www.washingtonpost.com Open in urlscan Pro
104.64.160.155  Public Scan

URL: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2024/03/22/jerusalem-west-bank-ramadan-violence/?utm_campaign=wp_post_most&utm_medium=emai...
Submission: On March 25 via api from BE — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 1 forms found in the DOM

<form class="w-100 left" id="registration-form" data-qa="regwall-registration-form-container">
  <div>
    <div class="wpds-c-giPdwp wpds-c-giPdwp-iPJLV-css">
      <div class="wpds-c-iQOSPq"><span role="label" id="radix-0" class="wpds-c-hdyOns wpds-c-iJWmNK">Enter email address</span><input id="registration-email-id" type="text" aria-invalid="false" name="registration-email"
          data-qa="regwall-registration-form-email-input" data-private="true" class="wpds-c-djFMBQ wpds-c-djFMBQ-iPJLV-css" value="" aria-labelledby="radix-0"></div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="dn">
    <div class="db mt-xs mb-xs "><span role="label" id="radix-1" class="wpds-c-hdyOns"><span class="db font-xxxs gray-darker pt-xxs pb-xxs gray-dark" style="padding-top: 1px;"><span>By selecting "Start reading," you agree to The Washington Post's
            <a target="_blank" style="color:inherit;" class="underline" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/information/2022/01/01/terms-of-service/">Terms of Service</a> and
            <a target="_blank" style="color:inherit;" class="underline" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/privacy-policy/">Privacy Policy</a>.</span></span></span>
      <div class="db gray-dark relative flex pt-xxs pb-xxs items-start gray-darker"><span role="label" id="radix-2" class="wpds-c-hdyOns wpds-c-jDXwHV"><button type="button" role="checkbox" aria-checked="false" data-state="unchecked" value="on"
            id="mcCheckbox" data-testid="mcCheckbox" class="wpds-c-bdrwYf wpds-c-bdrwYf-bnVAXI-size-125 wpds-c-bdrwYf-kFjMjo-cv wpds-c-bdrwYf-ikKWKCv-css" aria-labelledby="radix-2"></button><input type="checkbox" aria-hidden="true" tabindex="-1"
            value="on" style="transform: translateX(-100%); position: absolute; pointer-events: none; opacity: 0; margin: 0px; width: 0px; height: 0px;"><span class="wpds-c-bFeFXz"><span class="relative db gray-darker" style="padding-top: 2px;"><span
                class="relative db font-xxxs" style="padding-top: 1px;"><span>The Washington Post may use my email address to provide me occasional special offers via email and through other platforms. I can opt out at any
                  time.</span></span></span></span></span></div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div id="subs-turnstile-hook" data-test-id="regform" class="wpds-c-eerOeF center"></div><button data-qa="regwall-registration-form-cta-button" type="submit"
    class="wpds-c-kSOqLF wpds-c-kSOqLF-hDKJFr-variant-cta wpds-c-kSOqLF-eHdizY-density-default wpds-c-kSOqLF-ejCoEP-icon-left wpds-c-kSOqLF-ikFyhzm-css w-100 mt-sm"><span>Start reading</span></button>
</form>

Text Content

Accessibility statementSkip to main content

Democracy Dies in Darkness
SubscribeSign in
Israel-Gaza WarLive updates Israeli hostages Gaza devastation ICJ ruling Who are
the Houthis?
Israel-Gaza WarLive updates Israeli hostages Gaza devastation ICJ ruling Who are
the Houthis?


IN JERUSALEM AND THE WEST BANK, RAMADAN IS MARRED BY VIOLENCE AND LOSS

By Claire Parker
, 
Lorenzo Tugnoli
and 
Sufian Taha
March 22, 2024 at 1:00 a.m. EDT

People pray in a square outside Jerusalem's al-Aqsa Mosque on March 15, the
first Friday of Ramadan. (Lorenzo Tugnoli for The Washington Post)

Listen
10 min

Share
Comment on this storyComment489
Add to your saved stories
Save

The war in Gaza has cast a pall over the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, a time
of fasting and reflection, charity and community.

For Palestinians in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, the occasion is always
bittersweet — marked by moments of joy and constant reminders of the Israeli
occupation that shapes their lives.


Advertisement

Story continues below advertisement



Celebrations are circumscribed by Israeli restrictions. Families navigate
checkpoints to gather for meals. Violence can interrupt prayer or play at any
moment.

Since the Oct. 7 Hamas-led attack on Israel, restrictions have been tightened,
Israeli military raids have intensified, and settler attacks have driven
families from their homes.

