The Village

Adh Dhahiriya is the southernmost populated town in the West Bank, bordering the Negev desert. As the hills become bare and vegetation disappears, the town appears on the last hills of the West Bank overlooking the desert.

The town is an archaeological site. It has always been the southern gateway to the central highlands of Palestine, and has played a defensive role fending off Bedouin raids and foreign campaigns. Part of the Roman Fort still stands, and remnants of Hellenistic, Roman, and Crusader structures can still be found in and around Adh Dhahiriya. The reuse of antiquity stones in the historic structures is evident of continuous habitation on the hill since ancient times. 

Adh Dhahiriya is known for being a commercial hub that connects Hebron with the Negev desert. This peripheral location made the town a central market of commerce for surrounding smaller communities as well as for Bedouins residing in the desert. Historically, the town hosted a weekly cattle market. The historic marketplace, known as the old souk where buildings still stand, is a 200 meter long street, that up until the late 1970s, had shops advertising local merchandise and cattle products, along with a local oven that baked bread for residents and shoppers.The new commercial market, on the other hand, lies on a longitudinal main street that cuts the historic center into two parts (east and west) it is on the western side, where the old souk is, that RIWAQ’s work took place. Today, the main street is a lively and crowded daily market place.

As a result of Israeli mobility restrictions that have made it more difficult for Bedouins and residents of the Negev to reach Hebron City, Adh Dhahiriya functions as a major alternative market and service center for the region. Moreover, the presence of a southern Israeli checkpoint used by Palestinian workers has resulted in an overflow of traffic through the town.
The Historic Center

The beauty and scale of Adh Dhahiriya’s historic center is a definite surprise to newcomers. It is relatively intact. Buildings and extended family courtyards are numerous and huge in scale. Reused large-cut stones are almost everywhere and a system of underground caves underneath homes and streets still exist.
Settlement in Adh Dhahiriya was originally in the caves underneath the current historic center. Although there are several archaeological remains that date back to Roman times, most of the buildings within the historic center have the characteristics of Ottoman architecture in Palestine. This implies that during a certain point of history (most probably during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries), families relocated from the caves and constructed their homes on top of them using local stone and recycled materials from surrounding archaeological sites and ruins. We can still see massive stone blocks in peasant houses with Roman and Crusader ornaments and decorations.
According to RIWAQ’s Registry of Historic Buildings in Palestine (2006), there are 850 historic buildings still standing in Adh Dhahiriya. The reason the historic center was spared destruction is that its lands are vast, and expansion moved away from the area for agricultural and grazing lands.
The historic center was deserted in the second half of the twentieth century, presumably as a result of the rapid increase of population and subsequent construction of modern houses with new construction techniques. The area was not demolished to reuse the land for common buildings because of ownership fragmentation and property rights yet at the same time, buildings were left to decay. The historic center became home to only a few economically underprivileged families, and generally only used as a passage to different parts of town through the multiple alleys (including the old souk) linking the new commercial market street in the east to residential neighborhoods in the west.
The old souk starts at al Harajeh plaza and continues south towards a populated residential neighborhood, and extends to the Omari ancient mosque located at the southern edge of the historic center. The old souk passes by local landmarks such as the Caesarea building (which is most likely an old caravanserai) and Hosh al Sabbar (courtyard).
Rehabilitation

Snowballing Regeneration: from sporadic interventions to interconnected vision

For almost ten years, RIWAQ has been regenerating the historic center of Adh Dhahiriya, marking our work there the longest process adopted through the 50 Villages Rehabilitation project. The duration of our work there has allowed some pauses for RIWAQ and the community to evaluate the progress and impact of the project’s many transitional phases the emerging uses and functions were a driving force in determining succeeding plans and strategies.
 
In 2004, a local initiative comprised of municipal employees contacted RIWAQ for the first rehabilitation project in town. This project proved to be the first of many to come, and was the first nucleus to an island of restored buildings that continued to grow in scale and scope.
 
The rehabilitation of Adh Dhahiriya was an incremental process. The advantage of using the abandoned historic center as a shortcut to link different parts of the town benefited several institutions that opened later in the newly restored buildings with adjoining plazas and alleys. Over time, this has increased the influx of people to the historic center, prompted other services to open, and given the historic center new life. By 2011, most of the work was concluded and a significant portion of the historic center was restored, clean, and functional yet the new commercial center was still the focal point of town and had not made the necessary linkages to the historic center that RIWAQ had envisioned.
 
2011 marked the first year of a more comprehensive approach to the regeneration of the historic center. RIWAQ’s goal was to position the historic center to regain its commercial power, which had been lost to the new commercial center over the years. A main focus, in addition to upgrading housing conditions for families, was rehabilitating the old souk, and providing a sleep-over facility for those interested in visiting the town and its amazing surroundings.
 
The Adh Dhahiriya municipality has been quite active during the rehabilitation process the Old Town Protection Committee was established in order to facilitate work with homeowners, residents, and new investors, and to begin gathering funds for the continuation of the project after RIWAQ’s departure.

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