To the Israeli Soldier Who Murdered Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi

By Chris Hedges 

I know you. I met you in the dense canopies in the war in El Salvador. It was there that I first heard the single, high-pitched crack of the sniper bullet. Distinct. Ominous. A sound that spreads terror. Army units I traveled with, enraged by the lethal accuracy of rebel snipers, set up heavy .50 caliber machine guns and sprayed the foliage overhead until your body, a bloodied and mangled pulp, dropped to the ground.

I saw you at work in Basra in Iraq and of course Gaza, where on a fall afternoon at the Netzarim Junction, you shot dead a young man a few feet away from me. We carried his limp body up the road.

I lived with you in Sarajevo during the war. You were only a few hundred yards away, perched in high rises that looked down on the city. I witnessed your daily carnage. At dusk, I saw you fire a round in the gloom at an old man and his wife bent over their tiny vegetable plot. You missed. She ran, haltingly, for cover. He did not. You fired again. I concede the light was fading. It was hard to see. Then, the third time, you killed him. This is one of those memories of war I see in my head over and over and over and never talk about. I watched it from the back of the Holiday Inn, but by now I have seen it, or the shadows of it, hundreds of times.

You targeted me, too. You struck down colleagues and friends. I was in your sights traveling from northern Albania into Kosovo with 600 fighters from the Kosovo Liberation Army, each insurgent carrying an extra AK-47 to hand off to a comrade. Three shots. That crisp crack, too familiar. You must have been far away. Or maybe you were a bad shot, although you came close. I scrambled for cover behind a rock. My two bodyguards bent over me, panting, the green pouches strapped to their chests packed full of grenades.

I know how you talk. The black humor. “Pint sized terrorists” you say of the children you kill. You are proud of your skills. It gives you cachet. You cradle your weapon as if it is an extension of your body. You admire its despicable beauty. This is who you are. A killer.

In your society of killers, you are respected, rewarded, promoted. You are numb to the suffering you inflict. Maybe you enjoy it. Maybe you think you are protecting yourself, your identity, your comrades, your nation. Maybe you believe the killing is a necessary evil, a way to make sure Palestinians die before they can strike. Maybe you have surrendered your morality to the blind obedience of the military, subsumed yourself into the industrial machinery of death. Maybe you are scared to die. Maybe you want to prove to yourself and others that you are tough, you can kill. Maybe your mind is so warped that you believe killing is righteous.

You are intoxicated by the god-like power to revoke another person’s charter to live on this earth. You revel in the intimacy of it. You see in fine detail through the telescopic sight, the nose and mouth of your victim. The triangle of death. You hold your breath. You pull slowly, gently on the trigger. And then the pink puff. Severed spinal cord. Death. It is over.

You were the last person to see Aysenur alive. You were the first person to see her dead.

This is you now. And now no one can reach you. You are death’s angel. You are numb and cold. But, I suspect, this will not last. I covered war for a long time. I know, even if you do not, the next chapter of your life. I know what happens when you leave the embrace of the military, when you are no longer a cog in these factories of death. I know the hell you are about to enter.

It starts like this. All the skills you acquired as a killer on the outside are useless. Maybe you go back. Maybe you become a gun for hire. But this will only delay the inevitable. You can run, for a while, but you cannot run forever. There will be reckoning. And it is the reckoning I will tell you about.

You will face a choice. Live the rest of your life, stunted, numb, cut off from yourself, cut off from those around you. Descend into a psychopathic fog, trapped in the absurd, interdependent lies that justify mass murder. There are killers, years later, who say they are proud of their work, who claim not a moment’s regret. But I have not been inside their nightmares. If this is you then you will never again truly live.

Of course, you do not talk about what you did to those around you, certainly not to your family. They think you are a good person. You know this is a lie. The numbness, usually, wears off. You look in the mirror, and if you have any shred of conscience left, your reflection disturbs you. But you repress the bitterness. You escape down the rabbit hole of opioids and alcohol. Your intimate relationships, because you cannot feel, because you bury your self-loathing, disintegrate. This escape works. For a while. But then you go into such darkness that the stimulants you use to blunt your pain begin to destroy you. And maybe that is how you die. I have known many who died like that. And I have known those who ended it quickly. A gun to the head.

