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Khalil Shokeh (Bethlehem historian) discussing Ottoman period and World War I

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posted on 2018-10-29, 15:45 authored by Freja Howat-Maxted, Leila Sansour, Bea Brown, Jacob NorrisJacob Norris
POOR QUALITY AUDIO. Khalil Shokeh (Bethlehemite historian) interviewed by Marwa Sobeh.

He discusses the following: Bethlehem changed during the late Ottoman period to become almost a city due to urban expansion and the influx of tourism that came from around the world, as well as the establishment of local organisations; farmers used to work with the Ottoman soldiers to sell their produce; local people had to communicate with the Ottoman authorities for the collection of taxes; Ottomans exploited the bad relations between Beit Jala and Bethlehem for their own benefit but sometimes they also had to intervene in disputes between them; overall there was exploitation on both sides between the Ottoman authorities and the local residents of Bethlehem.

Original audio: CD.
Transcript: summary.
In the original collection at Bethlehem University this CD was categorised as File 1 of Box 1.

This fileset exists as part of the Ottoman Empire and World War I collection within the Bethlehem University Oral History project of the Planet Bethlehem Archive.

History

Date

c.1992-2008

Type

Digital reproduction of CD and handwritten transcript

Source

Bethlehem University

Language

Arabic

Spatial

31.7160165,35.1783942

Spatial Relation

Beit Jala

Identifier

pb_bu_wwi_c19920000-0001aa.wav, pb_bu_wwi_c19920000-0001ab.pdf

Rights

Bethlehem University