Metzad was established in 1984 by
immigrants from the United States, the United Kingdom, South Africa and France. The settlement was built on the site of a
Nahal paramilitary outpost called
Nahal Asfar (named after a biblical place of the Maccabean revolt (1 Maccabees 9:33)) established in 1983, and which Palestinians state was confiscated from the village of
Ash-Shuyukh. The first structures on Metzad were erected by the
Israel Defense Forces's civil corps of engineers. They were handed over for civilian use at the time of the creation of Metzad in 1984. Initially, the road up to the settlement was unpaved, water was brought by truck, and electricity was sporadically provided by a generator. The next phase of development involved the placement of sixty caravans to serve as homes, offices, security compound, award-winning Preschool facilities, Clinic, Youth Center, Library, Weaving and Art Studios, and Computer Center. Construction of a new neighborhood of twenty-five permanent homes began in 1992. This included the building of a Family Health Center, an industrial building housing both the Weaving Studio and a
Simcha Hall for special events and an outdoor basketball court. Metzad is the southernmost settlement in the Gush Etzion bloc, and is one of its three Haredi settlements, the others being
Betar Illit and
Ma'ale Amos. The settlement contains one
Kollel:
Metzudat David and elementary school "Dover Shalom". The synagogue is the highest building in Metzad. The second floor offers a panoramic view of the
Judean Mountains, the
Dead Sea and
Jerusalem. Immediately to the west is ''Khirbet ez-Za'feran
or Hurvat Za'afran
, thought to be the site of the ancient Bor Asphar'' (Well of Asphar), where, according to
1 Maccabees and
Josephus, the
Maccabees gathered following
Judas Maccabeus's death. ==References==