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Friday 12 September 2025 10:51:30 GMT
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“There will be no Palestinian state here, it won’t happen. Europe is becoming Islamic, there’s plenty of space there they can go. Also, in England, there are already many Muslim cities that could invite them to live there,” an Israeli, who lives in the West Bank, told the Guardian at a gas station in Eli settlement. “People call us settlers. I mean, I welcome this title, I love settling my land. And every day that I walk here, I feel more and more connected to who I am meant to be,” another man told our video team. In a new series, In Search of Palestine, reporter Matthew Cassel travels through the West Bank to document what daily life looks like under deepening occupation. It is more than two years since Israel’s war in Gaza began and the West Bank has become an increasingly volatile front in the Israel-Palestine conflict. While international recognition of a Palestinian state has gathered momentum, the situation on the ground is moving in the opposite direction. The declaration of a ceasefire in Gaza – which has not stopped the Israeli military killing Palestinians there  – has reduced the political pressure on other governments to act. Israel’s government has advanced new annexation legislation and the rate of settlement growth is accelerating. Starting in Hebron and moving north to Ramallah, through villages outside the city and finally Nablus, @‌matthewcassel meets people across generations to ask: what does the idea of a Palestinian state mean today? To watch the second episode of In search of Palestine: 'Israel is promised only to the Jewish people', follow the link in bio. Video: @matthewcassel, Kyri Evangelou, Ayman Abu Ramouz and Temujin Doran
“There will be no Palestinian state here, it won’t happen. Europe is becoming Islamic, there’s plenty of space there they can go. Also, in England, there are already many Muslim cities that could invite them to live there,” an Israeli, who lives in the West Bank, told the Guardian at a gas station in Eli settlement. “People call us settlers. I mean, I welcome this title, I love settling my land. And every day that I walk here, I feel more and more connected to who I am meant to be,” another man told our video team. In a new series, In Search of Palestine, reporter Matthew Cassel travels through the West Bank to document what daily life looks like under deepening occupation. It is more than two years since Israel’s war in Gaza began and the West Bank has become an increasingly volatile front in the Israel-Palestine conflict. While international recognition of a Palestinian state has gathered momentum, the situation on the ground is moving in the opposite direction. The declaration of a ceasefire in Gaza – which has not stopped the Israeli military killing Palestinians there  – has reduced the political pressure on other governments to act. Israel’s government has advanced new annexation legislation and the rate of settlement growth is accelerating. Starting in Hebron and moving north to Ramallah, through villages outside the city and finally Nablus, @‌matthewcassel meets people across generations to ask: what does the idea of a Palestinian state mean today? To watch the second episode of In search of Palestine: 'Israel is promised only to the Jewish people', follow the link in bio. Video: @matthewcassel, Kyri Evangelou, Ayman Abu Ramouz and Temujin Doran

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