Al-Mirkaz
Al-Mirkaz is a small Palestinian hamlet located in the Masafer Yatta region of the Hebron Governorate, in the southern West Bank. It is administered under Palestinian local frameworks but lies within Area C of the West Bank, under direct Israeli civil and military occupation. The hamlet faces chronic challenges related to displacement, loss of infrastructure, and settler-related violence.
History and archaeology
The Masafer region is called after the Arabic words for 'traveling.'The site appears as "Mirkus or Mirkad", on Van de Velde's map of Palestine, charted in 1851-1852, and published in 1858.
According to the 1870s Survey of Western Palestine, Khurbet el-Merkez contained “traces of ruins,” including “foundations and heaps of stones.”
Al-Mirkaz was first settled by families from Yatta in the 19th century. The area encompasses caves and terraced fields that local scholars and residents identify as part of longstanding seasonal and permanent habitation.
In the British Mandate Period, Al-Mirkaz's residents relied on a mixed agrarian economy of animal husbandry, orchard cultivation and field crops. Natan Shalem, the geographer who surveyed the area in 1931, recorded Markaz as one of the Yatta offshoot villages with caves, water cisterns, and cultivated fields, emphasizing its permanent nature long before 1967.
Khirbet al-Markaz was shelled during an Israeli assault of November 1966. UN Security Council records describe Israeli tanks and armored vehicles bombarding the settlement before troops entered and blew up houses. The Israeli state later argued that the area was only sporadically inhabited.
Legal-administrative context
Since 1967, Masafer Yatta—including Al-Mirkaz—has fallen within Israel’s declared Firing Zone 918, allowing routine demolitions and displacement under the Israeli military framework. A 2022 Israeli Supreme Court ruling upheld eviction orders affecting eight penalized hamlets in Masafer Yatta, potentially impacting over 2,000 residents.Al-Mirkaz’s residents frequently face demolition orders for homes, cisterns, and solar units due to the difficulty of obtaining Israeli-issued building permits. Many inhabitants rely on temporary structures and community cisterns.
The increasing persecution, harassment and violence have compelled many families to leave al-Mirkaz—a process NGOs described as ethnic cleansing.
Population and livelihoods
Local inhabitants are sedentary farmers, numbering approximately 150–300 in recent years. They speak Arabic and maintain livelihoods based on goat herding, olive cultivation, and grazing. Dependence on water tankers, solar panels, and community cisterns is common due to limited infrastructure access.Settler violence
In November 2025, several Palestinian, regional, and international media outlets reported a sharp escalation of Israeli settler attacks against the civilian population of al-Mirkaz accompanied by injuries, property damage, and growing insecurity for residents. According to Al Jazeera, settler violence intensified across the South Hebron Hills during this period, with assaults documented in and around the hamlet as part of a broader surge in West Bank attacks.Video published by the Times of Israel showed settlers assaulting Palestinians in the South Hebron Hills, consistent with additional reports identifying al-Mirkaz as one of the affected communities. A separate live report by the same outlet noted that seven settler attacks were recorded in a single night across the West Bank, indicating what it described as an intensifying pattern of violence that included incidents in the South Hebron Hills region.
More detailed accounts from regional and local agencies reported direct injuries in al-Mirkaz itself. Anadolu Agency stated that five Palestinians were wounded when settlers attacked residents with sticks and stones, damaging property before Israeli forces arrived. Najah News likewise reported settler groups entering the hamlet, assaulting residents, and vandalizing structures belonging to local families. The Egyptian newspaper Youm7 also reported injuries resulting from attacks on al-Mirkaz, describing beatings and extensive property damage.