In West
Bank, Latest Victim of Israeli Settler Violence Shocks in a New Way
A video
of a Palestinian family’s dog being savagely beaten has spread widely in the
days after the attack.
David M.
Halbfinger
By David
M. Halbfinger
Reporting
from Atara in the West Bank
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/22/world/middleeast/settler-attack-dog-west-bank.html
May 22,
2026, 5:02 a.m. ET
Cruelty
has become commonplace in the West Bank, where extremist Israeli settlers beat
and shoot Palestinians, steal their sheep, uproot their olive groves and torch
cars and homes. The settlers, outlaws in a multitude of ways, seldom face
consequences for their actions.
But even
for Palestinians living under the constant threat of being attacked, some
violence retains the capacity to shock.
That was
the case when a video went viral that showed a settler menacing a
year-and-a-half-old dog with a club in each fist — and swinging hard, beating
her over the head.
In the
video, the dog, a Belgian Malinois named Lucy, squeals in pain and tries to
scramble away. But she had been chained to an olive tree to keep her in the
shade on a hot afternoon.
What
follows, recorded by the dog’s owners, a Palestinian family in the village of
Atara, is extremely difficult to watch, and to describe.
Until
recently, the violence in Atara had followed a more typical playbook, aimed at
driving Palestinians to flee for safety — abandoning their homes, pastures and
farmlands to the encroaching settlers, so that Arab spaces shrink and Jewish
spaces expand.
A group
of young settlers established an illegal outpost, called Kfar Tarfon, last
summer about three-quarters of a mile from the Abu Rejalah family’s home in
hilly Atara, north of Ramallah.
They
pelted Palestinians’ cars with stones along the main road into town, residents
said. They harassed a Bedouin sheep farmer on the edge of Atara until he gave
up and moved. Residents of the village said they felt too afraid last fall to
harvest hundreds of olive trees just downhill from the outpost.
Then the
settlers took an interest in the Abu Rejalah family, which is growing, and not
fleeing, as the seven sons of Hassan Abu Rejalah, 50, begin to marry and have
children of their own. Their expanding home, a three-story construction site,
is visible from Kfar Tarfon across a small valley.
The
settlers herded their sheep through the family’s small hillside plot,
destroying crops, according to Mr. Abu Rejalah, two of his sons and other
members of their extended family. They drove up to the family’s doorstep as if
they owned the place, stealing harvested vegetables and disabling a driveway
gate in plain view of surveillance cameras.
And they
accused two members of the family of attacking them, according to Mr. Abu
Rejalah. The family said the accusation was false. On Jan. 9, Israeli soldiers
arrested his sons Ibrahim, 31, and Daoud, 26, who were beaten by soldiers,
taken to an Israeli police station, imprisoned in a military prison for five
days and then released without being charged, Ibrahim and his father said.
Asked
about the arrests, the Israeli military confirmed that soldiers had detained
Palestinians after an Israeli civilian reported that they had thrown stones at
him. It did not address whether the Palestinians had been beaten. It said they
were turned over to the police, who did not respond to questions about the
incident.
Such
experiences are all too familiar to Palestinians across the West Bank.
What was
unusual was the cruelty to animals.
Last
fall, a neighbor of the Abu Rejalahs’ who lives closer to the settlers’ outpost
discovered a dead donkey hanging from one of his olive trees, residents said.
It was cited as one of the reasons that villagers forsook the yearly olive
harvest, a fixture of Palestinian life and important revenue source.
Members
of the Abu Rejalah family said that on Feb. 18, they discovered a settler
grazing his sheep on their property and throwing stones at another dog, Angel,
a part-Malinois mixed breed. Two days later, the dog died from his wounds.
No one
photographed that attack, but on May 14, when a lanky settler showed up at the
family’s home and threw a stone at a window, Ibrahim recorded video from inside
the house. He also called the Israeli police and Palestinian security services.
Israeli soldiers soon arrived, he said, and sent the man away.
Ibrahim
said that the Israeli and Palestinian officers had cautioned him: “As long as
they’re around, don’t go outside.”
The same
settler — whom the police said Thursday that they had identified — returned the
next day at around 6 p.m. No one went outside. Two family members took out
their cellphones and pressed record.
In the
videos, which have been verified by The New York Times, the young man, wearing
a hooded sweatshirt, holds a wooden club and is accompanied by two white dogs
of his own. He paces back and forth, scanning the windows of the house. Then he
walks down to the olive tree to which Lucy is chained. Nearby, another dog,
Cheetah, not on a chain, is keeping her company.
The man
picks up a grapefruit-size rock and throws it at one of the dogs. Cheetah, bloodied, runs away. Lucy cannot.
The man,
now holding a club in each hand, begins to beat her, hard.
The dog
tries to put the tree between herself and the man. But he reaches around the
tree to strike her. Seeing her wounded, he moves in.
He
pummels her head, swinging both clubs. Once. Twice. Only on at least the 17th
double-blow does the dog collapse.
The
attacker doesn’t stop. He beats her nine more times.
Ibrahim
Abu Rejalah said he called the Israeli police while the attack was still
underway and was told that soldiers would be sent immediately. He said that
police and soldiers only showed up days later, on Sunday.
Asked
about the case, the Israeli police said in a statement on Thursday that it only
learned of the incident after video of the attack went viral. It said its
investigation had been “intensive,” and called on the attacker to “turn himself
in, as the long arm of the police will reach him.”
In its
own statement, the Israeli military added that Kfar Tarfon was an “illegal
outpost” and was “expected to be evacuated.”
At the
settlers’ outpost on Tuesday, two men approached by Times reporters both
refused to comment.
“There’s
nothing for you here,” one said in Hebrew.
When
shown a still image from the video of the attack on the dog and asked to
identify the attacker, the man said nothing and walked away.
The dog
survived, somehow. Her skull was fractured in only two places, beneath a
10-centimeter gash, said Dr. Ashraf Shiban, a veterinarian in Rama, in northern
Israel. Her treatment is being paid for by an Israeli animal-rescue group.
The dog
was blinded in her left eye, but Dr. Shiban said Wednesday that she was already
eating again. In time, he said, she should recover.
Members
of the Abu Rejalah family said they feared further attacks from the Kfar Tarfon
settlers, particularly now that they have spoken up publicly. They expressed
little confidence that the attacker would be punished.
But they
seemed just as disbelieving that the attack had even occurred in the first
place.
“I worked
for years inside Israel,” said Hassan Abu Rejalah. “Every house has a pet, a
dog or a cat. They love pets.
“What
would make them do such a thing, if not to scare off people?”
Fatima
AbdulKarim, James McManagan and Natan Odenheimer contributed reporting.
David M.
Halbfinger is The Times’s Jerusalem bureau chief, leading coverage of Israel,
Gaza and the West Bank. He also held that post from 2017 to 2021. He was the
politics editor from 2021 to 2025.


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