Below is a summary of tables of child fatalities from 1987 to 2022 presented by
B'Tselem. It provides an overview of killings of Israeli children by Palestinian militants and of Palestinian children, largely by Israeli security forces. Per the below, the Israeli government disputes some of these numbers, especially regarding the
Gaza War. The
First Intifada of mass protests and rioting by
Palestinians in the occupied
West Bank,
East Jerusalem and
Gaza started in 1987, and children frequently participated. In an article in the London Review of Books, American professors
John Mearsheimer and
Stephen Walt claimed that the
Israel Defense Forces ("IDF") encouraged troops to break protesters' bones. The Swedish branch of
Save the Children estimated that during the first year of the intifada, between 23,600 and 29,900 children required medical treatment for such beating, tear gas, and gunfire injuries and that nearly a third were under the age of ten. The Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs lists 24 Israeli child fatalities between 1993 and 1999. As the B'Tselem summaries show, from the outbreak of the
Second Intifada starting in 2000 through the 2008–2009
Gaza War to September 2012, there were a greater number of child fatalities. A study by the
International Institute for Counter-Terrorism covering September 2001 to January 2005 found that 46 Israelis and 88 Palestinians were below the age of 12 at the time of their deaths. The youngest victim of violence during the Second Intifada was an Israeli infant who was nine hours old at the time of his death. During the 2004–2009 period, there were reports of 30 or more Palestinian children and infants dying, including as a result of
miscarriage, at
Israeli checkpoints where they were held for long periods of time and denied medical care. Additionally, suicide bombings and other attacks have caused Israeli women to suffer miscarriages, and numerous pregnant women have been killed. Casualties after the three-week
Gaza War during the winter of 2008–2009 were disputed. B'Tselem put out a report stating that 320 Palestinian minors under the age of 18 who did not take part in hostilities had been killed by Israeli forces. It was unknown if six other dead children took part, but 19 children between the ages of 16 and 18 who did so also were killed.
Defence for Children International reported that 352 children had died as a direct result of Israeli military action. The
Palestinian Centre for Human Rights found that 318 Palestinian children had been killed.
Al Mezan Center for Human Rights found that 355 Gazan children were killed by Israeli forces. According to
Amnesty International, the Palestinian fatalities included "some 300" children. The Israeli military later released its own figures, stating only 89 children under the age of 16 died. According to Elihu D. Richter and Yael Stein of
Hebrew University, B'Tselem data showed that the overwhelming majority of Palestinian child deaths were male teenagers, suggesting many could have had some role in combat or support for combat. Studies conducted by Israel's
International Institute for Counter-Terrorism indicate that 96 percent of Palestinian fatalities during the Second Intifada were male and that the vast majority of child casualties were teenagers. Israeli fatalities do not show any great inclination in regard to gender or age. The
United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported that during the
2012 Gaza War, 30 Palestinian children were killed.
Israeli children Palestinian suicide attacks, mainly directed at Israeli civilians, began in the 1990s and peaked during the Second Intifada (2000–2005). According to
Amnesty International, between 2000 and 2004, "more than 100 Israeli children... [were] killed and hundreds of others injured in suicide bombings, shootings and other attacks carried out by Palestinian armed groups in Israel and in the Occupied Territories." Some children were killed in shootings and attacks on cars and buses. In addition, several rapes, kidnappings, and individual murders of Israeli children and teenagers have occurred. Other Israeli children were killed in home invasions, some of them in their own beds or their parents' beds. Examples include: • In 2001, a Palestinian
sniper opened fire on the Avraham Avino settlement in
Hebron from the Palestinian-controlled Abu Sneineh neighborhood. Ten- month-old
Shalhevet Pass was shot in the head and killed while sitting in her stroller; her father was wounded. • The
Sbarro restaurant massacre in August 2001 killed 15 Israelis, among them 7 children and a pregnant woman. • The
Yeshivat Beit Yisrael massacre on 2 March 2002, targeting a group of women and children next to a synagogue, resulted in the deaths of seven children and four adults. Eight of the dead came from the same family. • The 2004
Murder of Tali Hatuel and her four daughters, in which Palestinian militants killed Tali Hatuel, who was eight months pregnant, along with her four daughters: Hila (11), Hadar (9), Roni (7) and Merav (2). After shooting at the vehicle in which Hatuel was driving with her daughters, witnesses said the militants approached the vehicle and shot the occupants repeatedly at close range. An alliance of
Islamic Jihad and the