Between 1973 and 2024, 1,227 Israeli soldiers committed suicide according to official statistics, but the actual number is believed to be far higher. In the U.S. an average of 16 veterans commit suicide every day.

I have trauma from war. But the worst trauma I do not have. The worst trauma from war is not what you saw. It is not what you experienced. The worst trauma is what you did. They have names for it. Moral injury. Perpetrator Induced Traumatic Stress. But that seems tepid given the hot, burning coals of rage, the night terrors, the despair. Those around you know something is terribly, terribly wrong. They fear your darkness. But you do not let them into your labyrinth of pain.

And then, one day, you reach out for love. Love is the opposite of war. War is about smut. It is about pornography. It is about turning other human beings into objects, maybe sexual objects, but I also mean this literally, for war turns people into corpses. Corpses are the end product of war, what comes off its assembly line. So, you will want love, but the angel of death has made a Faustian bargain. It is this. It is the hell of not being able to love. You will carry this death inside you for the rest of your life. It corrodes your soul. Yes. We have souls. You sold yours. And the cost is very, very high. It means that what you want, what you most desperately need in life, you cannot attain.

Then one day, maybe you are a father or a mother or an uncle or an aunt, and a young woman you love, or want to love as a daughter, comes into your life. You see in her, it will come in a flash, Aysenur’s face. The young woman you murdered. Come back to life. Israeli now. Speaking Hebrew. Innocent. Good. Full of hope. The full force of what you did, who you were, who you are, will hit you like an avalanche.

You will spend days wanting to cry and not knowing why. You will be consumed by guilt. You will believe that because of what you did the life of this other young woman is in danger. Divine retribution. You will tell yourself this is absurd, but you will believe it anyway. Your life will start to include little offerings of goodness to others as if these offerings will appease a vengeful god, as if these offerings will save her from harm, from death. But nothing can wipe away the stain of murder.

Yes. You killed Aysenur. You killed others. Palestinians who you dehumanized and taught yourself to hate. Human animals. Terrorists. Barbarians. But it is harder to dehumanize her. You know, you saw it through your scope, she was no threat. She did not throw rocks, the paltry justification the Israeli army uses to shoot live rounds at Palestinians, including children.

You will be overwhelmed with sorrow. Regret. Shame. Grief. Despair. Alienation. You will have an existential crisis. You will know that all the values you were taught to honor in school, at worship, in your home, are not the values you upheld. You will hate yourself. You will not say this out loud. You may, one way or another, extinguish yourself.

There is a part of me that says you deserve this torment. There is a part of me that wants you to suffer for the loss you inflicted on Aysenur’s family and friends, to pay for taking the life of this courageous and gifted woman.

Shooting unarmed people is not bravery. It is not courage. It is not even war. It is a crime. It is murder. You are a murderer. I am sure you were not ordered to kill Aysenur. You shot Aysenur in the head because you could, because you felt like it. Israel runs an open-air shooting gallery in Gaza and the West Bank. Total impunity. Murder as sport.

You will, one day, not be the killer you are now. You will exhaust yourself trying to ward off demons. You will desperately want to be human. You will want to love and be loved. Maybe you will make it. Being human again. But that will mean a life of contrition. It will mean making your crime public. It will mean begging, on your knees, for forgiveness. It will mean forgiving yourself. This is very hard. It will mean orientating every aspect of your life to nurturing life rather than extinguishing it. This will be your only hope for salvation. If you do not take it, you are damned.

Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi (27 July 1998 – 6 September 2024) was a Turkish-born American human rights activist and peer mentor. Eygi was a volunteer for the International Solidarity Movement(ISM) and an activist against the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories. On 6 September 2024, she was shot in the head by an Israel Defense Forces (IDF) sniper during a protest against illegal Israeli settlements in BeitaNablus, in the West Bank. Eygi was rushed to the Rafidia Surgical Hospital but died shortly after.

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The Gang Mentality Of The Israeli Occupation Army

The way the Israeli occupation army acts harshly in the current conflict in Gaza shows a kind of “gang mentality” in their thinking. To understand this behavior, we have to look at the strong influence of the main groups that formed this army. This army was created by bringing together notable Zionist terrorist gangs like Haganah, Irgun, Palmach, and Stern (Lehi), which played a big role before Israel was formed, helping it achieve its political and strategic goals.

