Tuqu'
Tuquʿ or Tequʿ is a Palestinian town in the Bethlehem Governorate, located southeast of Bethlehem in the occupied West Bank. The modern part of the town was built up in 1948 and lies adjacent to Khirbet Tuqu', from which it takes its name. It is administered by the Tuqu' municipal council along with two other localities: Khirbet ad-Deir and Al-Halqum. As of 2019, the modern center of Tuqu' had a population of 8,767, Khirbet Tuqu' had a population of 131, Al -Halqum of 266, and Khirbet ad-Deir of 2,009.
The town and its villages are part of a wider village cluster - along with Za'atara, Beit Ta'mir, Hindaza, Nuaman, Ubeidiya, and al-Asakra - that the nomadic pastoralist Ta'amreh tribe of Palestinian Bedouins have lived in for at least hundreds of years. While Tuqu has a municipal jurisdiction of over 191,262 dunams, the built-up area is small, consisting of only 590 dunams, and 98.5% of the village's land was classified as Area C and 1.5% as Area B in the 1995 accords.
The Israeli settlement of Tekoa, initially established in 1975 as a Nahal military outpost, was built on 1071 dunams of land which, according to ARIJ, Israel confiscated from the Palestinian citizens of Tuqu'. Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem, are illegal under international law.
Etymology
Strong's Concordance states that Tekoa means in Hebrew "a stockade". Gesenius' lexicon uses "the pitching" in reference to tents. Horatio Balch Hackett gives the root תקע, meaning "to strike", and like Gensenius connects this to driving of tent pegs into the ground, noting the area's ongoing traditional nomadic pastoralist way at the time of his visit in 1852.Location
Teqoa is located 12 km or c. 5 miles south of Bethlehem. Khirbet ad-Deir is just to the north of modern Tuqu', with al-Halqom lying to its east. Khirbet Tuqu' lies directly to the southeast of modern Tuqu', between the two small Palestinian villages of Al Maniya and Wadi Muhammed, which lies to the west. Also to the west, north of Wadi Muhammed, are Al Manshiya and Marah Rabah. To the north of Tuqu' is Haramala, a small village that is part of the Jannatah municipal council. Israeli settlements are encroaching from the south, overtaking Kisan, Palestine next to Tuqu', and from the east in what is known as the Teqoa wilds, where a series of settlements, broadly called Tekoa (Israeli settlement) continue to be developed.Biblical references
The location of biblical Teqoa is elaborately described in Scripture. In the Jewish Encyclopedia, Isidore Singer notes that "the Greek text of a passage lost in the Hebrew places it, together with Bethlehem and other towns of the hill-country of Judah, south of Jerusalem". Singer offers as secure the identification of the site at "Khirbat Taḳu'ah". Jeremiah places Teqoa in the south, and two other passages speak about the desert, or wilderness, of Tekoa. However, describes the prophet as "a herdsman of Tekoa", suggesting that the land was reasonable for shepherding.According to biblical sources, Ephrathites from Bethlehem and the Calebites from Hebron founded Teqoa. Samuel speaks of a "wise woman" of Tekoa in the time of David. King Rehoboam fortified the city and made it strategically important. The people of Teqoa who returned from Babylon were Calebites, and they participated in rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem.
History
Modern Tuqu' is located immediately west of Khirbet Tuqu', an ancient site with ruins of what is identified as biblical Teqoa, also mentioned by other sources in Classical antiquity.Hellenistic and Roman periods
During the Maccabean Revolt it was fortified by the Greek general Bacchides. Josephus again mentions Teqoa in connection with the First Jewish–Roman War. Eusebius mentions a village by the name of Teqoa.Byzantine period
Teqoa is again mentioned in Byzantine sources. The Bible indicates Teqoa as the birthplace of prophet Amos, and from the 4th century CE on a tomb alleged to be his was said to be visible at the village. A chapel built over the tomb is attested in the 6th century and is mentioned again in the 8th. The ruins consist of a double cave over what was a baptismal font, mosaic floors; a Monophysite monastery is located near the tomb. Byzantine ceramics have been found. The remains of the Byzantine church and monastery are still visible.When Victor Guérin visited the site in 1863, he described the remains of an almost completely destroyed church, and an octagonal baptismal font, carved into a monolithic block of reddish limestone, measuring a meter and ten centimeters deep inside, and one meter thirty centimeters in diameter. On different sides of the octagon crosses were carved. At the bottom of the baptismal font the water flowed through an opening into a tank. The Survey of Western Palestine, with data collected between 1872 and 1877, refers again to the font: "There is also a very fine octagonal font about 4 feet high and 4 feet 3 inches diameter of inscribed circle; on every other side is a design. Two of these designs represent crosses, a third is a wreath, the fourth is formed by two squares interlaced diagonally to one another. The font is of good reddish stone."
