Abu Dis
Abu Dis is a Palestinian town in the Jerusalem Governorate of the West Bank, situated approximately four kilometers east of central Jerusalem and largely enclosed by the Israeli separation barrier constructed in the early 2000s.[1][2] The town hosts the main campus of Al-Quds University, the largest Palestinian higher education institution, which enrolls over 10,000 students and contributes to the local economy through education and research activities.[3][4] According to Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics projections, Abu Dis had a population of 12,137 residents in 2017, predominantly Palestinian Arabs engaged in agriculture, services, and commuting to Jerusalem prior to barrier restrictions.[5] The separation barrier, built by Israel citing security needs amid the Second Intifada, has severed direct access to Jerusalem for most residents, confining urban areas within its path while isolating farmland and complicating daily movement via checkpoints.[1][2] In 2020, the U.S. administration under President Trump proposed Abu Dis as the capital for a Palestinian state in its peace plan, highlighting existing Palestinian Authority buildings there, but the suggestion was dismissed by Palestinian leaders and locals as inadequate, insisting on sovereignty over East Jerusalem.[1][2][6]Geography and Demographics
Location and Physical Features
Abu Dis is a Palestinian town situated in the Jerusalem Governorate of the West Bank, approximately 3.8 kilometers southeast of central Jerusalem.[7] Its geographic coordinates are roughly 31°45′44″N 35°15′58″E.[8] The town lies in Area B under the Oslo Accords, where the Palestinian Authority exercises civil control alongside shared security with Israel. The terrain around Abu Dis features hilly elevations typical of the Judean highlands, with the town's average altitude at 641 meters above sea level.[9] It is bordered by neighboring localities including Al Izariya to the south, 'Isawiya to the north, and As Sawahira ash Sharqiya to the east, with deep valleys surrounding the built-up area.[10] The landscape includes rocky outcrops and wadis, contributing to a varied topography that rises and falls across the locality's expanse.[11]Population Trends and Composition
The population of Abu Dis has shown steady growth over the modern period, reflecting broader demographic trends in the West Bank such as high fertility rates and limited emigration despite economic challenges. In the late Ottoman era, an official village list from around 1870 recorded 52 houses and a population of 326 males, implying a total of approximately 650 residents assuming comparable female numbers.[10] Between 1922 and 1947, the population increased by 110%, driven by natural growth and rural stability under the British Mandate.[10] Post-1948, the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics (PCBS) recorded 9,721 residents in the 2007 census, with 5,030 males and 4,691 females, indicating a slight male majority typical of areas with male labor migration.[12] The 2017 PCBS census reported 12,251 inhabitants, reflecting an average annual growth rate of about 2.4% over the decade, consistent with West Bank patterns of youthful demographics and family-oriented settlement.[5] PCBS projections estimate continued expansion, reaching 14,421 by mid-2025 and 14,711 by 2026, based on assumed fertility and mortality rates adjusted for local conditions.[5]| Year | Population (PCBS Data/Projections) |
|---|---|
| 2007 | 9,721[12] |
| 2017 | 12,251[5] |
| 2021 | 13,265[5] |
| 2025 | 14,421 (projected)[5] |