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Patt Junction Bus bombing

2002 in JerusalemHamas suicide bombings of busesIsraeli casualties in the Second IntifadaJune 2002 events in AsiaMass murder in 2002
Terrorist incidents in IsraelTerrorist incidents in Israel in 2002Terrorist incidents in JerusalemTerrorist incidents in Jerusalem in the 2000s
לוח זיכרון קו 32 צומת פת גילה ירושלים
לוח זיכרון קו 32 צומת פת גילה ירושלים

A suicide bombing on an Egged bus was carried out by Hamas in Jerusalem on June 18, 2002, killing 19 people and wounding over 74. 17 of the dead were residents of Gilo.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Patt Junction Bus bombing (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Patt Junction Bus bombing
Dov Yosef, Jerusalem Katamonim

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 31.75 ° E 35.198333333333 °
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Address

דב יוסף

Dov Yosef
9328257 Jerusalem, Katamonim
Jerusalem District, Israel
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לוח זיכרון קו 32 צומת פת גילה ירושלים
לוח זיכרון קו 32 צומת פת גילה ירושלים
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Nearby Places

Sharafat, East Jerusalem
Sharafat, East Jerusalem

Sharafat (Arabic: شرفات) is a Palestinian Arab neighborhood of East Jerusalem, located within approximately 5 km to the south west of the Old City of Jerusalem. It is situated close to the Palestinian town of Beit Safafa and near the Israeli settlement of Gilo in the southern portion of East Jerusalem.Sharafat is later mentioned in chronicles from the 13th and 15th centuries, Ottoman tax records from the 16th century, and the travel writings and ethnographies of European and American visitors to Palestine in the 19th and 20th centuries. During the period of Mamluk rule (c. 13th - early 16th centuries), Sharafat was home to the Badriyya a renowned family of awliya (Muslim saints) to whom the village was dedicated as a waqf (Islamic trust) by the viceroy of Damascus in the 14th century, and whose family tombs continue to be venerated to this day. After the 1948 Palestine War, Sharafat lay in the area to the east of the Green Line that was ruled by Jordan until 1967. Following the occupation West Bank, including East Jerusalem by Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War, Israel included it in its expanded Jerusalem District. In the 1970s, the Israeli government expropriated land from the village to build the settlement of Gilo, whose subsequent expansion saw the destruction of homes, vineyards and orchards in Sharafat. The Palestinian Authority (PA), established pursuant to 1993 Oslo Accords, considers Sharafat a part of its Jerusalem Governorate. In 2002, the population was made up of 978 Palestinians.