
Jacir Palace on Christmas Day
2008
Jacir Palace or Qasr
Jacir ( ) is the largest hotel in Bethlehem
in the central West Bank
. The building's original design was based on
typical Palestinian architecture and the characteristics of an
Arab household. Jacir Palace has three floors,
each spanning 800 square meters. The newly-built hotel added an
outdoor swimming pool, a health spa, two meeting rooms, 250
available rooms and eleven food and beverage outlets including
restaurants and bars.
Jacir Palace was built in 1910 by local craftsmen on commission of
the former mayor of Bethlehem, also a merchant,
Suleiman Jacir (great grandfather of
Emily and
Annemarie
Jacir), who intended that he and his five brothers’ families
would live in the house together. So they did for a time, however,
the family went bankrupt in the 1930s and were forced to abandon
the palace as well as sell all the furniture inside. The Jacir
family never recovered from this economic devastation.
Jacir Palace was
eventually taken over by the British
who used it
as a prison in the 1940s. In the 1950s it was a private
school called al-Ummah, later the house became a public boys’
school and at a still later stage was transformed into a public
girls’ school. The house was also used by the Israeli Army,
particularly during the first intifada, as a point of control
considering its advantageous location and continued to be a major
point of confrontation between local stone-throwing youths and the
Israeli Army.
In 2000, a group of Palestinian investors belonging to PEDCAR —
which is linked to the
Palestinian National
Authority — acquired Jacir Palace; they refurbished and
renovated it soon after. However, the hotel was closed down from
2000 to 2005.
See also
References
- Hotel International: Jacir Zara Investment (Holding)
Co. Ltd
- Emily Jacir:
Photostory: Retracing bus no. 23 on the historic
Jerusalem-Hebron Road, 15 December 2006, The Electronic
Intifada (alternative link: [1])
- Palaces in the Bethlehem Area Zeiter, Leila.
Bethlehem.ps
- Jacir Palace, InterContinental Bethlehem re-opens
for business InterContinental Hotels Group