The baptismal font was seized by Israeli soldiers in 2020 from outside the Mayor's house where it was being temporarily displayed until a museum could be constructed to showcase it.
Muslim conquest and Early Muslim period
Teqoa was captured during the Muslim conquest of Syria and with time, several of its inhabitants converted to Islam. There was a significant nomadic Bedouin presence in the village's vicinity.Crusader and Ayyubid period
Teqoa was known as "Casal Techue" by the Crusaders who conquered Palestine in 1099. Its Christian residents welcomed the Crusaders. Medieval chronicler William of Tyre relates that the Christians of the village aided the Crusaders during the Siege of Jerusalem in 1099, by guiding them to local springs and food sources. Many of the villagers also joined the Crusader army.In 1108, the Russian traveller Abbot Daniel noted that Casal Techue was "a very big village" with a mixed Christian and Muslim population. The village was granted by King Fulk and Queen Melisende to the canons of the Holy Sepulchre in 1138 in exchange for Bethany, the concession allowing the inhabitants to collect bitumen and 'salt' from the Dead Sea shores. The area's population included villeins comprising local Christians and Muslims, the latter being Islamised former Christians, and apparently also recent Frankish settlers, with Bedouin living outside the village.The ruins of a castle, a Frankish manor house from the period, are found at Khirbat at-Teqoa at the edge of the biblical and Byzantine archaeological mound, some 41x48x60 m in size, and protected by a rock-cut ditch.
Zengid forces captured Casal Techue in 1138. The Knights Templar under Robert the Burgundian managed to recapture the town easily, but experienced their first military defeat when Zengid forces counterattacked, leaving the area between the town and Hebron "strewn with Templar bodies" according to William of Tyre. He blamed the Templars' defeat on their failure to pursue fleeing Muslim forces which allowed them to regroup just outside Casal Techue.
Syrian geographer Yaqut al-Hamawi described it as "a village famous for its honey" during a visit there in 1225, during Ayyubid rule.
Ottoman period
Teqoa, like all of Palestine, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517. According to an Ottoman census in 1526, 82 families lived in the village, 55 of which were Christians. In 1596 the village appeared in Ottoman tax registers as being in the nahiya of Mīr within Quds. It had 62 Muslim households and five Christian households. The villagers paid taxes on wheat, barley, olives, vines or fruit trees, and goats or beehives, amounting to 27,000 akçe. All of the revenue went to a waqf.The majority of Teqoa's Arab Christians emigrated to Bethlehem in the 18th century. Teqoa's Christian migrants formed Bethlehem's Qawawsa Quarter. French explorer Victor Guérin visited the site in 1863 and described finding the scant remains of a church and an octagonal baptismal font. The PEF Survey of Palestine in 1883 mentions that it "seems to have been large and important in Christian times. It is still inhabited by a few persons living in the caves " The Ta'amireh were living in the caves of Teqoa at this time.
During the travels of Edward Robinson in Palestine in 1838, his guides and guards in the Bethlehem area and on his way to Teqoa were members of the Ta'amireh tribe. He recounts how they set up his tent by their encampment, and that their tradtional roaming grounds extended throughout the area of Bethlehem and Tewia all thr eay to thr Dead Sea. They guided and accompanied him on his trip to Teqoa, which Robinson said was in ruins and deserted, except for these Arabs in the vicinity.
Horatio Balch Hackett, who visited the village during his travels in Palestine in 1852, describes the pastoralist history of the site that he sees reflected and come to life in the two large shepherds' encampments he found there, with their varied herds of horses, cattle, goats, camels, sheep and goats, all around them and up the hillsides as far as the eye could see. He also describes the water source on the outskirts of the village as a spring bustling with activity, with women and men collecting drinking water for their families and their herds.
Jordanian period
The modern town of Teqoa was established right next to the ancient village site in 1948 during Jordanian rule. The inhabitants were Bedouins from the Ta'amireh tribe. Sedentarization of the tribe which had long practiced nomadic pastoralism in the area began in the 1920s and was largely completed by the 1970s.Post-1967
During the Six-Day War in 1967, Teqoa came under Israeli occupation, remaining so until this day. The population in the 1967 census conducted by the Israeli authorities was 1,362.Over the years, Israel has confiscated 1,436 dunams of Teqoa's land for the construction of three Israeli settlements: Tekoa, Mitzpe Shalem, and a resort, Metzoke Dragot. In addition, the settlers have constructed various outposts.
