Villagers in West Bank’s Umm al-Khair say security forces quick to stymie Tu Bishvat coexistence event or new soccer pitch, but take their time when it comes to stopping settler harassment
UMM AL-KHAIR, West Bank – The ramshackle Palestinian hamlet of Umm al-Khair, located in the South Hebron Hills region of the West Bank, is no stranger to hardship and adversity.
Since October, the village has had demolition orders hanging over more than a dozen of its structures. In July, peace activist Awdah Hathaleen, one of the village’s most prominent residents, was shot dead, allegedly by an extremist Jewish settler from the area.
On Monday, the hamlet was once again the scene of strife as the army and police thwarted a planned tree-planting event there organized by Israeli coexistence activists, illustrating what villagers say are ever-growing challenges imposed by their settler neighbors and Israel’s security services that threaten their daily existence beyond the tragedies and large-scale tribulations that usually grab headlines.
These day-to-day difficulties include perpetual harassment and intimidation inside the hardscrabble village, struggles to maintain their agricultural livelihood, and even efforts aimed at stopping them from giving their children a place to play soccer.
“We are upset all the time here,” Khalil Hathaleen, the brother of the slain activist, told The Times of Israel on Monday, complaining of persistent harassment by settlers and security services whenever he takes his sheep and goats out to graze. “They don’t give the kids one minute to be happy. They make life very difficult for everyone.”
The tree-planting activity was organized by Rabbis for Human Rights to mark the Jewish holiday of Tu Bishvat, which celebrates the new year for trees and is a day on which tree-planting ceremonies are traditionally conducted in Israel.
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An IDF officer comes to inform coexistence activists that they have to leave the Palestinian hamlet of Umm al-Khair in the West Bank where they went to plant olive trees on February 2, 2026 (Jeremy Sharon/Times of Israel)
