
© STANDING TOGETHERIDF and Border Police officers declaring a 'closed military zone' in Burin, October 25 2019.
Approximately 100 activists from the NGO Rabbis for Human Rights (RHR) and the Israeli grassroots movement Standing Together gathered on Friday to participate in the season's 17th joint olive harvest in the West Bank,
but were subsequently driven out by the IDF and Border Police forces, according to new footage.
The harvest is taking place in several locations across the northern West Bank, according to Standing Together, in the Palestinian villages Yusuf, Burin and Atara and "done in solidarity with Palestinian farmers who live in the West Bank."
The organization's director Roula Daud, who took part in organizing the event, said that
the activists "will not surrender to government-supported settler violence. We will stand together, Jews and Arabs, with the residents of the West Bank."That is, following a recent incident where, according to Rabbis for Human Rights,
five RHR volunteers and Palestinian farmers were attacked by settlers from the Yitzhar area two weeks ago, while participating in the annual harvest in the villages Burin and Hawareh. The NGO said that the attackers cut the olive trees following the alleged assault.
80-year-old Rabbi Moshe Yehudai, alongside four other volunteers, was reportedly
attacked by a group of over 30 settlers armed with crowbars. Yehudai was evacuated by a Palestinian Red Crescent ambulance with a broken arm. A resident of Yitzhar was arrested for allegedly participating in the attack,
but was released from custody. The suspect claimed that he was "attacked" by an officer during his interrogation.
Comment: For more analysis on the the 'Joker', listen to the SOTT editors discuss the movie on a recent episode of Mind Matters: MindMatters: The Value And Relevance of Joker
See also: Leading neurocriminologist Adrian Raine considers Joker "a great educational tool"