Tekoa was established in 1975 as a Nahal outpost in the vicinity of the Palestinian village of Tuqu'. In 1977 it was handed over to civilian residents. It is named after the hometown of the Biblical prophetAmos, whereupon the neighbouring settlement of Nokdim indicates his profession - see. Tekoa is built on 1071 dunam of land which Israel confiscated from the Palestinian citizens of Tuqu'. The town is located 5 miles south of Bethlehem at the foot of Herodion.
Archaeology and landmarks
The archaeological site of El Khiam is located in this area. Letters of Shimon Ben Kosiba, leader of the Jewish Bar Kokhba revolt against Roman occupation, were found in a valley near Tekoa. Ancient caves and caves that were dug in the karst chalk stone of the Nachal Tekoa or Wadi Khureitun, named after Chariton the Confessor, by monks from the Lavras of Saint Chariton and his successor Euthymius the Great, are right behind Tekoa. Outside Tekoa, at Khirbet Tuqu', various ruins were seen 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 Hebrew origin. Byzantine ceramics have been found, and in the ancient site of nearby Tekoa ruins, there are the remains of a Byzantine church and monastery.
In 1989, the Tekoa Agro-Technology Farm established in 1986 was named Enterprise of the Year by the Israeli Journal of Agricultural Settlements.
Arab-Israeli conflict
In May 2001, two Israeli boys from Tekoa, Koby Mandell and Yosef Ishran, were killed, by unknown person who were never apprehended. In September 2001 an Israeli was shot and killed in Tekoa when militants opened fire on her family's car. In February 2002, two Israelis were killed in a shooting attack near Tekoa in an attack that the Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades claimed responsibility for.
Status under international law
Like all Israeli settlements in the Israeli-occupied territories, Tekoa is considered illegal under international law, though Israeli disputes this. The international community considers Israeli settlements to violate the Fourth Geneva Convention's prohibition on the transfer of an occupying power's civilian population into occupied territory. Israel disputes that the Fourth Geneva Convention applies to the Palestinian territories as they had not been legally held by a sovereign prior to Israel taking control of them. This view has been rejected by the International Court of Justice and the International Committee of the Red Cross.