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The lives and bodies forever scarred by Israeli state-backed settler violence

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By Oren Ziv | Nov. 11, 2025
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If certain areas of the occupied West Bank were once considered relatively safe, today, every Palestinian community, olive grove, field, or town is vulnerable to attacks. Any encounter with Israeli settlers — particularly near outposts established since the start of the war — can turn violent within seconds. The presence of international or Israeli activists, once a modest deterrent, no longer offers much protection. No one is off limits: not the elderly, not women, not children, not even infants.

 

According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), since October 7, 2023, Israeli settlers have killed 33 Palestinians in the West Bank and wounded more than 1,400 others. October 2025 saw over 260 attacks, an average of eight per day — the highest monthly tally since OCHA began documenting such incidents in 2006.

 

This year’s olive harvest season has been the most violent in recent years, with some 167 documented assaults that left more than 150 Palestinians injured and destroyed more than 5,700 trees and saplings across 87 villages. And in the past week, Israeli settlers have torched Palestinian properties, fields, and even a mosque, prompting the Israeli Police to make several arrests and army officials to issue a rare rebuke.

 

But “settler violence” can be a misleading term. In recent years, and especially since the start of Israel’s genocide in Gaza, Israeli settlers in the West Bank have operated in near-total symbiosis with the army and state authorities. In suggesting that settlers are rogue actors, the phrase obscures the state’s central role in the colonization of the West Bank and allows Israeli politicians, the army, and the public to dismiss such violence as the work of “a handful of extremists.”

 

The coordination between settlers and state authorities is often explicit. In May, for instance, Israeli forces demolished nearly the entire village of Khalet Al-Daba in Masafer Yatta. Soon after, settlers from a nearby outpost launched a wave of violence, culminating in a September assault that wounded women and infants. Barely a week later, the last remaining structures were destroyed by Israeli authorities.

 

In such a reality, it is nearly impossible to distinguish between the actions of Israeli settlers, soldiers, and police — who often arrive at the scene not to protect Palestinians, but to arrest them, invariably on the basis of false settler complaints.

 

This escalation is not incidental; it is part of a deliberate mechanism designed to push  Palestinians off their land. With the backing and often direct coordination of the army and police, settler violence has already wiped dozens of communities off the map in recent months.

 

For this photo essay, I gathered 14 testimonies from the victims of this violence in the West Bank — mostly Palestinians, but also Israeli activists. Many were beaten by masked settlers wielding clubs, while others were shot, stoned, or attacked in their homes or fields, and lucky if they escaped with only minor wounds. 

 

Most of those photographed live in villages now surrounded by settlements. Some have already been forced out of their homes; others remain under sustained attack, their injuries one episode in an ongoing campaign of harassment by Israeli forces and settlers alike.

 

An Israeli army spokesperson told +972 Magazine that “the IDF strongly condemns any form of violence that diverts commanders and soldiers from their mission — defense and counterterrorism. All incidents have been transferred to the Israel Police for further handling.” 

 

Yet to date, not a single indictment has been filed in relation to any of these attacks. The Israel Police did not respond to our request for comment.

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Mohammed Da’amin, 43, his wife Wafa, 30, and their children Ahmad, 4, Saddam, 1, and Omri, 6 months, in As-Samu’, South Hebron Hills

In late October, masked settlers descended on the Da’amins’ small home...

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Saeed Mohammad Ibrahim Rabah, 60, in Al-Rakeez, Masafer Yatta

“I was born about a kilometer and a half from here...

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Zainab Ali Al-Dababseh, 34, and her son Izz Al-Din, 7, in Khalet al-Daba, Masafer Yatta

On Sept. 5, settlers attacked Zainab Al-Dababseh’s home...

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Fatma Abu Naim, 32, in Al-Khalail, Ramallah district

In May 2025, settlers attacked Fatma Abu Naim near her home...

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Suleiman Musa Melihat, 40, in Al-Mu’arrajat, Jordan Valley

Seven years ago, Suleiman Melihat was shot by settlers...

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Afaf Abu Alia, 53, in Al-Mughayyir, Ramallah district

During this year’s olive harvest, Afaf Abu Alia was beaten...

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Omar Melihat, 14, in Maghayer Al-Dir, Jordan Valley

In May, when settlers drove out residents of Maghayer Al-Dir...

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Nika, 26, and Lisa, 28, in Al-Sidra, east of Ramallah

Nika and Lisa, Israeli protective presence activists, were assaulted...

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Ahmad Hathaleen, 30, in Umm Al-Khair, Masafer Yatta

In July, Israeli settler Yinon Levi entered private Palestinian land...

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Issam Rimawi, 42, in Al-Mughayyir, Ramallah district

Rimawi, a photojournalist, was beaten unconscious by settlers...

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Jonathan Pollak, 43, in Al-Mazra’a A-Sharqiyyeh, Ramallah District

Pollak, an Israeli anti-Zionist activist, was at the scene of a brutal settler...

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Ahmad Qaid, 15, in Deir Dibwan, Ramallah district

In June, Qaid was hit by a stone during a settler attack...

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Oded Yedaya, 77, and Hamed Al-Jaroub Abu Rabia, 55, in Beita, Nablus district

Oded Yedaya — an Israeli photographer, artist, and activist...

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Bashar Eid, 53, in Burin, Nablus district

Eid was attacked on Nov. 8 while harvesting olives...

Eran Maoz assisted with this project. A version was first published in Hebrew on Local Call. Read it here.

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