These gangs included European mercenaries without moral limits and used harsh and bloody tactics to carry out the Nakba crime. This involved using bombs to destroy everything in Palestinian life and committing mass killings against civilians, including women and children. After Israel was declared in 1948, the Israeli army “regularised ” by including members of these gangs in its structure.

It seems like the Occupation army continues to follow its aggressive path, bringing back the spirit of those gangs in all their negative aspects.

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Israeli Occupation Forces Specialise In Killing and Disabling Palestinian Children

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The Unspoken Tragedy: Palestinian Women in Israel’s Brutal War on Gaza

In the midst of the ongoing war in Gaza conducted by the Israeli occupation forces, a stark reality unfolds — the silent suffering of Palestinian women. According to the United Nations, a staggering two-thirds of casualties in Israel’s war on Gaza are women and children. This sheds light on a deeper crisis that deserves attention from all human rights organization worldwide. The initial premise of the brutal war by the Israeli occupation forces was to dismantle Hamas, yet what unfolded was the obliteration of vast areas in the Gaza Strip, leaving tens of thousands of Palestinian civilians dead or maimed. More than 1.8 million people were forced to flee, their homes destroyed by Israeli and Western-supplied bombs.

The United Nations reveals a heart-wrenching statistic: women and children make up nearly 70% of the victims in Israel’s relentless bombardment. The challenges faced by Palestinian women living under constant attack are unimaginable. Pregnant women, numbering 50,000 in Gaza, deliver babies in miserableconditions, lacking water, painkillers, anesthesia, and electricity for incubators. Despite these hardships, Palestinian women persist in caring for their families amid this brutal war. They mix baby formula with contaminated water and go without food so their children can live another day. Fleeing Israeli bombs on foot, they face the harsh reality that there is no safe place in a conflict-ridden land.

The devastating consequences of war reach beyond physical destruction. Palestinian women are not just victims; they are the backbone of their society. This war, as brutal as it is, has highlighted the central role women play in preserving the identity and resilience of the Palestinian people. The brutal war on Gaza has been deliberately targeting the fundamentals of life in Gaza, civilians, landmarks, mosques, churches, universities, hospitals and even animals. It has affected women and children most adversely. The destruction of entire neighborhoods and the collapse of medical infrastructure disproportionately impact women and children.

It is disheartening to witness the silence from feminist movements globally and within Israel when it comes to the Palestinian women. While these movements advocate for women’s rights and equality, the omission of Palestinian women’s struggles raises questions about the universality of their principles. The selective silence of feminist movements in the face of the suffering of Palestinian women raises concerns about the consistency of their advocacy. It prompts reflection on whether the principles of justice and equality are applied universally or if there are exceptions based on political affiliations or ethnicities, which seems the case!

Moving ahead, it is imperative for the global community to acknowledge the pressing necessity for an immediate ceasefire. Halting this brutal war on Gazans promptly can bring much-needed relief to the Palestinian people, particularly women and children, who are facing unprecedented challenges. As the world observes the profound crisis in Gaza, it becomes paramount to amplify the voices of Palestinian women.

Listen to Lowkey’s song in support for women ‘Something wonderful’

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Olaf’s Advice to Bibi

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In Handala’s Playground, Season 1, Episode 3

Watching Football

S.T. Salah

Asif: Hello, you’re Handala! I can see your face. How is that?

Handala: Sorry, forgot to turn around. See you later!

Asif: Please don’t go!

Handala: I’m late, I need to check on my friends at home.

Asif: I thought you wouldn’t return to Palestine.

Handala: Things have changed; Palestine is free now. I want to watch the football match  between Palestine & UAE. Do  you watch  Asia football cup?

Asif: I don’t have TV, but I love football, and my dream is to play for Palestine when I grow up.

Handala: Good luck! Do you play football at all?

Asif: Yeah for El-Jabalia juniors, but that was before  I lost my legs m.

Handala: So  sorry, what happened? 

Asif, tearing up: There was explosion in the UN school yard, then doctors amputated my legs without pain killers. It was really  painful.

