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・ Shia Islam in Uzbekistan
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Shia villages in Palestine
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・ Shiamak Davar
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Shia villages in Palestine : ウィキペディア英語版
Shia villages in Palestine

From 1923 to 1948, there were seven villages in Mandatory Palestine for which the population was predominantly Shia Muslim (also known as Metawali). They were Tarbikha, Saliha, Malkiyeh, Nabi Yusha, Qadas, Hunin, and Abil al-Qamh.〔Kaufman (2006). The 1922 census also listed the Muslim minority in al-Bassa as Shia, but Kaufman determined they were actually Sunni.〕 These villages were transferred from the French to the British sphere as a result of the border agreement of 1923. All of them were depopulated during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War and their former locations are now in northern Israel. In contrast, the Muslim population of Mandatory Palestine, as with Israel in the present day, was predominantly Sunni.
==History==
At the end of World War I, the British and French governments held most of the Levant under military occupation, with Britain controlling Palestine apart from the northernmost parts, and France controlling Syria and Lebanon. These were administered under the military Occupied Enemy Territorial Administrations (OETA). After the 1919 Treaty of Versailles prescribed the division of the region into mandates, it was decided at the San Remo conference of May 1920 that Britain would have the Mandate for Palestine while France would have the Mandate for Syria and Lebanon.
In September 1920, the first French high commissioner General Henri Gouraud, announced the birth of the state of Greater Lebanon. On December 23, the British and French signed an agreement that broadly defined the boundary between their respective spheres.〔 The agreement also established the Paulet-Newcombe commission to determine the precise boundary, with wide powers to recommend adjustments.〔 In 1921, before the commission had reported, France conducted a census which covered the seven villages and granted Lebanese citizenship to their residents.〔 None of the villages were listed in the 1922 census of Palestine. However, the commission decided on border adjustments which placed the villages on the Palestinian side of the border, along with more than a dozen other villages.〔 The new boundary was agreed in a treaty of September 1923.〔 The citizenship of the residents was not changed to Palestinian until 1926.
The 1931 census counted 4,100 Metawalis in Palestine. Abil al-Qamh was about half Shia and half Greek Christian, while the other six were mostly Shia.〔
During the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, all of the villages were depopulated.〔 Their residents mostly fled as refugees to Lebanon, though some remained in Israel as internally displaced persons.〔 Israeli communities partly or completely on the lands of the former villages include Yuval, Shomera, Zar'it, Shtula, Margaliot, Ramot Naftali, Yir'on, Yiftah, and Malkia.
In 1994, the refugees from the seven villages, who had been classified as Palestinian refugees since 1948, were granted Lebanese citizenship. Some factions in the Lebanese government, Hizbollah in particular, have called for the seven villages to be "returned to Lebanon".〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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