Thursday, February 26, 2026

From Ian:

How the Revolutionary Left Embraced Radical Islam
In 2006, in a public discussion of Israel’s assault on Lebanon, the feminist scholar Judith Butler characterized Hamas and Hezbollah as “part of the global left.” Butler’s remarks provoked a scandal at the time, but after the October 7 attacks, it became common to hear Western leftist protesters chanting slogans like “long live Hamas!” How did Middle Eastern terrorist groups rooted in radical Islamic ideology come to occupy such a central place in otherwise secular left-wing politics? In The Revolutionists: The Story of the Extremists Who Hijacked the 1970s, journalist Jason Burke takes up this question, exploring the historical roots of the Palestinian national movement and situating its rise within the transition from 1970s left-wing radicalism to the emergence of radical Islamism, which reshaped global politics in the 1980s.

Burke’s account brings to life the central figures of this transnational revolutionary movement: Leila Khaled of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), Fusako Shigenobu of the Japanese Red Army, Ulrike Meinhof from the German Red Army Faction, and “Carlos the Jackal,” the nom de guerre of the sociopathic Venezuelan-born gun for hire Ilich Ramírez Sánchez. These leftist militants moved fluidly across borders, traveling from sympathetic regimes in the Middle East to hubs of revolutionary fervor, most notably the PLO’s refugee camps in Lebanon and Jordan. They hijacked airplanes and marched with Kalashnikovs in the desert. Inspired by the revolutionary tracts of Frantz Fanon, Régis Debray, Che Guevara, and Mao Zedong, they forged a transnational network of anti-colonial insurgency and solidarity.

These left-wing radicals took Mao’s dictum that “political power grows out of the barrel of a gun” to heart and concluded that electoral politics and peaceful protest were insufficient for taking on the global forces of capitalism, imperialism, and colonialism. But this analysis also created its own problems. The enemy these militants fought was not a single politician, national government, or corporation, but a vast, complex global political and economic system, so it was always unclear how a small number of assassinations and kidnappings could defeat it.

This is part of why Israel became their primary target. The radicals of the era viewed the Jewish state as the most egregious manifestation of capitalist decadence and settler colonialism, but also as small and weak enough to be brought down through violent direct action. By doing so, they believed they could hasten the inevitable collapse of a rotten Euro-American imperial system.

The ideological current underpinning this radical global project was internationalism. Building on Marx’s dictum that class conflict had no national boundaries, these radicals traveled the world for training, combat, and refuge. From the street cafes of Paris to the Arab communist enclave of Aden, the revolutionaries searched for hideout spots and friendly governments in far-flung parts of the world. For example, “Carlos the Jackal,” settled in the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen after fleeing authorities in Europe.

Burke offers a compellingly detailed picture of these radicals’ delusions of grandeur and the many comical contradictions that hampered their efforts. For example, a group of British Trotskyists drank alcohol in a PLO training camp and got into a fist fight with British Maoists as well as with the Palestinian guards who tried to confiscate their bottles. The German Red Army Faction mistakenly incorporated a submachine gun used by West German security forces into their logo, instead of the Kalashnikov, the weapon most associated with anti-colonial resistance. German radicals were so repulsed by the dirtiness of a PFLP office in Yemen that they went on a blitzkrieg-style cleaning spree. These militants romanticized the life of the revolutionary and were convinced they were forging a more just world, but they were constantly undermined by their own incompetence, poor planning, bad tempers, and cultural cluelessness.
Seth Mandel: The Emotional and Intellectual Fragility of Anti-Israel Activists
The few stills from the video presentation that have leaked focus on Islamophobia and something called “anti-Palestinian racism.” One example of anti-Palestinian racism, provided on a slide about “APR in Education,” is: “Being called Antisemitic if they are Pro-Palestinian or speak up about APR.”

This is a neat trick, and it is in line with the wider speech-chilling campaign conducted by pro-Hamas propagandists: It is “racist” to call someone an anti-Semite.

