The IDF Education Corps has drafted a new booklet aimed at helping commanders prepare troops for the moral and ethical dilemmas they might encounter…
ad-Dhahiriya or az-Zahiriya is a Palestinian city in the Hebron Governorate, 23 km southwest of the city of Hebron in the southern West Bank. According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, ad-Dhahiriya had a population of 28,776 inhabitants in 2007. The primary health care facilities for the municipality are designated by the Ministry of Health as level 3. Horatius Bonar describes Ad-Dhahiriya in 1856 during the late Ottoman period as:- Suddenly, at an abrupt elbow of the ravine, we are relived by seeing the old castle, perched on its rocky height well in the setting sun; the poor village, which seems to hang about it, with, with its square yellow huts, rather helps, at this distance, to improve its appearance, and to give dignity to its towers and broken ramparts. From this point it looks much bolder and substantial than it is; not so isolated as El-Aujeh, which we passed some days ago, but well-set upon yon craggy perch. Like most of its fellow castles in the east and border “peels” in the north, it has seen better days, and has at one time, been a noble stronghold for Romans, or Crusaders, or Turks….. From the records of the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) it can be found that on 14 April 2005 the entrance to ad Dhahiriya from Road 60 was closed by an earth mound by the IDF; forcing all Palestinian movement in the area to travel internally from Dura.






