Handala, shocked: I can’t imagine what you went through, but your eyes tell me you are strong and nothing can break you, my brother.
Let’s enjoy the moment and go out to buy something to eat and watch football?

Asif: Let’s go. 

Grandad: Asif, wake up quickly. We need to buy bread before they strike again.

Asif: (groaning). Ow,  my legs hurt.

Grandad: Let me check if there’s any fever or swelling. Did you have a bad dream or something?

Asif, weeping in agony: It really hurts. I saw Handala’s face in my dream, and he wanted to buy food  and watch football. 

Grandad: Poor thing. Let’s get you some breakfast first and talk about football later. 

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Classroom Apartheid

S. T. Salah, 8/3/26


This audit examines how Israeli state curricula and textbooks shaped perceptions of Palestinians from 1948 to 2026 through the Ministry of Education and licensed publishers.

From the early years of statehood, Palestinian schools were placed under strict supervision and forbidden to teach their national history. Textbooks described Palestinians mainly as a minority required to show loyalty while omitting expulsions and land confiscation.

Hebrew-language textbooks routinely depicted the entire territory as Israel and omitted the Green Line. Palestinians appeared rarely and were often portrayed as rioters, infiltrators, or terrorists. Maps labelled the West Bank as “Judea and Samaria” without reference to occupation.

Narratives of 1948 typically presented Palestinian flight as voluntary or ordered by Arab leaders while minimising expulsions and massacres. Visual materials frequently showed Palestinians as faceless crowds or threats, while Jewish Israelis were depicted as modern nation-builders.

Civics textbooks emphasised Jewish national identity and gave extensive coverage to the Law of Return while treating Palestinian refugee rights as external claims. Palestinian citizens were presented primarily as a security challenge rather than as a group facing structural discrimination.

State intervention repeatedly blocked educational materials that humanised Palestinians. The removal of Dorit Rabinyan’s novel from school reading lists signalled institutional resistance to narratives of equality or shared life.

Legal measures further restricted teaching about Palestinian history. Funding penalties for Nakba commemoration encouraged textbook revisions and teacher self-censorship. In East Jerusalem, authorities pressured schools to adopt modified textbooks that removed references to occupation and Palestinian national symbols.

Academic research expanded the evidence base. Comparative textbook studies found Palestinian history and culture largely absent from Hebrew-language curricula, while Jewish historical and biblical claims were emphasised. Maps routinely erased Palestinian political geography and omitted the Green Line.

Education policy changes intensified after 2010, with reforms emphasising Jewish identity and security narratives while reducing emphasis on equality and minority rights. Teacher reports documented growing pressure to avoid controversial topics such as occupation and Palestinian national identity.

Financial incentives encouraged East Jerusalem schools to adopt Israeli curricula while those retaining Palestinian Authority textbooks faced administrative pressure. Longitudinal research linked these educational patterns to youth attitudes supporting segregation and unequal rights.

Control of memory extends to higher education and public cultural institutions. Research by Israeli academics and organisations such as Zochrot documented resistance within universities to courses or events addressing the Nakba, including administrative pressure and cancellation of commemorations. Student groups reported disciplinary action or funding threats when organising Nakba memorial activities. This broader academic climate reinforces the school curriculum by limiting opportunities for students to encounter alternative historical narratives.

Language policy also shapes knowledge access. Arabic, the native language of Palestinian citizens, was downgraded in public life after the 2018 Nation-State Basic Law granted it only “special status.” Educational researchers note that reduced institutional emphasis on Arabic in Jewish schools limits engagement with Palestinian culture and history. Meanwhile, Palestinian schools operate under budget disparities and closer inspection regimes, restricting curricular autonomy. These structural differences reinforce separate educational experiences and unequal access to cultural representation.

Digital education and youth media have amplified curriculum effects. Studies of Israeli educational technology and youth social media consumption show that online learning platforms frequently replicate textbook narratives and maps that omit the Green Line and Palestinian national identity. As digital tools became central to schooling in the 2020s, these representations reached students earlier and more consistently, reinforcing the same narrative frameworks across new media environments.

The audit concludes that across decades the Israeli education system operated as an institutional mechanism shaping perceptions of Palestinians in ways that normalised inequality, segregation, and differential rights.

