Arab village in Haifa subdistrict, Mandatory Palestine
This article is about the Palestinian village depopulated in 1948. For the Circassian village in modern-day Israel, see Rehaniya. For the Lebanese village, see Rihaniyeh.
In the 1945 statistics, the village had a population of 240 Muslims,[4] and the village's lands spanned 1,930 dunams.[5] Of this, 1,761 dunums of land were used for cereals; 73 dunums were irrigated or used for orchards,[10] while 46 dunams were built-up (urban) land.[11]
1948, aftermath
On 5 April 1948, after the Battle of Mishmar HaEmek the Haganah ordered the Golani Brigade to inform the residents four Arab villages including Rihaniya that they should leave for safety reasons.[12]
Surviving villagers told Rosemarie Esber that they decided to leave Al-Rihaniyya on 30 April, as "we did not have guns to defend it". They took refugee in Umm az-Zinat, but when the Haganah attacked it (according to the villagers: unprovoked) they fled "with nothing but our clothes on", to Ijzim. They stayed at Ijzim for several months, until it also was attacked by Zionist forces, who "kicked everybody out". Esbers informants ended up in Umm al-Fahm.[13]
According to Khalidi's description in 1992, the village site was strewn with housing rubble, bushes and thorns. The village cemetery and a well were visible at the bottom of a hill to the north. The surrounding land was farmed and an avocado orchard lay to the south.[14]
References
^ abMorris, 2004, p. xviii, village #163. Gives both date and cause of depopulation as "Not known".