The past couple of months have seen tensions going up in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, with 15 attacks or attempted assaults reported between 28 November and 28 December.
Two Israelis have been killed in these attacks and more than a dozen Israelis have been wounded.
Samer Sinijlawi, a Fatah activist from Jerusalem, acknowledges the fact that there is violence but he says it comes from both sides.
Part of them problem, says Sinijlawi, is rooted in the fact that 2021 was one of the deadliest years for the Palestinians, who lost 313 lives, according to B'Tselem, an NGO that monitors Israel's actions in the territories.
Another problem is the home demolition policy, that saw a spike in 2021, with 199 residential structures being destroyed as compared to 151 and 104 in 2020 and 2019 respectively. The third is the activity of Jewish settlers in the West Bank, who allegedly harass and attack Palestinian
farmers and civilians.
However, that mess does not only stem from the Israelis, and Sinijlawi points the finger of blame at the Palestinian factions and their inability to change the situation.
A recent poll conducted by the Palestinian Centre for Policy and Survey Research showed that only 31 percent of Palestinians residing in the West Bank were happy with their life there. Only five percent have said the same thing about the Gaza Strip, which is controlled by the
Islamic movement Hamas.
The same poll also revealed that 27 percent wanted to immigrate from the Palestinian territories, and a vast majority believed the institutions of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip were corrupt.
The economic situation in the Palestinian territories has always been dire but it only gotten worse with the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic and the financial crisis it triggered.
That crisis has cost the Palestinians tens of thousands of jobs. Many were pushed into the cycle of poverty and that only added to their pre-existing feeling of frustration.
Now what needs to be answered is where all of this is going.
Sinijlawi believes it is a ticking bomb that will explode soon.
A prelude to a potential eruption of Palestinian anger has already been displayed in November in the cities of Hebron and Jenin, where pro-government forces loyal to President Mahmoud Abbas clashed with the masses and the supporters of Hamas, a rivalry faction that
challenges the PA.
Back then, says Sinijlawi, it was directed towards Abbas and the vices his government represents. This time around, however, if the situation explodes, it will spare nobody.