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Latest comment: 10 years ago1 comment1 person in discussion
I cannot find it in the 1922 census, the other Jewish localities in the Sub-District of Jerusalem are easy to identify. It looks as if it was not an "official" place in 1922.
Latest comment: 1 year ago4 comments2 people in discussion
To editor Eliyahu S: I don't remember making that edit, but maybe I was going on the fact that there were 10 inhabitants recorded in the 1931 census. Looking again at the census table, I see that the inhabitants then were Muslim (6 male and 4 female). I added that information and won't remove the depopulated status. Zerotalk11:19, 29 December 2022 (UTC)Reply
@Eliyahu S:Huldra reported above that she couldn't find it in the 1922 census and the article gives no page number. Probably that's because she was looking in the Jerusalem Sub-District, but actually it was just over the border in the Ramle Sub-District. It is there as "Kfar Uria" on page 22 with 40 Jews. But on the previous page "Kafruria" is listed with 9 Muslim inhabitants. Presumably that's the nearby place mentioned in our article. I'm thinking that the "Kefar Urya" in the 1931 census, with its 10 Muslims in 2 houses, may be the same as Kafruria. "Kefar Urya" is also in the 1938 village statistics with 11 non-Jews, but land ownership is Jewish. In the 1945 village statistics (p29 in original), the estimated population is 20 Jews. Zerotalk12:08, 29 December 2022 (UTC)Reply