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The war is in Gaza, but Palestinians in the West Bank are targeted with violence too

Suliman Mleihat, 32, and his nine-year-old son Obeida stand in front of Obeida's classroom, where he sheltered from settlers who attacked the school in the Mu鈥檃rrajat Bedouin community in mid-September.
Maya Levin for NPR
Suliman Mleihat, 32, and his nine-year-old son Obeida stand in front of Obeida's classroom, where he sheltered from settlers who attacked the school in the Mu鈥檃rrajat Bedouin community in mid-September.

This story is a part of an NPR series reflecting on Oct. 7, a year of war and how it has changed life across Israel, the Gaza Strip, the region and the world.

AL-MU鈥橝RRAJAT, West Bank 鈥 In a sun-filled classroom for elementary-aged students, decorations and posters showing the Arabic alphabet have been ripped from the walls, chairs toppled, papers and documents from a filing cabinet crumpled and strewn across the floor. The door to the classroom is tied with rope; its handle lies nearby, bashed and warped after the door was kicked in a day earlier.

A group of extremist Israeli settlers stormed the small primary school last month while it was in session.

In a video filmed that September day by an Israeli human rights activist, the settlers are seen wielding wooden bats and charging through the schoolyard. They beat a young teacher, attack the activist who鈥檚 filming and try to break into locked classrooms where students were sheltering.

鈥淭he teacher told us all to come and hold the door shut so they can鈥檛 break in,鈥 remembers nine-year-old Obeida Mleihat. He peeks into the classroom he was sheltering in, and points to a fan in the corner.

鈥淚 was standing over there,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 was scared.鈥

In the year since the Hamas-led attacks on southern Israel last Oct. 7 鈥 which Israel says killed around 1,200 people and sparked the current war in Gaza, which has killed more than 42,000 Palestinians 鈥 violence by Israeli settlers and the Israeli military has also erupted against Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

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Near-nightly military raids take place in many cities. Israel says these are part of counterterrorism efforts against Hamas and other militant groups that have stepped up attacks against Israelis. The military raids have become longer, more frequent, more deadly and more destructive than in the past. According to the United Nations, , 2023. Outside urban areas, settlers have increased threatening attacks on rural Palestinian communities, aiming to push them from their land.

The scene of a classroom that had been attacked at Obeida's school.
Maya Levin for NPR /
The scene of a classroom that had been attacked at Obeida's school.
Obeida plays in a classroom at his school after Israeli settlers attacked teachers with bats and tried to break into classrooms where students were sheltering a few days before.
Maya Levin for NPR /
Obeida plays in a classroom at his school after Israeli settlers attacked teachers with bats and tried to break into classrooms where students were sheltering a few days before.

Obeida鈥檚 dad, Suliman Mleihat, is the head of this rural Palestinian Bedouin community, tucked into the rolling hills of the Jordan Valley. He rushed to the school when he heard the attack was happening 鈥 both his young children were there. He says the Israeli military showed up and blocked him and other parents from entering, but also didn鈥檛 stop the settlers. (The Israeli military did not directly comment on this incident in response to an NPR request.)

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鈥淢y children are my soul, so it was incredibly difficult to not be able to get to them, to not know if they were okay,鈥 Mleihat says. When he did finally get to them, he hugged them both very tightly.

Mleihat says he recognized this group of settlers. They鈥檇 attacked the community before 鈥 poisoning sheep and hurting people.

鈥淏ut coming to the school, and threatening children, this is new,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his crossed a major line.鈥

Mleihat says that the settlers are trying to get them all to leave, to evict the Bedouin community. And he says it鈥檚 a real possibility, if attacks like this continue. But where would they go?

Attacks are orchestrated to force Palestinians off their land

Allegra Pacheco is an American attorney who heads the West Bank Protection Consortium, a group of international nonprofits focused on protecting Palestinians in the West Bank from forced displacement and attacks.

鈥淪ettler violence isn鈥檛 just about a group of young guys on a hilltop anymore,鈥 she says, invoking a common stereotype.

Pacheco has been working in the West Bank for decades. She says before last Oct. 7, most Israelis living in settlements in the West Bank 鈥 all of which are illegal under international law, though not necessarily under Israeli law 鈥 were relatively unconcerned with nearby Palestinians as long as they didn鈥檛 interfere with settler life.

鈥淣ow we're seeing much more rhetoric that 鈥楶alestinians are the enemies,鈥 that they're legitimate targets,鈥 says Pacheco. 鈥淎nd that, of course, transfers into the violence that we鈥檙e seeing.鈥

A view of the Mu鈥檃rrajat Bedouin community, Sept. 18.
Maya Levin for NPR /
A view of the Mu鈥檃rrajat Bedouin community, Sept. 18.

Attacks by settlers on Palestinians in the West Bank skyrocketed after last Oct. 7. The United Nations has nearly 1,400 attacks 鈥 not including harassment or threats 鈥 in the past year. The years 2023 and 2024 so far have had the highest number of incidents since the organization began collecting data nearly 20 years ago.

The attacks are often orchestrated to intimidate Palestinians into leaving their land 鈥 Pacheco says about 17 communities have been forcefully displaced this way in the past year alone.

鈥淥nce the Palestinians are chased out of these areas, the settlements move in and make it much harder to give back the land to the Palestinians,鈥 says Pacheco.

That is the goal.

The Yesha Council, the Israeli umbrella organization for all the settlements in the West Bank, : 鈥淭o prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea.鈥 And Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu鈥檚 government 鈥 with ultranationalist lawmakers in major positions of power overseeing the West Bank 鈥 encourages the expansion of illegal settlements, and instructs the Israeli police and military to protect them.

