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In the Lion鈥檚 Den: What a new militia offers young Palestinians

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Ayman Nobani/Special to 海角大神
A young Palestinian boy wears a pendant depicting a recently killed member of a local youth-led and nonpartisan militia, the Lion's Den, in Nablus, West Bank, Oct. 26, 2022.

Hamas, Fatah, the Palestinian Authority, and the PLO-affiliated organizations and movements that have dominated Palestinian politics for decades mean little to Aboud.

Instead, the Ramallah university student, who gave only one name out of security concerns, says his loyalty lies with a band of young militants unheard of just a few months ago. 聽

鈥淭he Lions are the ones who will save us,鈥 Aboud says, holding up an image of a young fighter on his phone. 鈥淚t is my generation鈥檚 turn to fight for our homeland.鈥

Why We Wrote This

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A new generation of youth-led and nonpartisan militias is tapping into the frustrations of young Palestinians disillusioned by poor prospects for peace and the economy, cut out of politics, and pressured by Israeli settlers and the military.

The Lion鈥檚 Den, a youth-led, nonpartisan, and nonsectarian militia based in the northern West Bank city of Nablus, is among several like it popping up across the occupied Palestinian territories.

The groups are capturing the imaginations and tapping into the frustrations of Palestinian youths amid an uptick in settler attacks and an Israeli military crackdown聽that intensified further this week with a deadly raid against the Lions in Nablus.

Their popularity marks a more militant turn for Generation Z Palestinians in the West Bank. With no peace process and facing an increasingly autocratic and corrupt geriatric Palestinian leadership, few job prospects, and the expansion of Israeli settlements and movement restrictions, young Palestinians who say they feel 鈥減ressured from all sides鈥 are turning their backs on Palestinian civil society and its nonviolent approach.

Instead, young men and women with no political outlets and little memory of the second intifada鈥檚 carnage are demanding a 鈥渞ight to self-defense鈥 from what they see as the encroachment of the Israeli military and settlers on their daily lives and communities.

Ayman Nobani/Special to 海角大神
A bicyclist passes a poster depicting two local fallen members of the Lion's Den militia, in the old city of Nablus in the West Bank, Oct. 26, 2022.

If 2021 saw the TikTok protest intifada for Palestinians, 2022 has brought Telegram militias, with fears among the older generation over what may come next.

鈥淵oung people who are dying are saying, 鈥楾his is my only way to be free, the only moment I had dignity,鈥欌 says Mohamed, a Ramallah-based human rights trainer. 鈥淎nd that one moment of dignity is worth dying for. That message has gone viral.鈥

Growing support

The Lion鈥檚 Den first emerged in February as the initiator of a series of shooting attacks on the Israeli military and settlers in and around Nablus.

The group of young men, consolidated within Nablus鈥 mazelike old city, used its stone alleys as its base and rejected ties to any known political group.

But it was Israel鈥檚 August assassination of Ibrahim al-Nabulsi, the 18-year-old and unemployed alleged ringleader of the militia, that brought it to national prominence for Palestinians, with support for the movement growing with each Israeli military operation.

Israel鈥檚 raid into the old city before dawn Tuesday targeted Lion鈥檚 Den leaders and what it said was a bomb-making factory, killing six people. It prompted a general strike across the Palestinian territories in protest.

Yet even as Israel continues a stifling, 16-day blockade of Nablus and night operations to dismantle what it describes as 鈥渢errorist鈥 cells, the militia continues to address viewers directly via Telegram and other apps.

Youth support for the armed groups comes one year after popular protests, also youth-led, erupted across the occupied territories over the evictions of Palestinian residents in East Jerusalem.

Ayman Nobani/Special to 海角大神
A vendor displays photographs as a makeshift memorial to 11 young men, local residents who were members of the youth-led Lion's Den, at his stall at the entrance to the old city of Nablus, West Bank, Oct. 26, 2022.

Young Palestinians who took part in protests last year see no contradictions in the two phenomena.

鈥淵oung people are saying, 鈥業 don鈥檛 want to be a victim and oppressed. I want to stand up for myself,鈥欌 says Marah, a hoodie-donning journalism student in Ramallah. 鈥淟ast year鈥檚 protests were the first steps, and these brigades are the next step; we are all finding different ways to resist.鈥

The nonpartisan militias also have filled a Palestinian leadership void created by increasingly unrepresentative parties and faction infighting.

Ghassan al Khatib, assistant professor at Birziet University and director of the Jerusalem Media and Communications Centre, a Ramallah public survey center, says, 鈥99% of the population is identifying with this movement without knowing who they are, who is behind them,鈥 or anything about their agenda and ideology.

鈥淭his tells you a lot about how desperately the public is actively searching for action and leadership,鈥 he notes.

鈥淎fter years of young people looking for hope or a cause, suddenly this came,鈥 adds Nablus-based journalist Bassam Abu Alrub. 鈥淓ach young person sees themselves in Ibrahim Nabulsi. It has woken up something inside of them, and it is spreading fast, like wildfire.鈥

At the same time, analysts say, Palestinian political factions and institutions are closed to young people, cutting off an outlet for their voices.