The combustible atmosphere sparked concerns that Ramadan — which began on March
10 this year — might bring unrest across Jerusalem and the West Bank. The
situation has remained relatively calm so far, even as anguish and loss have
darkened the month’s observances.

HOLY GROUND



Jerusalem’s al-Aqsa Mosque compound, and the golden-domed shrine at its center,
sit on a site known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary and to Jews as the Temple
Mount. The site is sacred to both groups. It has been a frequent flash point in
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

During Ramadan, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians typically gather at the
site, from where they believe the prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu resisted calls from far-right
ministers this year to limit al-Aqsa access for Jerusalem residents. But for
West Bank Palestinians, only men over 55, women over 50 and children under 10
are allowed to make the trip to pray there.





The first Friday prayer of the fasting month passed peacefully, despite calls
from Hamas for Palestinians to “confront” Israeli authorities.

“Oh God, we ask you to save the blood of our brothers in Gaza,” the imam called
over the loudspeaker during the midday sermon, the most important of the week.

Khawla Marizi, 62, had traveled from Hebron to be there. Extra screening
measures made the bus ride — an hour and a half long on a good day — take four
hours, she said.

“It was very hard for us, the people of the West Bank,” she said. “But once I
prayed in al-Aqsa, I forgot all my pains.”

“It is the place that our prophet came to,” she added. “We will never give it
up.”

THE OLD CITY



In the hour before iftar, the post-sunset meal, last-minute shoppers hurried
around the streets of Jerusalem’s Old City, picking up bread, juice, and qatayef
– cream-filled folded pancakes — to serve for dessert.

A hush settled over the cobblestones at sunset, as families headed homeward to
break their fasts together. Afterward, a stream of people surged toward al-Aqsa
for Taraweeh, the nightly Ramadan prayer.

Then, the Old City came alive: Men smoking shisha lined the streets. Girls
bought gummy worms at stands overflowing with sweets. Boys chased one another
through the alleyways.

But the scene was relatively muted compared with most years, vendors said. The
owner of a tea shop estimated that foot traffic was down 85 percent this Ramadan
– largely because of tightened Israeli restrictions on movement.

“We lost business during the coronavirus,” he said. “Now we lose in wartime.”





On Tuesday, March 12, celebrations in Jerusalem were marred by the killing of a
12-year-old boy by Israeli border police in the Shuafat refugee camp, on the
city’s edge.

Ramy Hamdan al-Halhouli, described by relatives as a gregarious child who loved
food and soccer, had gone with friends after the nightly prayer to the road
behind his house to light fireworks, a common Ramadan pastime.

At the end of the road stands the barrier wall that fences off the refugee camp,
and behind it, a concrete Israeli watchtower. Video obtained by The Washington
Post shows Ramy stepping out into the middle of the road with a lighted firework
aimed skyward. The crack of gunfire goes off and Ramy falls to the ground, a
second before the firework bursts into a red shower of flame above the boys —
roughly 50 yards from the watchtower.

Ramy Hamdan al-Halhouli joined friends to light fireworks in Jerusalem on March
12. He was shot by Israeli border police as the firework erupted. (Video: Ameer
Al-Halhouli)

His father, Ali Hamdan al-Halhouli, 61, heard the shot from his house and ran to
the boy. An ambulance took him to a Jerusalem hospital, where he was pronounced
dead. Israeli authorities held on to Ramy’s body for nearly a week before
releasing it to the family for burial in the pre-dawn darkness on Monday.

“He killed my hopes, my feelings,” Ali said of the border police officer who
shot Ramy. “My son was just a kid.”





As reports of the shooting circulated, Israeli Police said in a statement that
the “suspect” had endangered its forces. Later, it was announced that the
incident was under investigation by the Israeli Justice Ministry’s Department of
Internal Police Investigations. The officer involved was questioned and released
on March 13, a spokesman for the department said, and returned to service.

Share this articleShare

“That’s exactly how one should act against terrorists,” Itamar Ben Gvir,
Israel’s far-right national security minister, who oversees the police, wrote on
Telegram after Ramy’s death.

At least 112 Palestinian children were killed in conflict-related violence in
the West Bank and East Jerusalem between Oct. 7 and early March, according to
UNICEF, the United Nations children’s agency.

NABLUS



The northern West Bank city of Nablus is at once a commercial hub and a hotbed
of Palestinian militancy. It is famous for producing tahini and sweets,
especially during Ramadan. But new Israeli restrictions since Oct. 7 are
crippling the economy. Many Nablus residents are out of work and struggling
financially.