Because this idea is ubiquitous among Gaza Westerners, it tells us a few things about members of this movement.

First, they exhibit a level of emotional and intellectual fragility that is, frankly, pathetic. This training reportedly showed a map of Israel replaced by the Palestinian flag, and yet “teaching students that ‘Israel is a free democratic state’ would render teachers ‘racist’ in the eyes of the board,” Hummel explains. That the “pro-Palestinian” narrative relies on such Stalinism is not unrelated to the fact that much of modern anti-Zionist propaganda was produced by the Soviet Union in the first place. Yet even by the standards of anti-freedom Hamasniks, this scale of reality-aversion in adults is frightening.

Second, the process by which this campaign is being carried out is anti-democratic in the extreme. That means the system will be anti-democratic about everything it does. Israel isn’t the exception but the rule. The ultimate target, then, is the Western system of liberty and self-government, with which strident anti-Zionism is entirely incompatible.

Third, the terminology is an assault on language. “Anti-Palestinian racism” is a ridiculous, self-contradictory phrase that ought to be laughed out of the room. If it were racism, they could just call it racism. Since it isn’t, its proponents have come up with a term that means “pretend ‘Palestinian’ is something it’s not.”

And fourth, absolutely none of the movement’s complaints about “policing anti-Israel rhetoric” are to be taken seriously. These lunatics are arguing that openly calling for genocide against the Jews is not only within the bounds of neutral argumentation but that it is fundamental to the identity of what might be called Palestinianism. But saying “Israel is a democratic state” is so “racist” that educators have to be trained not to say it around children.

As this type of “equity” training colonizes Western academia at every level of schooling, it’s easy to see why these activists want it kept secret. Any self-respecting person would be ashamed to be a part of it.
The Real Reason the “Pro-Pals” Did not speak out on behalf of Iranians
The author seems to think this is perfectly understandable under the circumstances of the Palestinians’ lives imposed on them, not by their own leaders who drag them into incessant conflict, but because of Israel’s terrible treatment of Palestinians [2](also in the West Bank- I guess the Gazans were channeling their brothers and sisters.) In point of fact, Israel had not stepped foot in Gaza since 2005. Only when Hamas was elected to lead and resumed firing rockets at Israeli towns on a near daily basis, did Israel together with Egypt impose a blockade to prevent the Gazans from bringing in more tools of destruction (it didn’t work).

Mr. QJ laments the number of deaths of Palestinians at the hands of Israelis but you know what he never mentions even once? Hamas and a good part of the Palestinian population at large, is dedicated to the destruction of Israel and killing Jews as they have threatened to do repeatedly. And we had a front row seat to how that threat has been and, if given the opportunity, will continue to be carried out, on October 7, 2023. Israel set out to destroy Hamas so that the October 7 atrocities can never be repeated — and all of its actions in Gaza were proportionate to war’s purpose. No one forced Hamas to store munitions in schools and use hospitals as a base for military operations or to shoot from people’s homes making civilian casualties unavoidable.

The author’s point is essentially this: We don’t need to stand up for Iranians because there is substantial agreement in the country that what Iran is doing is wrong. We need only protest Israel’s actions because Israel has the support of its American ally.

So notwithstanding the real genocide in Sudan, no need to support the Sudanese because we all agree that they are oppressed and the United States is not supporting Sudan,

Tell that to the people who spoke out on behalf of the Ukrainians and against the South African apartheid.

What message does silence send to the Iranian people who are risking their lives for freedom? Some suffering is more worthy than others?

In other words, instead of answering the question—why some activists ignore atrocities in Iran—the author takes the opportunity to add to the slanderous vitriol against Israel who are portrayed as uniquely evil and invents a narrative that absolves him of any moral responsibility, Iran as irrelevant, and critical thinking is nowhere in sight.

