Gush Katif

Israel grants legal status to 19 West Bank settlements, including two vacated in 2005 disengagement

The move follows government approval on Wednesday for the construction of 764 housing units across three settlements in the West Bank.

An Israeli flag flutters, with Ma'aleh Adumim is visible in the background, in the West Bank, August 14, 2025.
 OPPONENTS OF Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s disengagement plan face IDF troops as they secure the fence of Kfar Maimon in July 2005 after police blocked them from marching to the Gush Katif communities to protest against their demolition.

This week in Jewish history: The 2005 Gaza Disengagement

The Jerusalem Dispatch

The Jerusalem Dispatch: 20 years since disengagement

THEN-PRIME MINISTER Ariel Sharon addresses the cabinet at a meeting in 2004, ahead of a vote on approving a Gaza pullout. Let’s not forget a key cause of our ongoing disaster – Sharon’s 2005 ‘disengagement’ from Gaza, the writer charges.

The Gaza Disengagement: Sharon's strategic mistake and its cost – opinion


Gush Katif evacuees mark 10th anniversary of uprooting

Hundreds of former residents of Gush Katif and Northern Samaria congregated at the President’s Residence where President Reuven Rivlin had initially been scheduled to address them.

An Israeli opponent of Israel's disengagement plan from Gaza mourns before evacuation in the Jewish Gaza Strip settlement of Kfar Darom

UN chief Ban condemns Israeli appropriation of West Bank land

"The seizure of such a large swathe of land risks paving the way for further settlement activity, which – as the United Nations has reiterated on many occasions – is illegal," UN chief says.

A house in Gevaot for staff from the special needs school that is now on the site.

Media Comment: The vacuum of critique

In 2005, Israel’s media was largely exuberant about the upcoming unilateral retreat, for Sharon was implementing one of its dreams: the end of part of the “occupation”

Prime Minister Ariel Sharon addresses the nation on the disengagement from Gaza, August 15, 2005

Stop mowing the grass

However, we have seen this same song and dance several times before. Every few years since Israel’s withdrawal in 2005, Israel is goaded into an incursion against Hamas.

An IDF soldier traverses a tunnel used by Hamas gunmen for cross-border attacks

The Gaza solution: Lessons for future peace

Any concessions in the face of Palestinian terror will play directly into the hands of Israel’s worst enemies, whose thirst for Jewish blood will subsequently grow stronger.

OPPONENTS OF the disengagement plan from Gaza confront Border Police at the synagogue in the settlement of Kfar Darom in August 2005.

Amidror: Reoccupation of Gaza ‘only military way’ to stop rockets

BESA head Inbar: Another option is to take out Hamas’s military leadership, which ‘might be best, even if costly.’

Home with asbestos damaged by Gaza rocket

Into the Fray: Like a rudderless ship in a stormy sea

Just as Hamas uses its civilians as human shields against Israeli military attacks, so the Israeli government uses its civilians as human shields to fend off diplomatic attacks from the international community.

Binyamin Netanyahu speaks at the Knesset on Monday

2005 Gaza evacuee: We know this reality from Gush Katif

“We wanted to live here because it was important - a place where we could contribute to Israel - and this is the place that we found.”

Tzurit Yarchy on the Weinberg patio. In front of her is the scorched earth from the fire and in back of her is the pockmarked wall from the mortar's shrapnel.

Gush Etzion residents hold rally for kidnapped boys

"We ask that Jews in Israel and the Diaspora continue to show their care and concern for the boys and their families, and keep hope alive.”

WOMEN AT the Gush Etzion junction show their support for the three kidnapped youths

A thousand brides

The Human Spirit.

Jerusalem dance students