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Elazar (Israeli settlement)

1968 establishments in the Israeli Military Governorate1975 establishments in the Israeli Military GovernorateCommunity settlementsGush Etzion Regional CouncilIsraeli settlements in the West Bank
North American-Jewish culture in IsraelPopulated places established in 1968Populated places established in 1975
Elazar
Elazar

Elazar (Hebrew: אֶלְעָזָר) is an Israeli settlement in the West Bank, 18 kilometers south of Jerusalem in the Gush Etzion cluster of settlements. A community settlement, it had a population of 2,561 in 2021. It is administered by the Gush Etzion Regional Council. The international community considers Israeli settlements in the West Bank illegal under international law, although the Israeli government disputes this.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Elazar (Israeli settlement) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Elazar (Israeli settlement)
Shimon,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 31.66 ° E 35.141944444444 °
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Shimon 14

Judea and Samaria, Palestinian Territories
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Elazar
Elazar
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Killing of David Ben Avraham
Killing of David Ben Avraham

On 21 March 2024, David Ben Avraham (Hebrew: דוד בן אברהם), a 63-year-old Palestinian Jewish convert, was shot and killed by an Israel Defence Forces (IDF) soldier near Elazar, an Israeli settlement in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. The soldier had approached Ben Avraham and asked whether he was Jewish, to which he responded affirmatively. In the ensuing encounter, the soldier pointed his rifle at Ben Avraham and threatened to kill him if he reached for his bag; Ben Avraham complied but was nevertheless shot dead. The IDF opened an investigation into what it termed a "grave" incident; the soldier, a reservist, was released a week later by an Israeli court. The Jerusalem Post stated that the killing joined a series of "wrongful mistaken killings" of Jewish Israelis and Arab Israelis since the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel "in which, to date, the prosecution and courts have been extremely lenient on the killers." Originally Sameh Zaytoun (Arabic: سامح زيتون), Ben Avraham was a resident of Hebron and had changed his name upon converting from Islam to Judaism. Following his conversion, he was jailed by the Palestinian Authority for 58 days in 2019. The Israeli government repeatedly denied his applications for Israeli citizenship, which The Times of Israel stated was "ostensibly due to his Palestinian heritage." On 29 March, Israeli Interior Minister Moshe Arbel posthumously approved Ben Avraham's residency status.