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Ein Hod: The ethnically cleansed Palestinian village that became an Israeli artists' colony

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Ein Hod: The ethnically cleansed Palestinian village that became an Israeli artists' colony





Submitted by
Samah Watad
on
Tue, 05/12/2026 - 15:40






Displaced Palestinians are now living near galleries and museums built inside the homes they lost in 1948


Ein Hod, which was originally an Arab village before the mass expulsion of Palestinians in the 1948 Nakba, has emerged as a haven for Israeli artists (Samah Watad/MEE)
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The stone village of Ein Hod sits on the slopes of Mount Carmel overlooking the Mediterranean Sea.

Narrow winding roads, old cactus fences and galleries are scattered between preserved Palestinian homes.

When Yara Mahajneh, an independent Palestinian artist, arrived there one evening carrying equipment for an exhibition, she found gates, guards and restricted entry surrounding the quiet artists' village.

"What kind of protection does a peaceful, liberal artists' village need?" she recalled asking.

Mahajneh was attending her graduate exhibition at the Janco Dada Museum in Ein Hod, a former Palestinian village known as Ein Hawd that was later transformed into an Israeli artists' colony.

"During my four years studying art at the University of Haifa, no one taught us the history of Ein Hawd," Mahajneh said.

"We studied European and Israeli art, but not Palestinian art or the story of the village itself".



Yara Mahajneh, an independent Palestinian artist, says Palestinians living inside Israel are often disconnected from their own histories (Samah Watad/MEE)

Before 1948, Palestinian families from the Abu al-Hija clan lived there.

'They are using one of the highest forms of human expression and documentation on the remains of other people'

- Mustafa Kabha, Palestinian historian

Palestinian historian and philologist Mustafa Kabha says the family's local history is tied to the wider Abu al-Hija presence in Palestine, whose roots are often traced in local narratives to fighters who arrived with Salah al-Din al-Ayyubi during the Crusader period.

"The village was inhabited mainly by the Abu al-Hija family," Kabha said, adding that its history is connected to other Abu al-Hija communities across Palestine, including Kawkab Abu al-Hija, which still exists today, and the displaced village of al-Hadatha near Tiberias.

By 1948, Ein Hawd had a population of around 800 to 850 residents, according to Sameer Abu al-Hija, a Palestinian historian and descendant of villagers displaced during the Nakba.

Most residents relied on agriculture, growing wheat, barley, vegetables, olives and carob, while also raising sheep and producing charcoal.

The village, however, fell in July 1948, after the seizure of Haifa just to the north and several nearby Palestinian villages by Israeli forces.

Kabha said the fall of Haifa deeply affected the morale of surrounding communities, triggering a chain reaction across villages in the southern Haifa district.

Abu al-Hija says villagers were terrified by reports of massacres in Tantura and Deir Yassin.

"People feared for the safety of women, children and the elderly," he said. "After two heavy battles with well-armed Zionist forces, the village fell and the people were forced out."

Some Palestinians fled towards Wadi Ara and Jenin, while others reached nearby Daliyat al-Karmel.

Families who later attempted to return settled on land surrounding the village, but were barred from re-entering their original homes.

At first, displaced Palestinians built simple shelters. These were later replaced by tin and mud structures and eventually by concrete homes.

Unlike many Palestinian villages depopulated during the Nakba, Ein Hawd was not completely demolished. Its stone houses remained standing, but its residents were prevented from returning.

Bedrooms on show

In the early 1950s, after a brief period during which Jewish immigrants from North Africa lived there, the village was transformed into an Israeli artists' colony now known as Ein Hod.

According to Abu al-Hija, the transformation began after artist Marcel Janco visited the village and saw in its preserved stone homes and landscape an ideal setting for artists, writers and sculptors.



Sameer Abu al-Hija, a Palestinian historian, says the village became an Israeli artists' colony after the artist Marcel Janco visited the area (Samah Watad/MEE)

Decades later, the village's story has taken on a deeply surreal dimension.

While displaced residents rebuilt homes on a nearby hillside, the original stone houses they left behind were gradually converted into galleries, museums and artists' studios.

Today, sculptures line the narrow paths of the village, while cafes, workshops and galleries operate inside preserved Palestinian homes. Bedrooms have become exhibition spaces, and family living rooms now host performances and cultural events.

"They are using one of the highest forms of human expression and documentation on the remains of other people," Kabha said.

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For Mahajneh, that contradiction only became fully visible years later, after she was invited to exhibit her graduation project - Katibet Mheileh - which explored trauma among Palestinian women inside the Janco Dada Museum.

During the performance, women stood silently carrying objects attached to their bodies while fragments of recorded phrases echoed through the gallery space: "The house was demolished. Iron my shirt."

At first, Mahajneh saw the invitation as a normal opportunity for a young artist trying to enter the art world. Only later did she begin questioning the setting itself.

"I started asking myself: why here?" she said. "There are galleries everywhere. Why this place specifically?"

The contradiction became increasingly difficult to ignore.

Palestinian trauma and memory were being exhibited inside the preserved homes of a depopulated Palestinian village, while descendants of the families who once lived there remained uphill, unable to return.

"At some point, I felt that we also became objects in the gallery," Mahajneh said. "We were serving a purpose inside this space."

Deeply personal

For Abu al-Hija, the transformation of the village is not an abstract political or artistic issue. It is deeply personal.

"The mosque is still there," he said. "But people avoid going near it after it was turned into a restaurant and bar."

Many of the original homes also remain standing, he said, but are inaccessible to the families who once lived in them.

"There are people here who pass their father’s house every morning on the way to work," he said. "But they still cannot enter it."

Kabha says the story of Ein Hawd raises broader questions about memory, ownership and narrative: who controls the Palestinian story when the land, the houses and even the cultural spaces are no longer controlled by Palestinians?

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He argues that the issue is not only that Palestinian villages were destroyed or transformed after 1948, but that many of their histories were pushed out of public memory altogether.

"Hundreds of Palestinian village stories were never really told," he said.

Mahajneh says that absence reflects a wider reality in which Palestinians inside Israel are often disconnected from their own histories, even within spaces that present themselves as liberal and inclusive.

Even as a Palestinian art student in Haifa, surrounded by Arab students and left-wing lecturers, she says the story of Ein Hawd was never part of the curriculum.

In that sense, Ein Hawd becomes more than a village transformed into an artists’ colony. It becomes an example of how Palestinian history can remain physically present - in stones, houses, mosques and cemeteries - while being erased from the official narrative built around them.

Today, Palestinians still pass the houses their families once lived in on their way to work, while tourists and artists continue moving through galleries built inside them.

For Abu al-Hija, the fear is no longer only about return.

"Golda Meir once said, 'The old will die and the young will forget,'" he said.

But he recalls the moment his seven-year-old grandson recently asked him to take him to Ein Hawd.

"That's my answer," he said. "The young did not forget."

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Ein Hod, Israel
The ethnically cleansed Palestinian village that became an Israeli artists' colony
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