Israeli settlements in the West Bank have become so disruptive that the International Court of Justice 鈥 calling on Israel to cease its presence in the occupied territories, including dismantling Israel settlements there and paying reparations to Palestinians for damages caused from the occupation.

Meanwhile, world leaders, including President Biden in his 2024 , are still pushing for a two-state solution.

Fears that the West Bank will become the next Gaza

In late August, the Israeli military launched one of its in years, centered on the Jenin urban refugee camp,. The raid lasted 10 days and killed 39 Palestinians, according to Palestinian health officials. Three Israeli police officers were also killed, according to the Israeli military.

The Israeli military left much of Jenin in ruins. Jenin Mayor Nidal Abu Saleh says at least 70% of the city was destroyed in the raid.

Driving through Jenin weeks later, the damage is still clearly visible. The streets have been ripped up and there are giant potholes from explosions. Much of the infrastructure is damaged, too 鈥 water and sewage flow through the streets and power lines are ripped down.

The Israeli military says operations like this are necessary for counterterrorism. Jenin and other cities in the West Bank have long been militant strongholds, which have grown more active since last Oct. 7.

As schoolchildren carrying backpacks try to navigate the piles of rubble and debris in the streets, community leader Farha Abu Hejah observes that the violence has been especially difficult for them.

Scenes of destruction of homes, storefronts and infrastructure after Israeli military raids, incursions, and bombings in a refugee camp in Jenin, in the occupied West Bank.
Maya Levin for NPR /
Scenes of destruction of homes, storefronts and infrastructure after Israeli military raids, incursions, and bombings in a refugee camp in Jenin, in the occupied West Bank.

鈥淭he children have a hard time getting to school because of the rocks and the holes in the road,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd the raids are terrifying. The children are in panic. Families are in total panic. It really impacts everyone鈥檚 psychological state.鈥

Abu Hejah grew up in Jenin, and has lived there all her life. She says the Israeli military has been targeting the refugee camp for many years, but never like this. Now, 鈥淚t鈥檚 a complete destruction of life and infrastructure. It looks like Gaza,鈥 she says. 鈥淛enin is Gaza, but in the West Bank.鈥

Khalil Shikaki, a political scientist and pollster in Ramallah, says his recent polls have show that Palestinians in the West Bank are feeling increasingly unsafe, unprotected by their own leaders and at the mercy of Israeli troops and even airstrikes 鈥 which were rare in the West Bank for the past two decades but have become regular in the past year.

鈥淭hese last few months have essentially brought in tremendous fears that the destruction in Gaza is going to happen in the West Bank as well,鈥 Shikaki says. 鈥淭here is a significant rise in the perception of West Bankers that Gaza is coming to them.鈥

Family homes are destroyed

Near the center of the Jenin refugee camp, through a small courtyard off a ripped-up street, is the Abu Ali family home 鈥 where 26 family members, including eight children, once lived spread over three floors.

Now, the main floor apartment is charred and covered in debris. A melted and warped ceiling fan hangs overhead in the living room, a crumpled refrigerator sits in what was once a kitchen. The back wall is blasted with a giant gaping hole.

Three-year-old Sami Abu Ali, grandson of Raeda Abu Ali, plays beside a door that was broken by Israeli soldiers in his family's home in the Jenin refugee camp, Sept. 18.
Maya Levin for NPR /
Three-year-old Sami Abu Ali, grandson of Raeda Abu Ali, plays beside a door that was broken by Israeli soldiers in his family's home in the Jenin refugee camp, Sept. 18.
Jenin Mayor Nidal Abu Saleh says at least 70% of his city was destroyed in an Israeli military raid in August.
Maya Levin for NPR /
Jenin Mayor Nidal Abu Saleh says at least 70% of his city was destroyed in an Israeli military raid in August.

The family matriarch, Raeda Abu Ali, says Israeli soldiers arrived in the night and ordered everyone out of the house. They carried a gas canister into the back room.

鈥淭hey told us to count to three, and you鈥檒l hear your home explode,鈥 she remembers. 鈥淭hat was a terrible moment, when I listened to my house blow up.鈥

A burned metal gas container still sits in the middle of the floor.

Abu Ali says the soldiers gave no reason for why they blew up the house. No one in her family is affiliated with any militant groups, she says.

The Israeli military told NPR that it was not aware of this specific incident, but added that 鈥渄uring the operation in Jenin, laboratories in a civilian area that were used by terrorists to prepare explosives were dismantled.鈥

She says they hope to rebuild, although she worries their home could be destroyed again. When asked if she can file a complaint, Abu Ali almost laughs.

鈥淲ho will listen to us? There鈥檚 no side that I can address this complaint to,鈥 she says. 鈥淟ook at Gaza. Look at the destruction. Who鈥檚 listening to them? Why would someone listen to us?鈥

Raeda Abu Ali, 60, looks at the charred remains of her home in Jenin, Sept. 18.
Maya Levin for NPR /
Raeda Abu Ali, 60, looks at the charred remains of her home in Jenin, Sept. 18.

As she speaks, her sister-in-law Samira Abu Ali begins weeding the front garden. Raeda鈥檚 three-year-old grandson plays nearby.

Samira says the plants were blown across the courtyard in the explosion, but she picked them up and replanted them.

She points to a small red flower on one of them, and smiles. Even after all that, she says, it bloomed.

Nuha Musleh contributed to this report from the West Bank. Itay Stern contributed from Tel Aviv.

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