Popular Resistance Committees claimed responsibility for the attack. Israel's Ministry of Foreign Affairs reports that 8,341 Israelis were injured as a direct result of the conflict between 2001 and 2007 but does not specify how many were minors. Frequent rocket fire has also caused many injuries in the post-Intifada period. Permanent disability among children has resulted, including blindness, paralysis, In February 1953, one of five Arab shepherds shot in
al-Burj was 13 years old. During the
1952 Beit Jala raid, four children ranging in age from 6 to 14 were killed by machine gun fire. According to Amira Hass, 54 minors were brought to UNRWA clinics with head wounds from August 1989 to August 1993. The Association of Israeli and Palestinian Physicians for Human Rights (PHR-Israel) estimates that a child under the age of six was shot in the head every two weeks during the
First Intifada. Nuphar Ishay-Krien, a social welfare officer during the First Intifada, worked with two mechanized infantry companies in the southern Gaza Strip, collecting testimony from soldiers. In one instance, a soldier stated that during a patrol, his commander grabbed a 4-year-old boy, broke his arm and leg, and stepped on his stomach multiple times. When asked why, the commander replied, "These kids need to be killed from the day they are born. When a commander does that, it becomes legit." According to the
Defence for Children International (DCI), of the "595 children killed [29 September 2000 to 30 June 2004] during the
Second Intifada, 383, or 64.4%, died as a result of Israeli air and ground attacks, during assassination attempts, or when Israeli soldiers opened fire randomly" and "212 children, or 35.6%, died as a result of injuries sustained during clashes with Israeli military forces." The DCI estimates that from 1 January 2001 until 1 May 2003, at least 4,816 Palestinian children were injured, with the majority of injuries resulting from Israeli army activity while the children were going about their normal activities. Amnesty International accused Israeli forces of inadequately investigating killings of children during the Second Intifada, while also condemning the killings of Israeli children by suicide bombings and other attacks by Palestinians. The Israel Defense Forces said that 89 "non-combatants" under the age of 18 died. B'Tselem reported that 318 minors below the age of 18 were killed. B'Tselem's numbers were disputed. When the United Nations attempted an investigation of high civilian deaths as a
possible war crime, Israelis refused to cooperate. During the November
2012 Gaza War, 30 children reportedly were killed. Other examples of casualties include: • Killing of 12-year-old
Muhammad al-Durrah in September 2000 as his father tried to shield him from bullets became a defining image of the Second Intifada, and was compared to other iconic images of children under attack, such as the
boy in the Warsaw ghetto (1943). • In November 2000, 14-year-old
Faris Odeh was shot and killed while clashing with Israeli troops at the
Karni crossing. • In 2001, an 11-year-old boy,
Khalil al-Mughrabi, was killed by tank fire, and two others were injured. Al-Mughrabi had been playing football in a field a half-mile away. • During the 2007 assassination of
Salah Shahade, a member of Hamas, several civilians were killed, including eight children. • In December 2008, two Palestinian school girls were killed in Gaza when a Qassam rocket launched by militants fell short of its Israeli target and into a house. During the first weeks of the ongoing
Gaza War, which began in October 2023, a Palestinian NGO estimated that the Israeli bombings of Gaza killed one child every 15 minutes, with more than 100 children dying each day. As of 5 April 2024, approximately 14,500 Palestinian children had been killed in the
Gaza war. In that period, military operations by Israel have also surged in the occupied West Bank, making last year the deadliest year on record for children there. A total of 124 children were killed in 2023, according to UNICEF - 85 of whom were reported killed after 7 October. So far in 2024, 36 Palestinian children have been killed in the territory by Israeli settlers or the military. As of September 2025, reports indicate that at least 19,000 children have been killed and about 42,000 injured in the Gaza War.
Foreign children • Aleksei Lupalu, 16, of
Ukraine was killed in the
Dolphinarium discotheque suicide bombing on 2 June 2001, along with 20 other civilians. Hamas claimed responsibility. • Shmuel Taubenfeld, 3 months, of New Square, New York, was killed in the
Shmuel HaNavi bus bombing on 19 August 2003 along with 22 other civilians, of whom 2 were foreign citizens. Over 130 were injured, and seven fatalities were children. Both Hamas and
Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility. •
Daniel Wultz, aged 16, of
Weston, Florida, USA, was killed in the
2006 Tel Aviv shawarma restaurant bombing. 10 other civilians were killed, of whom seven were Israeli and three were from other countries, and over 70 were injured.
Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility. • In March 2012, a French Muslim
attacked the
Ozar Hatorah Jewish day school, later stating he did it to avenge Palestinians. He shot and killed a Rabbi who taught there and his two sons, Aryeh, aged 6, and Gabriel, aged 3, as well as 8-year-old Miriam Monsonego and severely injured 17-year-old Bryan Bijaoui. == Palestinian attacks targeting children ==