This was not an article to be taken seriously on its merits and I would not usually pay attention to this kind of drivel but the author has 18,000 followers and lots of support. Fair minded people cannot allow antisemitic voices to continue slandering the State of Israel without raising our hands.
From Ian:

Melanie Phillips: The crumbling wall of Hamas propaganda
That “genocide” lie has now been revealed as a travesty by Hamas itself. In its latest revision of the number of deaths in Gaza during the war, it says that 68,800 died. As before, it provides no acknowledgement of the number of these casualties who were terrorist combatants, nor the number who were killed by misfired rockets from Gaza or execution by Hamas (of which there have been many), nor indeed the number of natural deaths.

Most of the dead were men aged 18 to 59. According to researcher Gabriel Epstein, who broke the numbers down for Haaretz, the Hamas statistics show a much higher share of adult men and older teenage boys relative to their share of the population and a much lower share of women and children.

This totally refutes the mantra that those killed by Israel were “overwhelmingly” women and children. And, of course, it exposes the claim of genocide as utterly ludicrous.

Among those who have defamed Israel with these lies for the past 28 months, there is no admission of the terrible wrong they have done, even as their narrative collapses around them. Far from acknowledging that an unknown number of its staff have terrorist links, MSF is refusing to share a list of its Palestinian and international staff with Israeli authorities as part of the registration process to work in Gaza and the “West Bank.”

What’s more, its admission about terrorists at Nasser Hospital was buried in a rarely referenced FAQ page on the MSF website, where it was spotted by the eagle-eyed analyst Salo Aizenberg.

There appears to be nothing about this MSF report, the PIJ “dual identity” revelations or the revised Hamas statistical breakdown on the websites of Israel’s chief media demonizers, the BBC and The New York Times.

As for Oxfam, the BBC website reports the industrial tribunal case Begum has brought against the charity by detailing claims against her of bullying and other leadership issues, while failing to mention her explosive charge that Oxfam has a “toxic antisemitic culture.”

Nor is this the first time that MSF’s halo has been tarnished from within. In December 2023, Alain Destexhe, MSF’s former head, published a 47-page report based on tweets and posts by MSF staff on X and on Facebook.

This revealed that a significant proportion of MSF staff in Gaza supported Hamas, including its onslaught on Oct. 7. They never denounced on X the crimes committed by Hamas on that day, the taking of hostages, or the use of hospitals as barracks or human shields.

While MSF spared Hamas, said the report, the NGO accused Israel of “all the crimes,” using terms such as “massacres,” “annihilation,” and “accepted and organized sacrifice.”

“Is it possible,” it asked, “that MSF and its employees knew nothing and saw nothing of the violations of humanitarian law in the hospital by Hamas?”

It’s a good question, which could usefully be repeated about others. Is it possible that the Western media and the rest of the liberal establishment that demonize and defame Israel know nothing and see nothing of the violations of truth and evidence by Hamas?

The answer, incredible as it seems, is yes—and no. Those who see it shut their eyes to it. Others don’t allow themselves to see it at all.

Nothing, including whistleblowing or revised information from within, can be allowed to challenge the Western liberal narrative of heartless Israeli colonizers and wretched displaced Palestinians. Which is why the entire media, humanitarian and human-rights complex, which has poisoned the mind of the West with this exterminatory propaganda, is itself an accomplice to an all-too-real genocidal program.
Former hostage Matan Angrest says he was electrocuted in captivity
Former hostage Matan Angrest says he was tortured and electrocuted during his two-plus years in Hamas captivity.

“For eight hours in a row, I sat and had to tell them things, during which I knew that it wasn’t just about my own well-being but the security of the country at stake. There are things that are in the realm of ‘die and don’t tell,'” Angrest tells Channel 12’s Uvda investigative program, indicating that he was exposed to highly classified intelligence during his service in an elite tank unit.

Angrest recalls opening his eyes for the first time after he was kidnapped from his tank, which was hit by an RPG on the Gaza border.

He says he found himself in a home in Gaza with over half a dozen Palestinians sitting in front of him.

