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Safi, Malta

Safi
Ħal Safi
Local council
Parish Church of San Paul1.jpg
Safi church
Flag of Safi
Flag
Coat of arms of Safi
Coat of arms
Motto: Sine Macula
Safi-map.svg
Coordinates: 35°50′0″N 14°29′6″E / 35.83333°N 14.48500°E / 35.83333; 14.48500Coordinates: 35°50′0″N 14°29′6″E / 35.83333°N 14.48500°E / 35.83333; 14.48500
Country  Malta
Region Southern Region
District South Eastern District
Borders Birżebbuġa, Żurrieq, Kirkop, Luqa
Government
 • Mayor Johan Mula (PL)
Area
 • Total 2.3 km2 (0.9 sq mi)
Population (March 2014)
 • Total 2,126
 • Density 920/km2 (2,400/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Ħalsafi (m), Ħalsafija (f), Ħalsafin (pl)
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code SFI
Dialing code 356
ISO 3166 code MT-47
Patron saint St. Paul
Day of festa last Sunday of August
Website Official website

Safi (Maltese: Ħal Safi) is a village in the Southern Region of Malta, bordering Żurrieq and Kirkop. It has a population of 2,126 people as of March 2014.

The formation of the village, as known today, goes back to the Punic-Roman period. The village of Ħal Safi is surrounded by four other major villages. Farmers and peasants used to interact on their way back home from work. After a niche was erected, people began to settle, a new village started to form and expanded over the years.

In 1417, the village was already recorded as being named Ħal Safi. According to 1419 records of the Standing Army (id-Dejma), counting between eighty and ninety people, were considered as village residents. The job occupations of the period was based on primary economy, mainly raising animal and agriculture.

The origin of the village's name is uncertain. Some historians believe that the name derived from the pure (Maltese: safi) air of the area, others insist it is due to its similarity to the village of Safi in Morocco, and others say since none of the residents were contaminated during an epidemic infection that hit vast zones in Malta. The coat-of-arms, a horizontal light-blue stripe on a silver background, and the motto, Sine Macula, emphasize the meaning of the village.

For several years Ħal Safi formed part of Bir Miftuħ. However, the residents were not happy with this, mostly because of the distance between the two villages. Instead they wished to at least form part of Żurrieq, which was much nearer. In 1575 when Monsignor Dusina visited Ħal Safi, the residents put their wish forward, but nothing came out of it.

At last, in 1592, Bishop Gargallo decided to separate Ħal Safi, Imqabba and Ħal Kirkop from Bir Miftuħ. He amalgamated the three villages into one Parish. Father Carl Taliana from Luqa was appointed as its Parish Priest. Ħal Safi residents were still not satisfied because they had to walk long distances when visiting the church dedicated to Saint James at Ħal Kirkop for the celebration of sacraments such as Holy Communion and Funerals.


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Wikipedia

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