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Israeli settlers. On 26 February 2023, hundreds of Israeli settlers went on a violent late-night rampage in Huwara and other Palestinian villages in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, leaving one civilian dead and 100 other Palestinians injured, four critically, and the town ablaze. [1][2] It was the worst attack stemming from Israeli settler ...
The attack. Two Israelis from Ashdod, Shai Sailas Nigrker, 60, and his son Aviv (Nigrker) Nir, 29, arrived in Huwara on Saturday, August 19, 2023, to service their car. After several hours of repairs, the two were at a car wash on Highway 60 south of Hawara. Around 3:04pm, a Palestinian terrorist arrived, shot them and ran away.
1. On 26 February 2023, an unidentified person fatally shot two Israeli settlers in their car in Huwara, a town south of Nablus in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Following the shooting, Israeli settlers carried out revenge attacks on Palestinians, which have killed at least one Palestinian and injured around 100 others.
Hawara is an archaeological site of Ancient Egypt, south of the site of Crocodilopolis ('Arsinoë', also known as 'Medinet al-Faiyum') at the entrance to the depression of the Fayyum oasis. It is the site of a pyramid built by Pharaoh Amenemhat III , who was a Pharaoh of the 12th dynasty of the Old Kingdom, in 19 century B.C. [1]
Huwara is an ancient site, and cisterns and rock-cut tombs have been found, together with remains of columns. [9] It has been suggested that Huwara should be identified with Horon, hometown of Sanballat the Horonite. [10] Huwara is identified with the Samaritan village of Hivria (Hebrew: חוריא).
Huwara checkpoint. Coordinates: 32°10′40″N 35°16′23″E. Palestinians and an Israeli soldier at the Huwara checkpoint, 2005. The Huwara checkpoint (Hebrew: מחסום חווארה; Arabic: حاجز حوارة) is a formerly major checkpoint operated by the Israel Defense Forces at one of the four main exits of Nablus. Situated to the ...
The Labyrinth of Egypt was built at Hawara by Amenemhat III, who ruled c. 1800 BC as the sixth pharaoh of the Twelfth Dynasty. [1][2] Karl Richard Lepsius also discovered cartouches bearing the name of Amenemhat's daughter, Sobekneferu, [2] suggesting that she made additions to the complex's decorations during her reign as king of Egypt.
After the photo caught the country's attention, a GoFundMe page created by a man named John Noonan, who initially started the fundraiser to buy "a few kegs" for the students and give his friends a ...