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Ottoman Palestine

S. T. Salah, 6/3/26


This section examines how Palestine was governed and inhabited under Ottoman rule and establishes the historical baseline immediately preceding British colonial administration. It reviews administrative records, land systems, demographic continuity, and wartime disruption to clarify what existed before the emergence of a modern settler project and how late Ottoman reforms created legal and administrative conditions later used in processes of land transfer and dispossession.

Between the early sixteenth century and the First World War, Palestine was administered by the Ottoman Empire as a populated provincial territory. Ottoman authorities governed through taxation, conscription, land administration, and periodic reform, generating episodes of local resistance and hardship but without a policy of population removal or settler replacement. By the early twentieth century, Palestine consisted of interconnected towns, villages, and agricultural landscapes with long-standing social, economic, and familial continuity, and its inhabitants related to the land through local, regional, and religious frameworks rather than a modern national designation.

The Ottomans incorporated Palestine into their domains after defeating the Mamluks at Marj Dabiq and al Ridaniyya in 1516–1517. Administratively, the area that Europeans later labelled “Palestine” was divided among several districts under the province of Damascus, including the sanjaqs of Jerusalem, Nablus and Gaza. Sixteenth century tahrir (tax) registers list hundreds of villages in these districts, with named household heads, crop types and livestock totals. These registers show stable rural communities growing wheat, barley, olives, grapes and pulses, paying taxes in cash and kind, and maintaining village structures that would still be recognisable in the late Ottoman and Mandate censuses.

The basic Ottoman bargain in Palestine was taxation and security in exchange for loyalty, with local notable families, religious leaders and village headmen acting as intermediaries. Land tenure was governed by the empire’s system of miri (state) land and various forms of usufruct; peasants held long term cultivation rights in exchange for taxes and military levies. For most of the Ottoman period, outside interventions in local land use were limited. Peasants in areas such as Jabal Nablus, the Hebron highlands and the Galilee cultivated terraced hillsides and plains in patterns that remained recognisable for centuries. Studies of families and waqf endowments in Jabal Nablus between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries show continuity of lineages and land use, not wholesale replacement.

Ottoman rule was not benign. Heavy taxation, corruption and conscription sparked periodic uprisings. In 1834, during an interlude when Muhammad Ali’s Egypt briefly ruled Palestine under nominal Ottoman suzerainty, a major revolt broke out in Hebron, Nablus and other towns against forced conscription and new taxes. Egyptian and allied forces crushed the uprising with executions, village burnings and deportations. When direct Ottoman control was restored later in the nineteenth century, the central state continued to push reforms that increased its reach into rural life, provoking local resistance but not targeting Palestinians as a people for removal.

In the mid nineteenth century the Ottoman government introduced the 1858 Land Code and related cadastral reforms. These required subjects to register landholdings in their own names with state authorities and were intended to increase tax revenue, regularise tenure and strengthen central authority. In practice, many Palestinian peasants avoided registration out of fear that records would expose them to higher taxes, conscription or conscription of their sons. Large tracts of land were registered instead in the names of urban notables or absentee owners in cities such as Jerusalem, Jaffa, Nablus, Damascus and Beirut. Over time, this created a layer of legally recognised ownership above long standing peasant cultivation.

In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, this legal structure became a mechanism through which Zionist institutions acquired land without direct consultation with or consent from the cultivators. Ottoman law allowed sale of registered land to private buyers. Foreign Jewish settlers and Zionist agencies such as the Jewish Colonization Association began purchasing estates and large parcels from absentee landlords, especially in the coastal plain and parts of the Galilee. When title was transferred, peasants who had worked the land for generations but did not hold formal deeds could be evicted. These transactions remained limited in absolute size before 1917 compared with the total cultivated area, but they established a precedent: dispossession could be carried out through legal sale once land had been detached from the people who farmed it.

Ottoman reforms also encouraged limited European penetration. The empire granted capitulations and later commercial concessions that allowed foreign powers to establish consulates, churches, schools and hospitals in cities such as Jerusalem, Jaffa, Haifa, Nazareth and Bethlehem. These institutions brought education and medical services but also increased external influence and debt. Railway projects, including the Jaffa–Jerusalem line opened in 1892 and the Hejaz Railway extension to Haifa and Dar’a, integrated Palestine more tightly into Ottoman and regional markets, making export agriculture, especially citrus around Jaffa, more profitable but also more vulnerable to price shocks and land concentration.

