Activist rabbi helps Palestinian farmers facing Israeli settler violence

There was an average of three incidents of settler violence per day, according to the UN, but since the outbreak of the war it has risen to seven.

Israeli activists Guy Hirschfeld (R) and Rabbi Arik Ascherman (2nd-R) argue with Israeli soldiers after they asked Palestinian shepherds to leave an area designated as military zone in Um Zuka town, north of the Jordan Valley, on February 19, 2020. / Photo: AFP
AFP

Israeli activists Guy Hirschfeld (R) and Rabbi Arik Ascherman (2nd-R) argue with Israeli soldiers after they asked Palestinian shepherds to leave an area designated as military zone in Um Zuka town, north of the Jordan Valley, on February 19, 2020. / Photo: AFP

Stooping under the weight of his body armour but uncowed by the threat of violence, Rabbi Arik Ascherman guards an olive grove in the occupied West Bank, protecting Palestinian farmers from rising Israeli settler violence.

"It's an all-out war between two peoples," said the 64-year-old, a veteran activist with the Rabbis for Human Rights group, outside the village of Taybeh, as farmers whacked olives weeping with oil onto pinstripe tarpaulins skirting the tree trunks.

"Nobody at this point is willing to help Palestinians, out of our pain and our anger."

Nearby his comrades -- even if they are only a handful -- prove him wrong. They are posted as lookouts, prepared to face off with settlers who may descend at any moment to harass and fight the farmers.

"Over the 28 years I've been doing this, I generally did not see myself as marginalised," said Ascherman, who has long campaigned against Israeli settler violence in the occupied West Bank.

"There were always a significant number of Israelis who at least passively supported and agreed with what we were doing," he said.

"Today that's evaporated. There's almost no support."

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'Our fear has doubled'

Since Hamas fighters stormed southern Israel five weeks ago, killing some 1,200 people according to Israel, there has been a dramatic rise in assaults by Israeli settlers on Palestinians living in the West Bank, occupied by Israel since 1967.

Before October 7 there were an average of three incidents of settler violence per day, according to the UN, but since the outbreak of the war it has risen to seven.

In late October, a farmer 14 kilometres (nine miles) north of Taybeh was killed by settlers whilst tending his olive trees, according to Israeli human rights group B'Tselem.

"Since the war has begun there has been a growing number of incidents in which violent settlers have been documented attacking nearby Palestinian communities while wearing military uniform and using government-issued weapons," B'Tselem said.

The Israeli military said it appeared "an off-duty IDF (army) soldier participated in the event", adding it had launched an inquiry.

"Our fear over the settlers has doubled since (October) 7," said 63-year-old Palestinian Sameer Abedalkareem, his family working on trees in the nearby village of Dura al Karia.

"We haven't been able to go to our land, because settlers and the Israeli army shoot towards us."

The sprawling vistas of gnarled olive trees planted in the ochre earth of the occupied West Bank have been the site of clashes between farmers and encroaching settlers for decades, with the disputes hinging on access to land.

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'Another front'

For Palestinians, the hardy olive, which thrives in tough conditions and can live for hundreds of years, is a symbol of their rootedness in the territory, where an estimated 10 million trees grow.

But this year's harvest coincided with the outbreak of the Israeli war on Gaza.

"Before, the olive-picking month was like a festival, but today it's nothing like that," said Abedalkareem's wife, 60-year-old Suad Mahmoud.

"Olives are very important to us, and without them we couldn't live," she said.

"From our perspective, it's like the settlers are trying to open another front," said Dani Brodsky, Rabbis for Human Rights's director for the occupied Palestinian territories.

"We pray for peace and we hope things will get better and we're willing to put the work in," he said, wearing a padded lacrosse glove to soften blows he may take if settlers show up.

Ascherman turned to the Old Testament to explain the current plight of the Palestinians in the occupied West Bank, citing the scripture when Abraham, the spiritual father of the Jewish faith, protests God's wrathful decision to wipe out the city of Sodom to punish the sins of its residents.

"How dare you, God, sweep away the innocent with the guilty?" Ascherman said.

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