On Wednesday morning last week in the Balata camp, a maze of narrow alleys
that’s home to some 33,000 refugees, the local committee of the Palestine
Liberation Organization was preparing iftar meals of chicken, rice and potatoes
to hand out to 700 people — nearly double the number who relied on food aid in
previous years, local officials said.

Fewer customers are coming to Ahmad Misheh’s shop on Balata’s main road to buy
luqma, a special Ramadan pastry, Misheh said. But the absence he feels more
acutely is that of his 21-year-old son Mustafa, whose fast fingers expertly
rolled the balls of dough in years past.

Mustafa, whom Misheh described as an “active” fighter in the camp, was arrested
in August 2022 for shooting at an Israeli checkpoint. No one was hurt in the
incident.

After Oct. 7, family visits to the Israeli prison where Mustafa is held were
suspended. “Every night we sit down for the iftar, we think about him,” Misheh
said. “Is he eating? Is he healthy?”

The family is holding out hope that Mustafa will be released as part of a Gaza
cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas, in which Israeli hostages would be
exchanged for Palestinian prisoners. But talks so far have yielded little
progress.





Israeli military raids here have become more frequent and violent since Oct. 7,
families say. Mothers stay awake at night, fearing that their sons will be
arrested or killed.

When the Israelis come, “I go to my room and I hide myself in bed and cover
myself with blankets,” Murad al-Qatawi, 10, said last week, sitting in his
family’s living room, where a bullet had pierced the window during a recent
raid.

Murad’s uncle, Mohammad al-Qatawi, 43, was killed in an Israeli drone strike
here in January. A fighter in the second intifada — or Palestinian uprising —
Mohammad began spending time with militants in Nablus again several years ago,
his family said. They said they did not know whether he had taken up arms again.

“The IDF doesn’t report about Palestinian deaths,” the Israel Defense Forces
said when asked about the strike that killed him.

“There is no taste for anything without Mohammad. He was my oldest son,” his
father, Juma, 72, said as he broke his fast on Wednesday evening last week,
surrounded by his younger children and grandchildren. “There is no joy, no
happiness."

HEBRON



This Ramadan is the first that Fares Samamreh, a Palestinian farmer and father
of 18, has spent away from the land that he worked all his life.

Samamreh, 57, was born in Zanuta, a small Palestinian farming village perched on
a ridge in the south Hebron hills. In the 1980s, Israelis began to build
settlements nearby. But the people of Zanuta carried on: Samamreh built a small
house with a corrugated metal roof for his growing family.

He and his sons harvested vegetables and tended to their sheep. If Ramadan fell
in the summer, the family would break their fast with wild cucumbers. “Ya
salaaaam,” Samamreh said with a smile after iftar on Thursday night last week —
an expression of appreciation for life in the village.

The problems began three years ago, he said, with the arrival of extremist
settlers. Their leader began to plow the family’s land and graze his own sheep
there. After Oct. 7, the harassment escalated sharply, Samamreh said.

Settlers descended on the family’s home at night, threatening them and flying
drones that scared their livestock. The men carried guns and wore army uniforms
to appear more menacing, Samamreh said, and destroyed the family’s water supply.
A group of Israeli soldiers watched as settlers harassed students at the village
school, Samamreh said, and one soldier hit his 9-year-old son, Ali.

The IDF said it was not aware of the incident, adding that “the family can
contact the usual channels and the issue will be reviewed.”




On Oct. 28, fear drove the Samamrehs to pack up their belongings and leave,
becoming one of more than 150 families “forcibly transferred” by settlers and
soldiers from rural communities in the West Bank since the war began, according
to the Israeli rights group B’Tselem. The United Nations has recorded 658
attacks by settlers against Palestinians since Oct. 7.

The family resettled just over a mile away, in a makeshift structure of cinder
block, concrete and sheet metal at the end of a winding dirt road. The bumpy
land isn’t good for grazing or planting crops, they said.

Samamreh can still see his farmland in Zanuta from the top of a nearby hill.

“It was the work of a lifetime,” he said.

Miriam Berger in Jerusalem and Itay Stern and Lior Soroka in Tel Aviv
contributed to this report.


ISRAEL-GAZA WAR

Israel-Gaza war: Secretary of State Antony Blinken is set to make a quick stop
in Israel as tensions are rising between the United States and Israel over
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s plans to invade Rafah. The Israeli
military said Wednesday that it was continuing its raid on al-Shifa Hospital in
Gaza City, where people said they were trapped in dire conditions.