They began asking him questions about where he served and where he was kidnapped from, but the questions were in Arabic and he didn’t understand. His captors then got angry and started beating him while his hands and feet were tied.

He says he couldn’t move his arm because it was burned so badly.

“Someone came to me with two cables and put them on my wound and just turned (a machine) on. I could feel myself being electrocuted. I screamed in a pain that is impossible to describe,” Angrest says.
The Disastrous Legacy of Mahmoud Abbas
Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas, who became head of the Palestine Liberation Organization after Yasser Arafat's death, is a Holocaust-denying, terror-supporting, corrupt dictator who was bad for Israel, bad for the Palestinians, and bad for peace, which he undermined more than promoted. His policies promoted, incited, and rewarded terrorism and the systematic indoctrination of generations of Palestinians to hate Israel and Israelis.

He insisted on treating genocidal terrorist organizations such as Hamas and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) as legitimate Palestinian factions and continued to reject peace efforts. Abbas bears direct responsibility for the deaths of thousands of Palestinians and Israelis. If the PA is to continue playing any future role, any future Palestinian leader must be the absolute antithesis of Abbas.

While consistently feigning moderation and pragmatism, Abbas consistently rejected peace. In 2008, he rejected an offer by then-Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to create a Palestinian state. Instead, Abbas chose to pursue virtual statehood, repeatedly requesting that the UN recognize the non-existent "State of Palestine."

Abbas accumulated a substantial personal fortune estimated to be over $100 million. His sons, Tarek and Yasser, run the large Falcon business consortium that controls much of Palestinian commerce. The consortium includes tobacco, electrical and mechanical engineering, media, construction, and investment interests. They, too, have amassed huge personal fortunes.
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Parents Admit ‘Some Concern’ As Gannenet Deploys ED-209 To Guard Bamba

Jerusalem, February 27 - A wave of snack thefts at a local daycare has prompted the preschool teacher to install an enforcement droid to prevent further trespasses, but the unit's reputation for uncompromising implementation of its protocols has some adults in the community wondering whether other, less extreme, options might deserve exploration before this solution gets implemented, lest, for example, a child gets frightened.

Parents of the two dozen children at Gan Esti in the city's Giv'at Massua neighborhood expressed a modicum of anxiety over the use of the Omni Consumer Products ED-209, following at least two instances of children in Esti's care breaking into the cabinet and stealing Bamba.

"We have some concern," acknowledged Yuval Shalev, father of Lihi, 5. "Nobody wants their child consuming too much junk food, and certainly nobody wants their child to learn that stealing is tolerated. Everyone agrees on that. We just think that, maybe, before resorting to a machine that riddles the suspect with hundreds of rounds, continuing even after he's just a convulsing corpse, should sit no higher than, say, ninth of the list of deterrence possibilities."

The preschool teacher, Esti Cohen, defended the decision with characteristic gannenet pragmatism. "Bamba is not just a snack — it's practically a food group," she explained in a brief phone interview. "After the second incident, where little Noam [Sharabi, 4] managed to pry open the cabinet during circle time and distributed half the stash to his friends before I noticed, I realized we needed something more reliable than a child-proof lock. The ED-209 arrived last week from a... surplus supplier. It's programmed for compliance enforcement. Simple."

Cohen emphasized that the unit remains in standby mode during most gan hours, stationed discreetly behind the craft-supply shelf with its massive frame partially concealed by a colorful mural of the Israeli flag and smiling cartoon animals. "We only activate it when there are fewer staff members in the room," she added. "And we've adjusted the protocols — no lethal force unless the offender refuses to return the pilfered bag after verbal warning. It's very reasonable."

Not all parents share that confidence. Michal Levy, mother of twins aged 4, described the robot's arrival as "a bit much, even for Jerusalem standards." She pointed out that the ED-209's distinctive mechanical growl occasionally echoes through the thin walls during naptime, startling some of the younger children awake. "One boy asked if it's a new kind of dinosaur," she said. "We told him it's a very big toy. But honestly? We're worried about the 'twenty seconds to comply' part. Toddlers and preschoolers don't count that well, if at all."

