Located near al-Haddar (see above location) near the al-'Awja river, which contained an ancient cemetery.

Jaffa's School Statistics

General School Counts Statistics (based on 1946 census)

School
Funding

Boys
Schools
Girls
Schools
Mixed
Schools
Total
Government 4 5 - 9
City 2 1 - 3
Private and National 8 3 13 24
Foreign 3 2 6 11
Total 17 11 19 47

Students Enrollment Breakdown By School Type (based on 1946 census)

Students Enrollment

Government City Others Total
Boys 1,704 935 4,272 6,911
Girls 1,533 372 2,724 4,629
Total 3,237 1,307 6,996 11,540
Percentage 28.1% 11.3% 60% 100%

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Occupation and Ethnic Cleansing

Statistic/Fact

Value
Occupation date 13th of May 1948
Attacking Israeli force More than 5,000 well trained and well equipped Haganah and IZL forces.
City defenders

Jaffa defenders were made up from of a combination forces as follows:-

  1. Arab Liberation Army headed by 'Abdel Nijim al-Din and Michael al-'Issa (Palestinian Christian from Jaffa).

  2. Local Palestinian volunteers.

  3. 50 Yugoslavian Muslim Mujahideens who volunteered to defend the city.

  4. Many Palestinian Germans from the German colonies near Jaffa and some Italian volunteers.

Altogether, the defending force was 1,500 volunteers strong, which was very poorly trained, under armed, and they had few months only to build Jaffa's crumbling defenses. Despite the odds, many of these heroes withstood a three months onslaught and siege.

It should be noted that Jaffa was never allocated to the Jewish state by the UN GA partition plane, and it had also no Arab Armies.

Click here, to read more about the battle for for Jaffa in Arabic.

Refugees' migration route The mass majority of Jaffa's inhabitants, numbering at least 50,000, were pushed into the sea. Similarly, Haifa's population, numbering at least 35,000, suffered the same fate on the May 23rd, 1948. .  Click here to view a map that illustrates refugees' migration routes.

Via boats, many of the refugees landed in Gaza, 'Areash (Egypt), and some made it all the way to Beirut (Lebanon). Also some people fled inland to al-Ramla, al-Lydd, and the well off refugees fled to Jerusalem and Amman.

Ironically, often Zionists accuse the Arabs of plotting to push the Jews into the sea!

Ethnical cleansing The mass majority of Jaffa's population were ethnically cleansed. Out of the 70,000 Palestinians who used to call Jaffa home, only 3,650 were allowed to stay. The remaining Palestinian population were boxed in al-'Ajami neighborhood, where their movements were severely restricted until 1966.

Click here, for a detail eye witness account depicting the cleaning of Jaffa.

Casualties on both sides According to Manachem Bagen, IZL has taken at least 1,000 casualties (either killed or injured), and unknown number for Haganah's casualties. On the Palestinian side, they suffered over 1,300 killed including 20 Yugoslavian Muslim Mujahideens.

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Jaffa Today

Soon after occupation, the Zionists blew up and bulldozed most of Jaffa's (75%) Arab section, and only the al-'Ajami, Old City, and small part of al-Mansheyyah survived demolition. Mostly (if not all) Jaffa's Suqs were obliterated including Suq al-Nahaseen, Suq al-Balabseh, Suq al-Maslakh, ..etc. In 1954, Jaffa became the suburb of Tel Aviv, and since then both cities are known by Tel Aviv-Yafo. Currently, Jaffa's Old City neighborhood is being renovated, and mostly it is being inhabited by artists.
Jaffa's main port has been closed and all its shipping has been diverted either to Tel Aviv or Isdud ports. Jaffa's main Clock Square now called Kikea Hagana (The Haganah's Square) and Jaffa's main street Bistress-Iskandar 'Awad is now known by Rehev Mifrats Shelomo. Jamal Basha street name has been changed to Jerusalem street, and big portion of al-Manshiyyah neighborhood became a public park. It also should be note that currently Jaffa's Arab population numbers around 10,000 people.

Click here for up to date information about the situation of Palestinian Arabs in Jaffa.

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Bibliography

Our primary sources for the above data was Biladuna Filisteen (second set, volume four) by Mustafa Murad al-Dabagh and The Palestine Encyclopedia.

http://www.palgates.com/Cities/Sub_City_Details.asp?CityID=623

Oral History

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Videos

Adding a video has never been easier, click here to see what other members have added.

