Motza


Motza, also Mozah or Motsa, is a neighbourhood on the western edge of Jerusalem, Israel. It is located in the Judean Hills, 600 metres above sea level, connected to Jerusalem by the Jerusalem–Tel Aviv highway and the winding mountain road to Har Nof. Established in 1854, Motza was the first Jewish farm founded outside the walls of the Old City in the modern era. It is believed to be located on the site of a Biblical village of the same name mentioned in.

History

Jewish settlement in the Late Ottoman period (1854–1917)

In 1854, farmland was purchased from the nearby Arab village of Qalunya by a Baghdadi Jew, Shaul Yehuda, with the aid of British consul James Finn. A B'nai B'rith official signed a contract with the residents of Motza residents that enabled them to pay for the land in long-term payments. Four Jewish families settled there. One family established a tile factory which was one of the earliest industries in the region. In 1871, while plowing his fields, one of the residents, Yehoshua Yellin, discovered a large subterranean hall from the Byzantine period that he turned into a travellers' inn which provided overnight shelter for pilgrims on their way to Jerusalem.
When Theodor Herzl visited Palestine in 1898, he passed through Motza, which then had a population of 200. Captivated by the landscape, he planted a cypress tree on the hill. After he died in 1904 at age 44, it became an annual pilgrimage site by Zionist youth, who planted more trees around Herzl's tree. During World War I, Herzl's tree was cut down by the Turks who were levelling forests for firewood and supplies.

British Mandate period

named the sanatorium opened in the village Arza, or "cedar", in reference to Herzl's tree. Arza, established in the 1920s, was the first Jewish "health resort" in the country.
Motza was violently attacked in the 1929 Palestine riots, and was abandoned for one year by its Jewish inhabitants.
The flourishing orchard of the Broza family is mentioned in the Hope Simpson Report in 1930. The children of Motza attended school in one of the rooms built above the vaulted hall. Their teacher was Moshe David Gaon, later father of singer and actor Yehoram Gaon. Motza was the only Jewish presence in the area. Kfar Uria and Hartuv were further west in the Judean foothills.
According to a census conducted in 1931 by the British Mandate authorities, Motza had a population of 151 inhabitants, in 20 houses.
In 1933 the villagers founded the neighbouring Upper Motza.
In December 1948, United Nations General Assembly Resolution 194 recommended that "the built-up area of Motsa" be included in the Jerusalem "Corpus separatum", which was to be detached from "the rest of Palestine" and "placed under effective United Nations control". However, like other provisions of Resolution 194, this was never carried out in practice, and Motza became part of the State of Israel.

1929 murders

Despite good relations with neighbouring Arab communities, the village was attacked during the 1929 Palestine riots. Several residents of Qalunya attacked an outlying house belonging to the Makleff family, killing the father, mother, son, two daughters, and their two guests. Three children survived by escaping out a second-story window; one, Mordechai Maklef, later became Chief of Staff of the Israeli Army. The attackers included the lone police officer and armed man in the area, as well as a shepherd employed by the Makleff family. The village was subsequently abandoned by Jews for a year's time.
Refugees from Motza sent a letter to the Refugees Aid Committee in Jerusalem describing their plight and asking for help: "Our houses were burned and robbed...we have nothing left. And now we are naked and without food. We need your immediate assistance and ask for nothing more than bread to eat and clothes to wear."

In the Bible (Old and New Testament)

Biblical Mozah is listed among the Benjamite cities of. It was referred to in the Talmud as a place where people would come to cut young willow branches as a part of the celebration of Sukkot.
Motza was identified as the Emmaus of Luke in 1881 by William F. Birch of the Palestine Exploration Fund, and again in 1893 by Paulo Savi. Excavations in 2001–2003 headed by Professor Carsten Peter Thiede let him conclude that Khirbet Mizza/Tel Moza was the only credible candidate for the Emmaus of the New Testament.

Archaeology

Excavations at Tel Motza took place in 2012–13 and 2019.
Archaeologists found at Tel Motza remains of a settlement dated to the Neolithic period, and a settlement from the First Temple period containing a cultic structure and 36 wheat granaries, indicating that Motza was part of an ancient economic center.

Neolithic settlement

A 9,000-year-old Neolithic site is known at Motza. The area was excavated by Israel Antiquities Authority because of the highway construction and the researches are conducted by archaeologists Hamoudi Khalaily and Jacob Vardi from the Israel Antiquities Authority. This settlement is considered the largest ever discovered in Israel, and changed the beliefs about this area being uninhabited the Neolithic era. "This is most probably the largest excavation of this time period in the Middle East, which will allow the research to advance leaps and bounds ahead of where we are today, just by the amount of material that we are able to save and preserve from this site", reported archaeologist Lauren Davis from the IAA.
It has been discovered that the area was home to about 3,000 residents. Flint tools, figurine of an ox made of clay, a stone-carved human face, seeds, stone bracelets, animal bones and other objects have been found from the site. According to the archaeologists, "Amongst others, unique stone-made objects were found in the tombs, made of an unknown type of stone, as well as items made of obsidian from Anatolia, and sea-shells, some of which were brought from the Mediterranean Sea and some from the Red Sea."
The site was called "Big Bang" of Prehistory because of the preservation of the artefacts and the size of its area.

Iron Age Israelite settlement

Excavations in Motza unearthed the Tel Motza temple, a large building revealing clear elements of ritual use, dated to the 9th century BCE. A rare cache of ritual objects found near the building included tiny ceramic figurines of men and animals. An analysis of animal bones found at the site indicated that they belonged only to kosher animals. Excavations at the site continued as late as 2013, led by archaeologists Shua Kisilevitz, Zvi Greenhut, and Anna Eirikh-Rose on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority.

Landmarks

Motza was home to one of Israel's oldest wineries, the Teperberg Winery, then called Efrat, until its move to Tzora.
In 2006, the Yellin and Yehuda families helped restore Joshua Yellin's original home, among the oldest and most derelict buildings at the site.