Community WhatsApp groups have lit up with memes: side-by-side photos of the hulking droid looming over innocent orange Bamba bags, captioned with variations on "You have 20 seconds to hand over the puff...." "You are in violation of Gan Protocol III Section 9." Some parents have suggested alternatives —reward charts, a "Bamba honor system," or simply buying more bags to avoid scarcity-driven crime. A few even floated crowdfunding a less aggressive model, perhaps an ED-101 with softer protocols.

Shalev, the father quoted earlier, remains diplomatic but firm. "We're not against innovation," he said. "Israelis love tech. But when the alternative to a five-year-old grabbing an extra handful is hundreds of rounds turning the play area into a crime scene reenactment, maybe we dial it back. Start with a stern look, move up to time-outs, then maybe a locked box. At least in our home, even when he's at his worst, we try to avoid murdering a misbehaving child."




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  • Thursday, February 26, 2026
  • Elder of Ziyon

There is a striking disconnect between three different ways Palestinian identity is described: in genetic studies, in Western political discourse, and in internal clan narratives.

Start with genetics. Most population studies show that Palestinian DNA is overwhelmingly Levantine - often over 80%. That category includes Syria, Lebanon and Jordan, so it does not prove continuous residence within the borders of Mandatory Palestine. Still, genetically speaking, Palestinians are largely a Levantine population.

Now look at how Palestinian identity is framed in the West. There the emphasis is on absolute indigeneity: a people wholly rooted in the land, implicitly contrasted with Jews portrayed as foreign. In that framing, outside origins are minimized or ignored.

But there is a third narrative - the one found in Palestinian clan histories, tribal affiliations and social media accounts. Here, a very different picture emerges. Many families openly state, and often take pride in, origins outside Palestine: Hejaz, Yemen, the Arabian Peninsula, Egypt, Syria, even Circassian or Kurdish migrations during Ottoman times.

To move beyond anecdote, I examined the appendix of Glenn Robinson’s 2009 paper Palestinian Tribes, Clans, and Notable Families.” The list was not compiled with this issue in mind, which makes it a reasonably neutral sample of prominent Palestinian family names. After removing duplicates, roughly 95 families remained.

The origins of about 10% of the families could not be identified. Of the remainder:

  • About 20% described themselves as indigenous to the local Levant.

  • About 12% traced their origins to older Levantine Arab migrations that long predated Islam.

  • About 69% claimed migration from Arabia or other external regions, including prestigious lineages tied to the Hejaz, Yemen, Bedouin tribes, Hashemite ancestry, companions of Muhammad, Egyptian arrivals, or Ottoman-era migrations.

In other words, among families that preserve and publicize origin traditions, roughly 80% associate themselves with roots outside Palestine.

This does not necessarily contradict the DNA evidence. Male-line tribal migrations marrying local women could easily produce a largely Levantine genetic profile alongside Arabian clan narratives. The point is not genetic purity. It is self-perception.

Why do so many families prefer to emphasize external tribal origins rather than local indigeneity? In Arab society, descent from prestigious tribes - especially those connected to early Islamic history - carries social capital. Identity narratives often follow honor and status.

That creates tension with the Western-facing narrative of exclusive indigeneity. Internally, many families celebrate migration stories. Externally, migration is rhetorically erased. Their self-definition is that they came from elsewhere, not that they are proudly native Palestinians - even when their DNA might say otherwise. 

By contrast, Jewish diasporic naming traditions generally preserve identification with ancient Israelite tribes rather than with host nations. Ashkenazic Jews did not historically claim Polish or Hungarian tribal origin as a source of prestige. Surnames such as Cohen, Katz, Levi and even Loeb. Wolf and Hirsch explicitly reference biblical lineage. Whether every claim is provable is secondary; the identity myth points toward ancient Israel, not toward the countries of exile.