Religious and communal life under Ottoman rule was structured through the millet system. Recognised religious communities administered personal status law, religious courts and internal affairs. In Palestine, Muslim, Christian and Jewish communities managed their own religious institutions, schools and charitable endowments. Local conflicts and inequalities existed, including discrimination against non Muslim communities typical of the empire, but the state did not pursue a racial hierarchy that designated one ethno religious group as permanent masters and another as expendable. Anti Jewish pogroms of the type familiar by the Germans in Eastern Europe were not a regular feature of Ottoman Palestine; Jews lived in cities such as Jerusalem, Safad, Tiberias and Hebron alongside Muslim and Christian neighbours.

Ottoman conscription and war making brought direct harm to Palestinians, particularly during the First World War. From 1914 onward, young men were drafted into the Ottoman army and deployed to distant fronts, with high casualty rates. Jamal Pasha’s command in Greater Syria imposed requisitions of grain, animals and labour. A massive locust infestation in 1915 destroyed crops across Palestine and Syria. Combined with Allied naval blockades, German–Ottoman mismanagement and hoarding by local elites, this produced famine conditions across the region. In Mount Lebanon alone, historians estimate that between a quarter and a third of the population died between 1915 and 1918. Palestinian districts such as Jerusalem, Nablus, Gaza and the coastal plain also suffered severe shortages; families sold land, livestock and possessions to survive, and many left rural areas for cities or emigrated abroad. The Ottoman state bore responsibility for requisition policies and failure to secure food supplies, but famine, conscription and disease were byproducts of a collapsing empire at war rather than a targeted programme to remove Palestinians as a people.

Political surveillance and repression intensified in the war’s final years. Jamal Pasha’s authorities executed Arab intellectuals and activists in Damascus and Beirut in 1915–1916 for alleged treason and separatism; Palestinian figures were among those monitored, arrested or exiled. Newspaper censorship, bans on political clubs and suspicion of contact with the Allied powers limited organised political life. Yet during this same period Palestinian elites in Jerusalem, Jaffa, Haifa and Nablus continued to articulate local demands, including petitions against Zionist land purchase and immigration, within Ottoman legal and political channels.

By the time British forces advanced into Palestine in 1917–1918, Ottoman rule was hollowing out under military defeat and economic collapse but had not uprooted the country’s population. Village and town networks remained intact. Landholding patterns showed increased concentration and external encroachment, but the vast majority of agricultural land was still in Palestinian hands. The empire had extracted labour and resources and committed harsh acts of repression, especially during wartime, yet it had not installed a settler project designed to permanently displace Palestinians or declare the land primarily belonging to another people.

The significance of Ottoman rule for this audit is twofold. First, it provides a baseline of a multiethnic imperial framework in which Palestinians were a rooted, majority population whose presence was not in question, even when their political rights were constrained. Second, certain late Ottoman mechanisms, especially land registration and sale, created legal pathways that Zionist organisations exploited under and after the Mandate. The empire’s collapse opened space for a new colonial project not because it had already erased Palestine but because it left behind a populated, administratively mapped territory that others then claimed and reconfigured.

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Hajjaj’s Gallery

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Indigenous Continuity

S. T. Salah, 3/2/26


This section examines the long term formation of the land known as Palestine and of the population that is today called Palestinian. It reviews geological and environmental conditions, archaeological evidence, historical records, and genetic studies to assess patterns of habitation and continuity in the southern Levant.

Geologically, the area between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea forms part of the Levantine corridor along the Dead Sea Transform fault system. It is a land bridge between Africa and Eurasia with Mediterranean climate zones on the coast and highlands and semi-arid steppes toward the Jordan Valley and Naqab. These conditions produced reliable winter rains, fertile alluvial plains and terraced hillsides, and access to freshwater from springs and aquifers. Archaeology associates these environmental conditions with some of the earliest evidence of sedentary settlement and agriculture.

Archaeological research documents continuous human presence from the Paleolithic period onward. Early Homo sapiens remains at Skhul and Qafzeh caves date to roughly 120000 to 90000 years ago. 

