The Ramat Yeshai settlement started in 1984, set up by settlers from Hebron who established 6 portable caravans at ''Deir Al Arba'een''. The initiative obtained official Israeli approval in 1998, and the Israel Defense Ministry gave the go-ahead for building 16 housing units on the site in 2001. Since then the land adjacent to the settlement is being incrementally taken over, notwithstanding stop-work orders handed down in judgements from the
Israeli Supreme Court. Both the Abu Haikal and Abu Aisha families had saved and protected Jews from the slaughter of other Arabs during the
1929 Hebron massacre and the
Israeli Interior Minister Yosef Burg had, according to Abu Aisha, specifically asked settlers not to harm the Abu Aisha for this reason in the early 80s. According to , an Israeli counterterrorism specialist and expert in
far-right Jewish groups, "a small number of very radical Jewish families" settled in the area in the mid-1980s. and
Noam Federman who took up residence there. , in the
Israeli-occupied West Bank, calling for
the gassing of Arabs, above a
tag for the right-wing group the
Jewish Defense League Settlers are said to purposefully provoke Palestinian residents: numerous testimonies of continuous harassment have been collected from several Palestinian families such as the Abu 'Aisha, the Shamsiyeh, whose 8-year-old daughter's hair was reportedly set alight by a settler, and the Azzeh. Peace activists stationed in the area report frequent threats or acts of settler stoning at both activists and local residents who venture there, or who try to work their lands. Palestinians cannot adequately defend themselves, because the
settlement is defended by an entire company of the
Israeli Defense Force. An English graffiti reading 'Gas the Arabs', said to be the handiwork of the
Jewish Defense League, has been sprayed on one of the streets. persuaded Prime Minister Rabin to back down. The Dir al-Arba'in mosque, where Hebronite Palestinians had prayed until the mid-1990s, was declared a closed military zone, and converted into a synagogue, renamed by settlers
Tomb of Ruth and Jesse, and thenceforth all access to it by Muslims was forbidden ostensibly for security reasons. In 2005, violence against Palestinians in Hebron most frequently originated with the settlement at Tel Rumeida. The Abu Haikel family is reported to be harassed many times. Of the original 500 Palestinian families resident there, only 50 had remained after what
Gideon Levy called a 'reign of terror'. Palestinian cars are torched. Long curfews, restrictions on Palestinian movements in the area, and the difficulty of sending children to school like the local Qurtuba (Cordoba) elementary school whose main entrance was sealed with razor wire by the IDF in 2002 and whose students are subject to settler stoning, have, according to one testimony, forced residents in the Palestinian neighbourhood to abandon their homes, and a grocery business and a small hospital to close. Palestinian vehicles are forbidden on Tel Rumeida's streets, and Arab residents can only move in the area on foot. Visits by the
International Committee of the Red Cross to check the conditions of Palestinian residents are met by vandalism of vehicles: the flags are stolen, and the emblems on cars damaged since apparently the symbol of the Christian cross is considered 'offensive' to Jewish settlers in the area. B'tselem has a project to provide Palestinians with videos to capture violence against them, and one of the best known videos in the series deals with the harassment Palestinian residents of Tel Rumeida are subject to. According to
David Dean Shulman, Palestinian residents have opened a
Center for Sumud and Challenge, where the virtue of non-violent resistance and steadfast perseverance (
sumud) in the face of harassment is advocated. Situated close to Admot Yishai, the centre, run by
Youth Against Settlements (YAS), was subject to an arson attempt in 2013. soldiers search Palestinians routinely as they pass Tel Rumeida A Palestinian resident who refused lucrative offers for her home, has stated that settlers have used home-made napalm to poison their fields, continually burn their cars, and destroy their agricultural tools. In 2011, according to
Christian Peacemaker Teams, a further 16 trees from the Haikal's olive groves, some of them reputedly 1,000 years old, were destroyed by fire when settlers set them alight. Palestinian firefighter teams trying to extinguish the flames had their hoses confiscated, and replaced by older ones. Settlers reportedly uprooted roughly 100 olive-tree saplings planted with the help of a Jordanian NGO in the yard of a Palestinian school in Tel Rumeida. In 2012 an Israeli court ruled that settler claims to have purchased a house in Tel Rumedia in 2005, which had been abandoned by its owner Zechariah Bakri in 2001 when restrictions were imposed on Palestinian movements, were based on forgeries. The house, occupied by 6 settler families, was under a court order requiring them to evacuate it. At 6 a.m. on 6 November, Israeli forces occupied several Palestinian homes and the
Beit Sumoud headquarters of the
Youth Against Settlements, detaining residents while declaring that their occupation of the dwellings would continue for 24 hours. Palestinian TV crews were reportedly prevented from documenting the incident. Subsequently, the 50 Palestinian families who refuse to leave Tel Rumeida were required to have ID cards permitting them to move in the area: no one else will be permitted to enter the zone. Subsequently, the IDs of Tel Rumeida and Shuhada Street were stamped with numbers, a practice which led to protests by Palestinians who stated
'Israel is the last place in the world that should give people numbers'. The measure, reportedly a local measure, was revoked when higher echelon commanders reviewed the practice. In late November 2015 Baruch Marzel led a settler assault, demanding the closure of the Beit Sumoud, and engaged in a sit-in occupying its seats, on 28 November. In July 2016 an attempt by local Tel Rumeida
Gandhian-style peace activist
Issa Amro, and Jawad Abu Aisha, the owner of an old factory to clean up the site and establish infrastructure for a cultural cinema project was blocked by soldiers. Amro had called on Jewish activists to help them, trusting that their presence and privilege would ensure them the few hours require to clear the area and set up a film center. Some 52 mainly diaspora activists, many from religious backgrounds, turned up. Settlers reportedly started tomatoes at them, and the army then detained 15 activists. Subsequently, a military closure was imposed on the site. ==Fatal incidents==