This small fact is of course Kryptonite to the prevailing anti-Israel propaganda that Jews are illegal settlers and Palestinians are indigenous. The Jews never relinquished their ties to the land from their origins; Palestinians by and large do it even today on countless Palestinian Facebook and family webpages. 

The contrast is not about genetics. It is about where a people locates its origin story. When internal clan narratives celebrate external migration while political narratives assert exclusive indigeneity, the tension deserves examination.

Here is the entire list of Palestinian surnames as identified by Robinson and where these families say they originated from:

Family/Clan/Tribe
Region(s)
Claimed Origins
Status
‘Abd al-Hadi
Nablus
Notable; claims descent from al-Hadi (Hashemite, from Mohammed).
Migrated (Arabian/External)
‘Amr
Hebron
Linked to Banu Amr, sub-tribe of Tamim or others.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
‘Atrash
Bethlehem
Deaf clan; possible Bedouin.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
‘Azza
Hebron
Clan; possible Jewish origins in traditions.
Indigenous
Abu Amash
Bayt Hanun
Clan; claims descent from Umash in Beirut (Lebanese ties) or from Kafr Qaddum (West Bank local).
Indigenous (if West Bank) or Migrated (if Lebanese) – assuming Indigenous based on Palestinian context
Abu Awda
Bayt Hanun
Clan; possible Egyptian or Sudanese roots, or from Awad in Palestine (local Levantine).
Migrated (Arabian/External) if Egyptian; Indigenous if local
Abu Ghawsh
Jerusalem
Clan; claims Kurdish origins.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Abu Hassanayn
Gaza
Clan; possible from Hassanayn in Syria or Iraq; linked to Husseini/Hashemite descent.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Abu Khusa
Gaza
Clan; possible from Khusa in Egypt or Transjordan.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Abu Mashaseeb
Dayr al-Balah
N/A (no new claims; possible local Gaza clan).
N/A
Abu Middain
Gaza
Clan; possible Egyptian origins.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Abu Naja
Rafah
Clan; claims descent from Naja in Arabia or Morocco; some link to Quraish.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Abu Samhadana
Rafah
Clan; Bedouin, with Sinai/Egyptian ties.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Abu Sharkh
Gaza
Possible east origins, implying Transjordanian.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Abu Taha
Gaza/Rafah/Khan Yunis
Clan; possible Yemeni or Egyptian roots.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Abu Warda
Gaza
Clan; possible from Warda in Arabia or Egypt.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Adwan
Gaza
Bedouin clan; claims descent from Adwan tribe in Jordan, Hejazi origins.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Agha
Gaza
Claims Turkish or Circassian descent from Ottoman era.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Ahfat
Nablus
N/A (no new claims; possible local Nablus notable).
N/A
Al-Ahmad
Nablus/Jenin
Common; possible descent from Ahmad (variant of Mohammed).
Indigenous
Al-Hajj Muhammad
Nablus
Pilgrim family; claims to Mohammed.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Al-Sayf
Nablus
Sword clan; possible warrior Sahaba links.
Indigenous
Al-Sha’ir
Rafah/Khan Yunis
Clan; claims poetic lineage, possibly from Hejaz tribes.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Alami
Jerusalem
Notable; claims Moroccan or Syrian roots.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Ashur
Khan Yunis
Possible Assyrian or Transjordanian roots.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Atallah
Hebron
Christian connotations; possible Ghassanid.
Levantine but Migrated (Pre-Islamic/Regional Arab)
Bakr
Gaza
Linked to Banu Bakr tribe, Adnanite Arabs from Hejaz.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Bani Himar
Jerusalem
N/A (linked to Banu Himar, possibly Hejazi tribe; scarce info).
N/A
Bani Murra
Jerusalem
Linked to Banu Murra, Hejazi tribe.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Bani Shamsa
