Back to reports search page

Dura-Al Fawwar Junction, Hakvasim (sheep) Junction, South Hebron Hills, Susiya, Zif Junction

Observers: Hagit Sar Shalom, Raya Ye’or, Michal Tsadik (reporting); Translator: Charles K.
Dec-31-2015
| Morning

After three difficult months we dared today to visit a few of our acquaintances in the area.

We began at Susya.

At the entrance to the locality, a monument to the infant from the Dawabsha family.

Our friend ‘Azzam drove along winding roads to the hospital in Yatta with his wife, via Samu’a, because the entry near them is blocked.

The wind there is cold and biting.  ‘Azzam’s sons invite us into their warm, pleasant tent.

They’re fine, but last night settlers came.  Why?  Why not.

There’s also a drone newly overhead in the past few days.

The tent is dark until the sun rises.  They have neither sun nor electricity.

We ask why there are no wind turbines to generate electricity in such a windy location.  “We erected them but they were demolished.”  Why?  Because they’re too noticeable.  Because they emphasize the fact that the electric wires passing over their heads are intended only for the Jewish locality of Susia. 

Children are home early from school because of exams; the family’s workers are also home today.

We drove to Zif junction.  At the grocery Nabil says everything’s quiet.  Today there’s no checkpoint at the entrance to Yatta.

We continued to the junction with Highway 60 and from there past Kvasim junction.  Checkpoints in both directions, soldiers at the entrance to Hebron.

Beit Haggai – below it another entrance to Hebron blocked by a gate and soldiers controlling entry.

Dura al Fawwar junction.  Roadblocks at all the entrances to all the Palestinian localities – ‘Abda, Karameh.

We see again everywhere the mounds of earth and rocks at the entrances to every place in which people live, as it was in recent years. Only the entrance to Dahariyya was open, with no soldiers.

  • Dura Al-Fawwar Junction

    See all reports for this place
    • Junction on Route 60: west - the town of El Dura, east - the Al Fawwar refugee camp. There is a manned pillbox  at the junction. From time to time the army sets up flying checkpoints at the entrance to El Fawwar and Al Dura. Al-Fawwar is a large refugee camp (7,000 inhabitants in 2007) established in 1949 to accommodate Palestinian refugees from Be'er Sheva and Beit Jubrin and environs. There are many incidents of stone-throwing. In the vicinity of the pillbox there are excellent agricultural areas, Farmers set up stalls adjacent to the plots close to the road. In recent months the civil administration  has set up dirt embankments thereby blocking access to the stalls, and making it impossible for the farmers to sell their vegetables. Updated April 2021, Michal T.
  • Hakvasim (sheep) Junction

    See all reports for this place
    • One of the roadblocks (earthworks, rocks, concrete blocks or iron gates) that prevent transit of vehicles to Route 60 in the southern West Bank and block the southern entrance to Hebron. A manned pillbox supervises the place.
  • South Hebron Hills

    See all reports for this place
    • South Hebron Hills
      South Hebron Hills is a large area in the West Bank's southern part.
      Yatta is a major city in this area: right in the border zone between the fertile region of Hebron and its surroundings and the desert of the Hebron Hills. Yatta has about 64,000 inhabitants.
      The surrounding villages are called Masafer Yatta (Yatta's daughter villages). Their inhabitants subsist on livestock and agriculture. Agriculture is possible only in small plots, especially near streams. Most of the area consists of rocky terraces.

      Since the beginning of the 1980s, many settlements have been established on the agricultural land cultivated by the Palestinians in the South Hebron Hills region: Carmel, Maon, Susia, Masadot Yehuda, Othniel, and more. Since the settlements were established and Palestinians cultivation areas have been reduced; the residents of the South Hebron Hills have been suffering from harassment by the settlers. Attempts to evict and demolish houses have continued, along with withholding water and electricity. The military and police usually refrain from intervening in violent incidents between settlers and Palestinians do not enforce the law when it comes to the investigation of extensive violent Jewish settlers. The harassment in the South Hebron Hills includes attacking and attempting to burn residential tents, harassing dogs, harming herds, and preventing access to pastures. 

      There are several checkpoints in the South Hebron Hills, on Routes 317 and 60. In most of them, no military presence is apparent, but rather an array of pillboxes monitor the villages. Roadblocks are frequently set up according to the settlers and the army's needs. These are located at the Zif Junction, the Dura-al Fawwar crossing, and the Sheep Junction at the southern entrance to Hebron.

      Updated April 2022

       

       

      Umm al-Khair: The soccer field for Palestinian children is surrounded by new trailers and lots of Israeli flags
      Michal Tsadik
      Feb-17-2026
      Umm al-Khair: The soccer field for Palestinian children is surrounded by new trailers and lots of Israeli flags
  • Susiya

    See all reports for this place
    • Susiya The Palestinian area lies between the settlement of Susya and a military base. The residents began to settle in areas outside the villages in the 1830s and lived in caves, tents and sukkot. To this day they maintain a traditional lifestyle and their livelihood is based on agriculture and herding. Until the 1948 war, the farmers cultivated areas that extended to the Arad area. As a result of the war, a significant portion of their land left on the Israeli side was lost. After the 1967 war and the Israeli occupation, military camps were established in the area, fire zones and nature reserves were declared, and the land area was further reduced. The Jewish settlement in Susya began in 1979. Since then, there has been a stubborn struggle to remove the remains of Palestinian residents who refuse to leave their place of birth and move to nearby  town Yatta. With the development of a tourist site in Khirbet Susya in the late 1980s (an ancient synagogue), dozens of families living in caves in its vicinity were deported. In the second half of the 1990s, a new form of settlement developed in the area - shepherds' farms of individual settlers. This phenomenon increased the tension between the settlers and the original, Palestinian residents, and led to repeated harassment of the residents of the farms towards the Palestinians. At the same time, demolition of buildings and crop destruction by security forces continued, as well as water and electricity prevention. In the Palestinian Susya, as in a large part of the villages of the southern Hebron Mountains, there is no running water, but the water pipe that supplies water to the Susya Jewish settlement passes through it. Palestinians have to buy expensive water that comes in tankers. Solar electricity is provided by a collector system, installed with donation funds. But the frequent demolitions in the villages do not spare water cisterns or the solar panels and power poles designed to transfer solar electricity between the villages. Updated April 2021, Anat T.  
  • Zif Junction

    See all reports for this place
    • Zif Junction located on the crossroads that directs towards Road 356 to Yata. Yata is the district city of the southern Hebron Mountains. Usually, this junction is open to traffic. The nearby pillbox is unmanned. But the army and police are present occasionally, sometimes setting up a checkpoint and sometimes detaining residents from the big city. Often,  the Israeli policemen inspect vehicles and distribute driving reports to Palestinian vehicles. s
Donate