
Palestinian activist and community leader killed documenting settler violence in Umm al-Khair
On July 28, 2025, Awdah Hathaleen, a respected Palestinian young elder and nonviolent activist from the village of Umm al-Khair, was shot and killed by an Israeli settler while peacefully documenting settler activity near his home in the South Hebron Hills.
He was unarmed. He posed no threat. He was simply doing what he had always done—bearing witness.
Awdah was one of the kindest, gentlest, and most dedicated men I’ve had the privilege to know, his smile comforted without him speaking a word. He lived a life of service to his community and carried a deep strength rooted in principle. For years, his small village faced repeated home demolitions, land seizures, and settler intimidation.
And yet, Awdah responded not with fear or retaliation—but with quiet, consistent nonviolent resistance.
He welcomed visitors, documented abuses, and helped educate others about the daily realities of life under occupation. He believed in the power of presence—showing up with integrity, even in the face of systemic violence.
On the day he was killed, Awdah was filming Israeli settlers damaging olive trees and water infrastructure. One settler, Yinon Levi, drew his weapon and fatally shot Awdah at close range.
The moment was captured on video, including from Awdah’s own phone. He was pronounced dead shortly afterward.
This was not a clash. It was not a misunderstanding. It was the killing of a man whose only weapon was a camera and a commitment to truth.
A group of us visited his family and community a few days later—only once the Israeli occupation forces finally released the body and permitted the burial to take place. Usually, funerals in Palestine for those killed by the occupation are a moment of communal expression: flags are raised, slogans chanted, banners hung, and the life of the martyr is honored loudly and with pride.
But not this time. The army had explicitly forbidden all forms of public mourning. They threatened to raid or attack if anything was done that they did not approve.
And yet—we were there. Many came. Quietly. Steadily.
As I sat among the mourners, I thought of Awdah. The silence of that gathering was not a void, it was a mirror of who he was. He was never about the show. He was about presence. He was about quiet strength.
Awdah’s death highlights a painful reality: nonviolent Palestinian activists are not protected by their peaceful approach. Too often, their presence alone is treated as a provocation.
But that is precisely why their work matters.
At Nonviolence International, we believe nonviolence is not passive. It is active, courageous, and deeply strategic. Awdah embodied that truth. He lived it quietly, without fanfare—and paid the ultimate price for it.
We share Awdah’s story not only to honor his life but to renew our commitment to the values he upheld:
- Rooted resistance in the face of displacement
- Dignity without retaliation
- Service over ego
- Truth-telling under pressure
Awdah’s leadership was local, humble, and real. It’s exactly the kind of leadership we need more of—especially now.
Take Action:
📌 Help us honor Awdah’s legacy by supporting nonviolent resistance in Palestine.
👉Donate to his family’s fundraiser here or to Nonviolence International here.
👉 Get Involved with Unarmed Civilian Protection in Palestine here.
Even in his absence, Awdah’s example remains—a quiet but powerful reminder of what it means to resist with courage, humanity, and hope.
Photo: Nayef Hashlamoun Bilin, Palestine