Middle East conflict: Tensions in the region continue to rise. As Israeli troops
aim to take control of the Gaza-Egypt border crossing, officials in Cairo warn
that the move would undermine the 1979 peace treaty. Meanwhile, there’s a
diplomatic scramble to avert full-scale war between Israel and Lebanon.

U.S. involvement: U.S. airstrikes in Iraq and Syria killed dozens of
Iranian-linked militants, according to Iraqi officials. The strikes were the
first round of retaliatory action by the Biden administration for an attack in
Jordan that killed three U.S. service members.





Share
489 Comments
Israel-Gaza war
HAND CURATED
 * Republicans hug Netanyahu tighter as Democratic tensions with Israel war
   strategy boil
   March 20, 2024
   
   
   Republicans hug Netanyahu tighter as Democratic tensions with Israel war
   strategy boil
   March 20, 2024
 * Blinken begins new round of Gaza talks in Saudi Arabia
   March 20, 2024
   
   
   Blinken begins new round of Gaza talks in Saudi Arabia
   March 20, 2024
 * Blinken to visit Israel amid tensions over plan to invade Rafah
   March 20, 2024
   
   
   Blinken to visit Israel amid tensions over plan to invade Rafah
   March 20, 2024

View 3 more stories

Loading...

Subscribe to comment and get the full experience. Choose your plan →



Loading...
Company
About The Post Newsroom Policies & Standards Diversity & Inclusion Careers Media
& Community Relations WP Creative Group Accessibility Statement Sitemap
Get The Post
Become a Subscriber Gift Subscriptions Mobile & Apps Newsletters & Alerts
Washington Post Live Reprints & Permissions Post Store Books & E-Books Print
Archives (Subscribers Only) Today’s Paper Public Notices Coupons
Contact Us
Contact the Newsroom Contact Customer Care Contact the Opinions Team Advertise
Licensing & Syndication Request a Correction Send a News Tip Report a
Vulnerability
Terms of Use
Digital Products Terms of Sale Print Products Terms of Sale Terms of Service
Privacy Policy Cookie Settings Submissions & Discussion Policy RSS Terms of
Service Ad Choices
washingtonpost.com © 1996-2024 The Washington Post
 * washingtonpost.com
 * © 1996-2024 The Washington Post
 * About The Post
 * Contact the Newsroom
 * Contact Customer Care
 * Request a Correction
 * Send a News Tip
 * Report a Vulnerability
 * Download the Washington Post App
 * Policies & Standards
 * Terms of Service
 * Privacy Policy
 * Cookie Settings
 * Print Products Terms of Sale
 * Digital Products Terms of Sale
 * Submissions & Discussion Policy
 * RSS Terms of Service
 * Ad Choices
 * Coupons

5.12.6








WE CARE ABOUT YOUR PRIVACY

We and our 45 partners store and/or access information on a device, such as
unique IDs in cookies to process personal data. You may accept or manage your
choices by clicking below, including your right to object where legitimate
interest is used, or at any time in the privacy policy page. These choices will
be signaled to our partners and will not affect browsing data.

If you click “I accept,” in addition to processing data using cookies and
similar technologies for the purposes to the right, you also agree we may
process the profile information you provide and your interactions with our
surveys and other interactive content for personalized advertising.

If you do not accept, we will process cookies and associated data for strictly
necessary purposes and process non-cookie data as set forth in our Privacy
Policy (consistent with law and, if applicable, other choices you have made).


WE AND OUR PARTNERS PROCESS COOKIE DATA TO PROVIDE:

Actively scan device characteristics for identification. Create profiles for
personalised advertising. Use profiles to select personalised advertising.
Create profiles to personalise content. Use profiles to select personalised
content. Measure advertising performance. Measure content performance.
Understand audiences through statistics or combinations of data from different
sources. Develop and improve services. Store and/or access information on a
device. Use limited data to select content. Use limited data to select
advertising. List of Partners (vendors)

I Accept Reject All Show Purposes


Already have an account? Sign in

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


TWO WAYS TO READ THIS ARTICLE:

Create an account or sign in
Free
 * Access this article

Enter email address
By selecting "Start reading," you agree to The Washington Post's Terms of
Service and Privacy Policy.
The Washington Post may use my email address to provide me occasional special
offers via email and through other platforms. I can opt out at any time.

Start reading
Subscribe
€2every 4 weeks
 * Unlimited access to all articles
 * Save stories to read later

Subscribe