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Stories and Memories

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Pictures

  • General view from the south beach looking north, 1898-1914. Matson Collection.
  • General view of the port area, before 1914. Matson Collection
  • General view from north beach looking south, before 1914. Matson Collection
  • General view from the sea looking east , 1898-1914. Matson Collection.
  • General view from the Jaffa's orange groves looking West, 1898-1914. Matson Collection.
  • General view from the Jaffa's orange groves looking south, 1898-1914. Matson Collection.
  • General view from the sea looking east, 1898-1914. Matson Collection.
  • General view from the Jaffa's orange groves looking south, 1898-1914. Matson Collection.
  • Looking South On Jaffa Harbor In The Early 1920s
  • Jaffa's Harbor from the sea ,early 1930s
  • A demonstration in Jaffa's central square against the plans of the British occupation to increase Jewish refugees immigration into Palestine, October 1933. Click here to see a similar demonstration in Jerusalem.
  • Jaffa's fishermen in 1870
  • The Exodus Of Jaffa's Residents Via Boats, May-1948. Click here to see another unique picture for the people of Acre (Akka) as they were being pushed into the see. Ironically, Israelis claim that Palestinians are trying to commit this crime! Click on image to see a larger picture.
  • Street scene in the old city next to the Jaffa's famous Clock tower, before 1914. Matson Collection
  • Street scene in the old city, before 1945. Matson Collection
  • Street scene in the old city, before 1920. Matson Collection
  • Street scene in the old city next to the Grand Mosque, before 1920. Matson Collection
  • General view from the sea looking east, 1898-1914. Matson Collection.
  • Street scene in the old city, before 1914. Matson Collection
  • Street scene in the old city, before 1920. Matson Collection

    Click Here For More Jaffa Pictures

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    Related Town Links

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      Message Board

    Topic Replies Count
    Posted by Webmaster on FEBRUARY-17-2008
          Last reply posted on MARCH-3-2008

    Will you accept a new homeland & compensation instead of Palestine and you right of return?
    هل تقبل التوطين والتعويض بديل عن الوطن وحق العودة؟

    7
    Posted by Webmaster on FEBRUARY-17-2008
          Last reply posted on APRIL-10-2008

    Specific Board for Prisoners- صفحة مخصصة لأخبار الأسرى
    1
    Posted by Norman Ali Khalaf on JULY-12-2006
          Last reply posted on JULY-12-2006

    Sons and daughters of Jaffa City:
    2
    Posted by Webmaster on JULY-4-2006
          Last reply posted on JULY-12-2006

    Obituaries Announcements Board -صفحة الوفيات
    2
    Posted by Webmaster on JULY-4-2006

    Graduation Announcements Board - صفحة مناسبات التخرج
    0
    Posted by Webmaster on JULY-4-2006

    Marriage Announcements Board - صفحة مناسبات الزواج
    0
    Posted by Webmaster on MAY-7-2001
          Last reply posted on MAY-19-2001

    Sign Jaffa's Guest Book - سجل الزوار
    104

    Be innovative & take an initiative, the Message Board section has been built to recreate our sense of community. Click here for example topics which you can use.

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    411 Directory Service

    To contact any of the below members, simply click on the names.
    Display Name Clan/Hamolah Country of Residence
    Musleh Musleh JORDAN, AL-SAFRIYYA
    Naim Al siksik Al sakasik -
    ابو ابراهيم دويدار دويدار طرابلس, ليبيا
    عاشق يافا - LEBANON
    ابوشندي - AMMAN
    Ny3ram; sahabat - -
    وليد هنية هنية عمان, الأردن
    Esmat Ghanem Ghanem KUWAIT, KUWAIT
    UM Mohammed Abueljubain -
    Massoud Nimer Massoud Abo Al Afyeh Abo Al Afyeh K. S. A. , K. S. A.
    MAHER KAYALI - ITALY, ITALY
    فلسطيني خضر الامارات, الامارات
    تامر العزب - -
    ياسمين ابو زيد يافا
    أسعد عبد الرحمن السيد أحمد / القردحجي اءرحاض, اءسعئدحة
    علي أروادي أروداي اءرحاض
    Saeed Kayyali AMMAN, JORDAN
    سامي الرشيدي سكر الرشيدي العاصمة, الاردن
    Jehan Al Hasani - AMMAN, JORDAN
    عبدالفتاح محمد غانم غانم عمان, ألأردن
    Shamsuddin Dabbagh - -
    جواد الديباش