Baka was established in the late 19th century after the completion of the Jerusalem Railway Station. The station created the nucleus of a commercial center that eventually attracted mostly wealthy Muslim, Christian, and Armenian families from the Old City, who built mansions there in the 1920s. The neighborhood had an
agricultural character until the 1950s. During the
1948 Arab–Israeli War, the neighborhood was left on the Israeli (western) side of the dividing line between
West Jerusalem and
East Jerusalem. Its population changed, as was the case with many neighborhoods on both sides of the dividing line. After 1948, many streets in Baka were renamed for the
Twelve Tribes of Israel: Judah, Issachar, Levi, Zevulun, Reuven, Shimon, Gad, Ephraim, Menashe, Benjamin, Dan, Asher and Naphtali. ==Baka today==