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Jordan Valley: Stories of horror are heard everywhere

Observers: Daphne Banai (report and photo), Tamar Berger (photo)
Apr-24-2025
| Morning

Wherever you throw a stone in the Occupied Territories you hear horror stories.

We sat down in a café opposite the Turmus Ayya eye hospital. First we were suspected, but when we made it clear who we were, we were warmly greeted. People are desperate to talk, looking for willing ears, feeling invisible.

A 10-year-old child from Ramon village said that yesterday a group of settler thugs tried to set afire a farming facility at his home. The army chased them away so they went over to another house and set a structure there on fire. The army, arriving after the fact, chased them away from there so they returned to the boy’s home and this time managed to burn the structure.

As the child was still talking, another person joined us and said that these days the settlers are erecting a new outpost at the outskirts of Sinjil, on a hill overlooking it. Three days ago, the settlers set on fire a house at the edge of the village and as always, the soldiers backed them up and fired teargas at the Palestinians, which choked a villager to death – Wael ‘Afari, 48-years-old and a father of four who lives close to the said hill. We got there and saw an army van guarding the way to the outpost, and when the soldiers saw our car they jumped at us. When they drove up, two Border Policemen with cocked long rifles came at us. Their car held another five armed men, all pointing their weapons at us. And I thought there’s a shortage of soldiers… As on October 7th, many are helping the settlers run rampant in the Occupied West Bank at the expense of manpower in Gaza…

 

 

Location Description

  • Sinjil

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    • Singil

      A town with a Maqam

       The origin of the town's name is Raymond IV of Saint-Gilles, nicknamed the Count of Toulouse who established a Crusader fortress there in 1198. There is evidence of a settlement in the place as early as the Early Bronze Age.

        On the mountain across from the town of Singil, east of Ramallah, the agricultural lands of its ten thousand residents spread out – The beautiful built-up terraces were renovated during the quiet period of the Corona pandemic. Each person and his fields on the way to the hilltop, location of the holy site, Maqam Abu Al ‘Uf, one the prophet Mohammad’s companions. Singil lands  amount to 18 thousand dunams. Of these, 9,500 dunams are area C - where the Civil Administration forbids digging a water hole, laying pipes or building a shed to protect against the heat of the day or rain.

      Maqam Abu Al ‘Uf stands in the heart of Singil's agricultural lands, on a hill from which the entire town is overlooked. It is an ancient and beautiful place that contains all the elements of Palestinian life in the past, which they embrace with longing. But they are afraid to repair and clean the site with a double fear of the settlers and the civil administration, since the site is in area C, the settlers are trying to appropriate the Muslim site to the Jewish narrative and transfer it to their control. They come and litter site with ship excrement or set up tables for a parties there.

      Everything is beautiful, but there is a thorn in it: the Israeli occupation! In January 1978, a group of settlers settled near the village lands, under the guise of an archaeological dig camp in the nearby Tel Shiloh. Today Singil and its lands are surrounded by the huge settlements: Shiloh, Eli, Ma'ale Levona and their outposts: Giv’at Har’el, Giv’at Ha-Ro’eh (which the government approved to become a settlements) that more and more of the lands of Singil are annexed by one trick or another to the settlements. Another addition is the violent outpost called "Nahal Shiloh" from which a settler to attacks the Palestinian farmers, attempts to destroy terraces and send his herds to the Palestinian fields. Adjacent to the outpost is an Israeli army.

      Of the 10,000 residents who live in the town, 400 people work in Israel and depend on work permits. They leave at three in the morning through four exits manned by soldiers from the nearby army camp who are held up by ID checks. 12,000 residents left over the years to other countries, mainly to the United States.

      As part of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, over the years there have been dozens of incidents of mutual violence between the residents of the village and Jewish residents of the area and the IDF forces. Including a settlers’ pogrom in May 2023.

      Immediately after the horrific massacre carried out by the Hamas organization in the Gaza Strip on October 7, 2023, all the village entrances were blocked with stones and piles of dirt. There is no going out and no coming except for one checkpoint in the direction of Ramallah where a military guard allows one out of ten applicants to leave.

       

      Updated October 2023

       

  • Turmus Aya

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    • Turmus Aya is a beautiful and well-kept Palestinian town in the Ramallah and al-Bira governorate, located in the Shiloh Valley, about 22 km north of Ramallah. Near Highway 60 at an altitude of about 732 m. In 2016, 4,781 residents lived in the town. After the 2nd intifada in 2001, hundreds immigrated to the US, but they come in the summer to visit their families and live in the nice houses they built.

      Israel expropriated 752 dunams of the town's land for the establishment of the Shiloh settlement, in 1978, and another 372 dunams for the establishment of the Shebot Rachel settlement in 1992. According to the Oslo Agreement, the built-up area of TAos Aya was classified as area B. This area constitutes 64.7% of the town's land, and the rest, 35.3%, is area C.

      Starting in 2015, the town's residents often suffer from harassment from the settlers of the Adi Ad outpost, which include the uprooting and cutting of olive trees, the burning of wheat fields and the spraying of anti-Netzka inscriptions.

      On June 21, 2023, dozens of young people from outposts and surrounding settlements carried out a pogrom in broad daylight after the funeral of the victims of the attack that occurred two days earlier at the gas station in the settlement of Eli. The attack took place after the Israel Defense Forces' invasion of Jenin and the killing of innocents in the process - an invasion that took place after a previous event... and so on, deep into the non-stop blood equation that is always presented in Israel as terror attacks without context. They set fire to about 60 cars and about 30 houses with their occupants and threw stones, fire grenades and even shot from guns.The IDF soldiers watched the attack but didn't intervene.  A villager was killed by soldier fire. Only 3 settlers were arrested after a few days, but charges have not yet been filed against them.

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