Bnei Atzmon () was an Israeli settlement previously in the Sinai Peninsula, later moved to the Gaza Strip before being destroyed in 2005.
In 1982, the settlement was relocated to the Gush Katif region of the Gaza Strip about three kilometres north of Rafah after the signing of the Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty and the subsequent eviction of all Jews living in Sinai and surrender of all land there. The settlement in Sinai was originally named Atzmona, but since that location was evacuated and Israeli law forbids renaming a new location with that of a previously existing legal entity, Bnei Atzmon ( Sons of Atzmon, named after the Biblical border point of Israel (Numbers 34:4-5)), became the officially registered name. Nonetheless, it is more often referred to as Atzmona. The moshav's mostly Orthodox Judaism was associated with the Amana settlement organization.
On March 7, 2002, a Atzmona Massacre.
It was destroyed in 2005 by the Israeli government as part of the Israeli disengagement from Gaza.
In the cooperative settlement, there was area of more than 50,000 (50 km2) of field crops in the Besor area, 12 dunams (12,000 m2) of turkey coops, a barn, and a building company.
Many of the residents from the settlement resettled in the new moshav Naveh.
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