The current site of Akhzivland is situated near the ancient port city of
Achziv. Based on archeological findings and the numerous burial sites
located in the region, it is thought that Achziv was already an
important commercial center during the
Iron Age. In the
Book of Joshua, Achziv is mentioned as one of the nine cities of
Judah. A thriving city was also located on the site during the time of the
Mishnah. During the
Crusader period, the city was given as a gift to a knight. During the
Mamluk period, it was conquered by the Mamluk general
Baibars, who established a fishing village at the site called Az-Zeeb. Its residents fled Az-Zeeb during
Operation Ben-Ami in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.
Akhzivland is a micronation between Nahariya and the Lebanese border on the Israeli west coast. The state was founded by Eli Avivi in 1972. The micronation is promoted by the Israel Ministry of Tourism even though its legal status remains ambiguous.
The micronation is located near the ruins of
Achziv,
an ancient settlement on the Mediterranean coast in the Western
Galilee, about 5 kilometers north of Nahariya. A national park, field
school, and the ruins of the Palestinian village of
Az-Zeeb, which was captured by the
Carmeli Brigade during the
1948 Arab-Israeli War, are located nearby.

The current site of Akhzivland is situated near the ancient port city of
Achziv. Based on archeological findings and the numerous burial sites
located in the region, it is thought that Achziv was already an
important commercial center during the
Iron Age. In the
Book of Joshua, Achziv is mentioned as one of the nine cities of
Judah. A thriving city was also located on the site during the time of the
Mishnah. During the
Crusader period, the city was given as a gift to a knight. During the
Mamluk period, it was conquered by the Mamluk general
Baibars, who established a fishing village at the site called Az-Zeeb. Its residents fled Az-Zeeb during
Operation Ben-Ami in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.
The Akhzivland Museum in 2015


In 1952, Iranian-born sailor and
Palmach veteran Eli Avivi moved into buildings in the villages.
According to former residents of Az Zeeb, Avivi was hired by a family
of fishermen, and later moved into the family's house in 1955.
In 1961, the Israeli government granted the French resort company
Club Med a fifty-year lease over part of the area's coastline.
In 1970, the Israeli government sent bulldozers to demolish the home
in which Avivi had been living. In protest, Eli founded Akhzivland in
1971, setting up a hostel and a museum inside the former home of the
mukhtar of Az-Zeeb. The micronation became a tourist site - described by
Haaretz as a "hippy micro state" - attracting artists, writers, and countercultural figures.
The micronation elected Avivi to be President (according to the
constitution "The president is democratically elected by his own vote",
established a flag and national anthem, and even issued passports. For a
certain time, visitors’ passports received a special stamp. Following
the founding of Akhzivland, Avivi was arrested and detained, but was
released 10 days later after a judge ruled that the charge of "Creation
of a Country Without Permission" did not exist.
After Avivi sued the Israeli government, a court ruled to lease the
area to Avivi for 99 years, but did not rule on the legal status of the
state.

Akhzivland now contains a guest house, beachfront campground, and a museum of eccentricities.

Eli Avivi died of pneumonia on May 15, 2018.
By Richard Sheim,
Source- Google
Hakuna maoni:
Chapisha Maoni