Nablus
Clan; claims descent from Shamsa in Arabia (Qahatani or Adnani ties).
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Bani Zayd
Jerusalem
Clan; claims Arabian Peninsula origins, linked to Bani Zeid.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Barghouthi (Barghouti)
Ramallah/Al-Bira/Bethlehem
From Bani Zeid; descent from Omar ibn al-Khattab (Sahabi), via Egypt/Tunisia.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Baytuni
Jerusalem
Possible Christian origins (Beitunia ties).
Indigenous
Buhaisi
Gaza
Clan; possible from Buhaisi in Bahrain or Hejaz.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Burqawi
Nablus
From Burqa; local roots.
Indigenous
Dajani
Jerusalem
Notable a'yan; claims descent from Dajan tribe, possibly Hejazi or Yemeni.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Dakkak
Jerusalem
Notable; possible from Dakkak in Syria or local Jerusalem elite.
Migrated (Arabian/External) if Syrian; N/A otherwise
Darwish
Jerusalem
Sufi connotations; possible Yemeni or Hejazi.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Dira
Gaza
N/A (scarce; possible local Gaza clan or from Dira in Arabia).
N/A
Dughmush
Gaza
Clan; claims descent from Arab tribes in Iraq or Hejaz.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Duwaykat
Nablus
Clan; possible from Duwaykat in Nablus region (local).
Indigenous
Dweik
Hebron
Notable; claims descent from Dweik in Arabia or Ottoman ties.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Freij
Bethlehem
Possible Christian origins.
Indigenous
Hamad
Bethlehem
Praise; common Arab.
Indigenous
Hanun
Tulkarm
Compassionate; possible from Hanun in Syria or local.
Migrated (Arabian/External) if Syrian
Hasan
Jerusalem
Common name; possible descent from Hasan ibn Ali (grandson of Mohammed).
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Haniyya
Ramallah/Al-Bira
From Haniyah tribe, possible Yemeni.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Hilmi
Nablus
N/A (possible local notable; linked to Hilmi in Syria).
N/A
Hillis
Gaza
Clan; claims Yemeni tribal origins.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Hizbun
Bethlehem
N/A (scarce; possible Christian or local Bethlehem clan).
N/A
Husayni
Jerusalem
Claims descent from Husayn ibn Ali (grandson of Mohammed) via Yaman tribe roots.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Ja’bari
Hebron
Notable; claims descent from Jabir ibn Abdullah (Sahabi).
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Jarrar
Nablus
Clan; claims Jordanian or Hejazi ties.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Jaraf
Gaza
N/A (scarce; possible from Jaraf in Arabia).
N/A
Jawwad
Salfit
Generous; possible from Jawwad in Arabia or local.
N/A
Jayyusi
Nablus
Linked to Jays tribe, Arab Peninsula.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Jughan
Khan Yunis
N/A (scarce; possible local Khan Yunis clan).
N/A
Kafarna
Bayt Hanun
Possible Christian origins, implying Ghassanid (Yemeni-Arab Christian) ties.
Levantine but Migrated (Pre-Islamic/Regional Arab)
Kamal
Ramallah/Al-Bira
Perfection; notable, possible Turkish.
Indigenous
Kan’an (Kanaan)
Nablus
From Kanaan; claims Syrian origins.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Ka’raja
Jerusalem
N/A (scarce; possible from Ka'raja in Jerusalem local elite).
N/A
Khalaf
Ramallah/Al-Bira
Successor; possible caliphate ties.
Indigenous
Khalidi
Jerusalem
From Bani Khalid tribe; descent from Khalid ibn al-Walid (Sahabi).
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Khatib
Jerusalem
Preacher family; claims Quraysh or Sahaba ties.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Khoury
Ramallah/Al-Bira
Priest; Christian, Ghassanid Arab from Peninsula.
Levantine but Migrated (Pre-Islamic/Regional Arab)
Lahham
Jerusalem/Bethlehem
Butcher clan; possible Christian Ghassanid roots.
Levantine but Migrated (Pre-Islamic/Regional Arab)
Madhun
Gaza