鈥淭here are no elections, not even within political parties. Youths who cannot find a role for themselves try to find things outside the political structure,鈥 says Mr. Khatib.

Inside the Den

In Nablus鈥 old city Monday, not a single sign or flag for the Palestinian Authority (PA), Fatah, Hamas, or Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades was visible. Not even a Palestinian flag.

Ayman Nobani/Special to 海角大神
Residents sit by the Manara clock tower in Nablus, built in 1906 on the orders of an Ottoman sultan and a symbol of the West Bank city, Oct. 26, 2022.

Instead, photos of Lion鈥檚 Den members were prominently displayed on every stone wall, hanging from coffee shacks and inside restaurants. 鈥淟ion鈥檚 Den鈥 was spray-painted onto the walls in black.

Young men and women wore pendants with images of Mr. Nabulsi and other fallen militia members; one busy stand even sold mobile phone covers emblazoned with their photographs.

In one cafe, two 16-year-olds scroll their phones, looking at the latest Lion鈥檚 Den post: a TikTok montage of a recently killed brigade member set to a sorrowful ballad and emoji.

When asked about their ambitions, they shrug. On the subject of Lion鈥檚 Den, they become animated.

鈥淔or the first time in my life things are heading in the right direction,鈥 says one. 鈥淣ext, we need to form Lion鈥檚 Dens in the refugee camps and then in every town and village in Palestine to liberate our nation. That is our future.鈥

Challenge to Authority

The youth militias have become so popular that the PA and its dominant faction, Fatah, dare not publicly move against them.

That forces a difficult balancing act on the PA, which views the movements as a challenge to its control over the West Bank and as damaging to its credibility as a security partner for Israel and a reliable actor for the West.

Ayman Nobani/Special to 海角大神
A taxi driver displays a photo of a Lion's Den militia member on the dashboard of his cab in downtown Nablus, West Bank, Oct. 26, 2022.

In the past two weeks, the PA and Fatah have made multiple offers to the young men in return for laying down their arms: places in the security forces, jobs for life, perks for relatives, cash. The brigades have mostly refused, Fatah officials say.

Wednesday evening, four Lions turned themselves into the PA, a decision the group described as the fighters鈥 individual 鈥渃hoice.鈥 But the group has so far insisted it would fight on.

Lion鈥檚 Den members, not PA security services, patrol Nablus鈥 old city, checking IDs and photographing strangers.

Their influence and celebrity were on display Monday when, as Israeli security drones buzzed overhead, neighbors, relatives, and Fatah representatives sat in a ring of plastic chairs for mourners of Tamir Kilani, a militia member killed by Israeli forces two days earlier.

As a delegation of PA government ministers walked in to pay their respects, mourners barely lifted their heads to make eye contact.

Later, when a group of 20-something young men wearing all black with black baseball caps walked in, suddenly, older men elbowed each other.

鈥淚t鈥檚 them, it鈥檚 them,鈥 one whispered. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the Lions!鈥

鈥淧eople are being attacked by settlers, Israel is killing young people, checkpoints are erected everywhere, and the Palestinian Authority cannot protect us,鈥 says a Fatah youth officer for Nablus and cousin of Mr. Kilani.

鈥淏y committing to peaceful resistance, Fatah and the Palestinian Authority have left us to defend ourselves. This is the result. Violence begets violence. For every action there is a reaction, eventually.鈥

Fad or turning point?

Despite the Lions鈥 viral popularity, older generations and Fatah loyalists dismiss the brigades as a 鈥渇ad鈥 and a 鈥渢rend鈥 that, without a formal political structure, will fizzle out within weeks as Israeli military operations against them intensify.

Yet the proliferation of the youth brigades continues.

In addition to Nablus, Jenin, and Balata Camp brigades, which predate the Lion鈥檚 Den, new militias have been announced in Tulkarm and Hebron.

Ayman Nobani/Special to 海角大神
A woman walks past spray-painted graffiti reading "Lion's Den," one of several militant groups popping up across the West Bank, in the old city of Nablus, Oct. 26, 2022.

Not all young Palestinians welcome the trend.

Mamoun Shaloub, an engineering graduate and resident of Nablus鈥 old city, says the crisis has negatively hit Nablus and thousands of households.

He had been commuting daily to Ramallah to launch an on-demand scooter rental app service, Yalla Scooter, when the current crisis erupted; he now rents an apartment in Ramallah, unable to return home.

鈥淭he second intifada was chaos. People used to steal and kill rivals without accountability,鈥 he says from a Ramallah cafe. 鈥淧eople say we should support these militias to liberate our nation, but who are they, what do they have to do with us, and what can they provide for us?鈥

鈥淗ere in the West Bank, there are no jobs, insufficient salaries, and corruption. But my generation has solutions; we can make things a bit better for our society if we are given a chance.鈥

Yet more young Palestinians insist that chance is by taking up arms.

Spying reporters exiting the old city Monday, a teenager on a motorbike calls out, smiling, and points to the tattered Lion鈥檚 Den 鈥渕artyr鈥 posters on the opposite wall.

鈥淣ext time, God willing, you will see my face next to theirs,鈥 he says.

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