By around 12500 to 9500 BCE, the Natufian culture had established semi settled villages in the southern Levant, including at Ein Mallaha in the Galilee. These communities harvested wild cereals and exploited gazelle herds, forming a base for the later transition to agriculture. At Tell es Sultan, ancient Jericho in the Jordan Valley, Neolithic layers dating to roughly 10000 to 9000 BCE include stone architecture, defensive walls and one of the earliest known towers. Jericho and other early sites in the Jordan Valley and central highlands demonstrate the early shift from hunter gatherer life to permanent farming villages.

During the Early and Middle Bronze Age, approximately 3300 to 1550 BCE, the region was organised into Canaanite civilisation and city states that gave the land its earliest widely recorded name, the Land of Canaan. These populations spoke Northwest Semitic languages and formed a documented cultural foundation of the southern Levant. Egyptian records from the second millennium BCE refer to Canaan and list towns corresponding to sites across the region.

Canaanite society developed as a network of fortified city states rather than a single centralised kingdom. Excavations at Hazor, Megiddo, Lachish, Gaza and Tell el Ajjul show walled towns, palaces, temples, olive and wine presses and trade links with Egypt and Mesopotamia. Cities such as Jericho, Shechem, Gaza, Megiddo, Hazor and early Jerusalem functioned as independent polities with rulers, armies, patron deities and defensive walls.

Canaanite culture was technologically and economically advanced. Coastal populations later known as Phoenicians developed early alphabetic writing systems that influenced later Greek, Latin, Arabic and Hebrew scripts. Maritime trade connected Levantine ports to Cyprus, North Africa and the western Mediterranean. Agricultural systems included terraced farming of olives, grapes and figs that remain characteristic of the region today.

Religion in Canaanite society was polytheistic and centred on natural forces. Deities such as El, Baal and Asherah appear in inscriptions and ritual sites across the region and influenced later religious traditions. Early Jerusalem originated as a Canaanite settlement associated with the Jebusites and appears in Bronze Age sources under names derived from Urusalim.

Ancient DNA from Bronze Age skeletons in the southern Levant and from tombs at Sidon indicates that Canaanite populations form a major ancestral component of present day Levantine populations and that population continuity extends over several millennia.

In the Iron Age, approximately 1200 to 500 BCE, new political entities emerged on the Canaanite base. Archaeology identifies an Aegean linked material culture in coastal cities often associated with Philistine groups. Genetic studies indicate limited migration followed by absorption rather than population replacement. In the highlands and interior, inscriptions and regional records indicate multiple Iron Age polities including Israel, Judah, Moab, Ammon and Edom. Archaeological evidence from sites such as Hebron, Nablus and Jerusalem shows continuity in settlement and agriculture from the late Bronze Age through the Persian and Hellenistic periods.

The name Palestine has ancient roots. Egyptian inscriptions from the twelfth century BCE refer to Peleset on the southern coast. Greek authors later used Palaistine Syria for the area between Phoenicia and Egypt. After the Bar Kokhba revolt of 132 to 135 CE, Roman authorities renamed the province Syria Palaestina. Byzantine and later Christian sources used variants of Palestina for administrative districts. After the seventh century, Arab rulers used Jund Filastin to designate a fiscal and military district centred on Ramla and encompassing much of central and southern Palestine.

From the seventh century onward, linguistic and religious shifts occurred through Arabisation and Islamisation while populations remained locally rooted. Muslim, Christian and Jewish communities lived in Jerusalem, Hebron, Nablus, Gaza, Safad and Acre and in hundreds of villages. Historical travel records and administrative archives describe stable rural communities cultivating wheat, barley, olives, grapes and legumes across terraced hillsides and plains.

Historical and genetic research indicates long term continuity and blending rather than disappearance of earlier populations. Genetic studies of modern regional populations show ancestry derived largely from local Levantine groups with subsequent admixture from neighbouring regions. Y chromosome and mitochondrial studies identify shared deep ancestry among Palestinians, other Arab Levantines and Jewish populations, reflecting common regional roots before later religious and political differentiation.

Claims that the land was empty or that Palestinians represent a recent arrival are not supported by archaeological, historical or genetic evidence. The record instead shows continuous habitation shaped by successive layers of empire, language and religion rather than population erasure.

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