Volunteers help Arab-Israeli farmers amid Gaza war

Volunteers tie up cucumber plants in a greenhouse in Baqa al-Gharbiya on December 9, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 16 December 2023
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Volunteers help Arab-Israeli farmers amid Gaza war

  • Israel retaliated with a devastating air and ground offensive that has killed more than 18,700 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, around 70 percent of them women and children, according to the Hamas-run health ministry

BAQA AL-GHARBIAY, Israel: In Baqa Al-Gharbiya, an hour’s drive from Haifa, city folk have temporarily traded pens for boots to aid farmers in Israel facing a labor shortage exacerbated by the Gaza war.
Whether teachers or lawyers, Arab or Jew, they have come together during their leisure time to lend a helping hand to Arab-Israeli farmers like Marwan Abu Yassin for the harvest.
Arabs with citizenship account for around 20 percent of Israel’s population, descendants of Palestinians who remained after mass expulsions at the time of Israel’s founding in 1948.
“I had 16 Thai workers, but nine left the country because of the war, and I had 15 workers from the West Bank who no longer come to Israel because of the roadblocks,” said Abu Yassin, 55.
The war in Gaza began on Oct.7 when Hamas stormed across the militarized border into Israel.
Since the war began, Israel has suspended work permits for around 130,000 day workers from the occupied West Bank.
The Israeli government’s war Cabinet is torn over whether to allow the return of Palestinian workers, with some suggesting workers be brought in from places like India.
The farm sector has also lost many of its other key source of labor — Thais — who numbered some 30,000 before the war.
Many have fled the country after the Oct. 7 attack, according to Thai authorities. The farmers launched calls for volunteers, said Ibrahim Mawasi, 65, who helped coordinate the effort.
“A week after the war, we got together and decided to mobilize all the people who wanted to save agriculture,” he said.
Though they have helped, Mawasi said they needed experienced farmers.
On Abu Yassin’s farm, he usually cultivates 150 dunams or around 15 hectares of land, but he can only work around 50 this season, with only seven employees, and he still has costs to maintain the rest.
Volunteers were picking cucumbers in his fields, placing seedlings on stakes, and preparing for the strawberry harvest when the rains interrupted them.
Yusef Sader, a retired physics teacher, said he knew the work would leave him exhausted but was happy to have “given a little boost to the farmers.”
For Guy, 56, an Israeli Jewish social worker who did not give his surname, volunteering for the harvests was “very important for good relations between Jews and Arabs.”

 


US kills Al-Qaeda affiliate leader tied to December attack in Syria, Centcom says

Updated 18 January 2026
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US kills Al-Qaeda affiliate leader tied to December attack in Syria, Centcom says

  • Bilal Hasan Al-Jasim had “direct ties” to a Daesh gunman who killed and injured US and Syrian ⁠personnel

WASHINGTON: US military forces on Friday killed an Al-Qaeda affiliate leader linked to a Daesh attack on Americans in Syria last month, US Central Command ⁠said in a statement on Saturday.
Bilal Hasan Al-Jasim had “direct ties” to a Daesh gunman who killed and injured US and Syrian ⁠personnel on December 13 in Palmyra, Syria, Central Command said.

“The death of a terrorist operative linked to the deaths of three Americans demonstrates our resolve in pursuing terrorists who attack our forces,” said Admiral Brad Cooper, ⁠the head of US Central Command, in a statement.
Since the December 13 attack, US forces have been conducting strikes in Syria, with the US military saying it has hit more than 100 Daesh targets.