In May 2001, after the killing of two Jewish Israeli boys outside the nearby Israeli settlement of Tekoa, Teqoa was temporarily sealed off by the Israeli Army. Consequently, residents could not reach their jobs in Bethlehem and Israel, and shepherds could not reach grazing lands outside the village.
Demographics
According to a 1997 census by the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, Teqoa had a population of 4,890 inhabitants. There were only 24 Palestinian refugees, making up 0.5% of the population. There were 2,534 males and 2,356 females. Tuqu's population grew to 8,881 in the 2007 PCBS census. There were 1,368 households, with the average household size consisting of between six and seven members. The gender ratio was 49% women and 51% men.Teqoa has a Muslim majority and there are ten mosques in the town. They are the following: Abu Bakr as-Siddik Mosque, Bilal Ibn Rabah Mosque, al-Sahaba Mosque, al-Tawba Mosque, Abd al-Rahman Ibn 'Oof Mosque, Zaid Ibn Haritha Mosque, al-Abbas Mosque and Salah ad-Deen Mosque, al-Ansar Mosque and Ali Ibn Abi Talib Mosque. Most of the inhabitants belong to the 'Arab al-Ta'amira tribe. Principal clans include Badan, Jibreen, Sha'er, 'Emur, Nawawra, 'Urooj, Abu Mifrih, az-Zawahra, Sbeih, at-Tnooh, Sleiman and Sabbah.
Tuqu' is one of the villages of the Ta'amra tribe. There are people who trace their origins to Tuqu' that now live in Tarqumiyah.
Economy
Agriculture, particularly livestock, dominates Teqoa's economy. Dairy is produced and sold in local markets and in Bethlehem. Industry is virtually nonexistent, although there is a stone quarry and brick factory in the town. Unemployment is high at about 50% and mostly caused by Israeli restrictions on movement and access to the labor market in Israel proper as a result of the Second Intifada between 2000 and 2004.As of 2008 around 45% of Teqoa's workforce was employed in the Israeli labor market while another 30% worked in agriculture. The remainder of economic activity was split between employment in the Palestinian government or trade and services. Efforts have been made to attract tourists. A municipal center was built near the ruins of a Byzantine church in Teqoa. Tuqu' is well known for its vegetables.
Government
Since 1995, 98.5% of Tuqu's land area has been located in Area C or nature reserves, thereby depriving the Palestinian Authority of control over its administration and civil affairs. Originally, twelve tribal elders managed the town, but unable to plan and carry out internal improvements, they ceded their power to a council of younger men. The 13-member municipal council was established in 1997 to administer Tuqu' as well as the villages of Khirbet al-Deir, al-Halqum, and Khirbet Tuqu'ʿ, which were put under Tuqu's jurisdiction. Its first mayor, Suleiman Abu Mufarreh, initiated the construction of the municipal hall and recovered Tuqūʿ's stolen baptismal font, relocating it to the front of the municipal hall.Tuqu' is governed by a municipal council of eleven members, including the mayor. In the 2004–05 Palestinian local elections, the Hamas-backed Reform list won the majority of the seats, while the independent local United Tuqu' list won three. Reform member Khaled Ahmad Hamida won the mayorship, succeeding Raed Hamida.
Archaeology of Khirbet Tuqu' (ancient Teqoa)
The main periods of habitation brought to light by archaeological digs at Khirbet Teqoa are the Iron Age II, and the Byzantine period. Less well represented are the Iron Age IIb, Persian, Early and Late Roman, and medieval periods. Various ruins were seen at the site in the mid-19th century. These included the walls of houses, cisterns, broken columns and heaps of building stones, some of which had "bevelled edges" which supposedly indicated ancient Jewish origin. The site, has been excavated by Martin Heicksen, John J. Davis, and Sayf al-Din Haddad.Other archaeological sites and landmarks
The site of Khirbet Teqoa is considered "qualified in terms of tourism". A second archaeological site near Teqoa, Khirbet Umm El 'Amd, is "not qualified" in terms of tourism.The New Lavra of Saint Sabbas is today in ruins at the site of Bir el-Wa'ar, c. 3 km south of Tuqu'.