Notable; descent from Bani Hashim al-Ashraf al-Husayni (Quraish), migrated Mecca-Medina-Ta'if, then various places including Palestine in Mamluk era.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Majayda
Khan Yunis
Clan; claims descent from Majayda in Arabia (possibly Qahtani).
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Mamar
Khan Yunis
N/A (scarce; possible from Mamar in Arabia or local).
N/A
Mansur
Nablus
Victorious; possible Ottoman ties.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Masri
Multiple
"Egyptian"; claims descent from Egyptian migrants in 19th century.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Mattar
Gaza
Possible Egyptian ties.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Milhem
Halhul
Notable; possible from Milhem in Arabia or local Hebron.
N/A
Mughani
Gaza
Clan; claims descent from Mughani in Arabia (Quraish or Hejaz).
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Muhtasib
Hebron
Market inspector; Ottoman-era role, possible Syrian roots.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Musleh
Ramallah/Al-Bira
Reformer; possible local Ramallah notable.
Indigenous
Nasir
Jabalya
Linked to Banu Nasr, possible Hejazi tribe.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Nasr
Qalqilya
Victory; possible Nasr tribe.
Indigenous
Natshi
Hebron
Notable; claims descent from Natshi in Arabia (Tamim or Quraish ties).
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Nimr
Nablus
Tiger clan; notable a'yan.
Indigenous
Nusayba (Nusseibeh)
Jerusalem
Descent from Ubadah ibn al-Samit (Sahabi) and Banu Khazraj (Ansar).
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Qasim
Nablus
Linked to Banu Qasim, Hashemite.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Qawasma
Hebron
Clan; claims Yemeni origins.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Rayyan
Nablus
Common; possible from Rayyan in Arabia (gate of Paradise link, symbolic).
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Reyyes (Rayyes)
Gaza
Notable family; claims Arab elite (a'yan) roots, possibly from Hejaz.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Rishmawi
Bethlehem
Christian; Ghassanid or Yemenite.
Levantine but Migrated (Pre-Islamic/Regional Arab)
Salah
Jerusalem
Linked to Saladin's era, Kurdish or Arab.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Samana
Jabalya
N/A (scarce; possible from Samana in Arabia).
N/A
Shaq’a
Nablus
Notable; claims Hejazi Arab roots.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Shahwan
Khan Yunis
Clan; claims descent from Shahwan in Arabia (Bedouin ties).
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Shawwa
Gaza
Notable; Ottoman-era origins, with claims to Syrian or Transjordanian descent.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Shawwaf
Gaza
Notable; possible from Shawwaf in Arabia or Syria.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Shami
Jenin
From Sham (Syria); Syrian origins.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Simhan
Jerusalem
N/A (scarce; possible from Simhan in Jerusalem local).
N/A
Suwayti
Jericho
Clan; possible from Suwayti in Arabia or local Jericho.
N/A
Ta’amra
Bethlehem
Bedouin; nomadic Arab, with Edomite/Nabatean ties via trade.
Indigenous
Tamimi
Hebron
From Banu Tamim tribe; Adnanite descent from Ishmael via Adnan.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Tawil
Ramallah/Al-Bira
Tall clan; possible Christian Ghassanid.
Levantine but Migrated (Pre-Islamic/Regional Arab)
Tayaha
Gaza (Tribal Confederation)
Bedouin; linked to Tayy tribe, claiming Adnanite descent from Ishmael, with Hejazi origins.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Tuqan (Touqan)
Nablus
Notable; linked to Ta'amira Bedouins, nomadic Arab roots.
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Uraqat
Jerusalem/Jericho
Bedouin clan from Huwaitat region (northwestern Arabia); ancestors from Medina (Hejaz).
Migrated (Arabian/External)
Yahya
Jenin
John; possible Christian links.
Indigenous
Ziyada
Ramallah/Al-Bira
Common; possible from Ziyada in Arabia or local Ramallah.
N/A





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