![]() ![]() But like other attempts to explain Palestinian violence, the actual behavior of the terrorists proves far more complex, bewildering both the terrorists and the security officials who fight them. The hypothesis that Ramadan is a month of violence in the Palestinian context is one such attempt. December and November, which did not coincide with any holiday, were also very violent: 401 attacks, three deaths, and 254 and two fatalities, respectively.įor a century at least, security agencies and academia have tried to uncover the laws governing mass violence. ![]() There were more attacks in April, 268 compared with 190, but they were less deadly-perhaps because of increased Israeli security mobilization to counter them-resulting in four fatalities. Ramadan began on April 12, but the most violent month, at least in terms of Israeli fatalities, was March, with 11 Israelis killed in five lethal attacks. Only in 2022 is there any evidence of a linkage between Ramadan and peak Palestinian violence, but the relationship is weak even then. In fact, that wave of violence was exceeded only in the opening month of the Palestinian Authority’s massive attack in October 2001, 20 years earlier. But all of this occurred after Ramadan, and Israeli Arab violence is hardly as consistent as Palestinian violence in Jerusalem and Judea and Samaria. Within the span of about a week in May 2021, Arab rioters murdered three Jews, injured more than 600, and firebombed 10 synagogues and 112 Jewish residences in mixed-population cities. However, April and May were hardly the most violent months compared with November and December, which coincided with neither an Islamic nor Jewish holiday. The Hamas campaign, it should be noted, was launched on May 10, one day before the end of Ramadan. Oddly, while Israeli officialdom and the new media reinforced Hamas’s claims of a linkage, Palestinian behavior in Jerusalem and Judea and Samaria did not. ![]() ![]() Though the attack failed to change Israeli policy, Hamas did succeed in convincing the Israeli public regarding the relationship between Ramadan and Palestinian violence. That was the Ramadan during which Hamas launched a massive missile campaign against Israel that began with attacks aimed at Jerusalem, after an ultimatum to Israel to remove all its police and military personnel “from the al-Haram al-Sharif mosque site and Sheikh Jarrah” neighborhood of Jerusalem went unanswered. At least two months of that year, August and December, were appreciably more violent: 120 attacks, one fatality in August, and 98 attacks and one Israeli fatality in December. In May, which overlapped with most of Ramadan, there were 80 attacks and one fatality. In April, there were 71 attacks and no fatalities. In 2020, Ramadan began on April 23 and ended on May 22. It is important to note that four of the five Israelis killed in June were killed in a single incident.īut maybe the habitual violence in Ramadan is of a more recent vintage? An analysis of data for the last three years-2020, 20-suggests otherwise. Five Israelis were killed in 169 violent attacks in January, compared with five in June amid 103 attacks. The contrasts between January, the peak of violence, and June (which overlapped with most of Ramadan) are far less stark than in 2015. The wave of violence that began the previous year continued during the first four months of 2016-and none of those months included Ramadan, which fell between June 7 and July 5 (the Muslim calendar is lunar). The same can be said, albeit less strikingly, about 2016, another peak year of violence. Those months overlapping Ramadan were also less violent than in the continuation of the wave in November and December, when 12 Israelis were murdered. By contrast, during July and August, the months that overlapped with Ramadan, there were 123 and 107 attacks, respectively, and two Israelis were killed. The Israel Security Agency registered 620 attacks in October alone, leaving 11 Israelis dead. The first thing to note about that wave of violence is that it broke out three months after Ramadan, and when it did, it flared with a vengeance. Specifically, the period from October through December, in which the most significant and extreme wave of violence occurred in Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria and elsewhere. Let us take 2015, which arguably saw the most Palestinian violence of any in the past decade. ![]()
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