DayofPal–Yahya Sinwar, one of the most prominent leaders of the Palestinian resistance and the head of Hamas in the Gaza Strip, was confirmed killed on October 16, 2024, during an Israeli military operation in the Tel Al-Sultan neighborhood of Rafah.
He died in combat, reportedly fighting with a pistol and even a stick after being surrounded in a dilapidated house, according to sources familiar with the incident.
Sinwar, 62, had become one of the most symbolic figures in the Palestinian national movement, known for his uncompromising stance against Israeli occupation and for leading Hamas’s armed and political activities from Gaza.
His death, under dramatic circumstances and after years of being a top Israeli target, marks a pivotal moment in the ongoing war.
A Life Shaped by Struggle
Sinwar spent 23 years in Israeli prisons, much of it in solitary confinement, before being released in 2011 as part of the Gilad Shalit prisoner exchange deal, also known as the Wafa Al-Ahrar deal.
Upon his release, he rejected offers of comfort and political retirement, choosing instead to return to active resistance. He had joined the Islamic movement as a teenager and was deeply involved in student activism and underground military operations by his early twenties.
Former associates recall that from his earliest years, Sinwar viewed resistance not as a choice but as a life path. “He believed in confronting Israel until the last breath,” said a former fellow prisoner.
Defender of Al-Aqsa
Throughout his life, Sinwar remained committed to the defense of Jerusalem and the Al-Aqsa Mosque, not only rhetorically but also through direct action.
In 1981, he led a student delegation to Jerusalem to defend the mosque against settler incursions. Disguised as athletes heading to a football match, the students entered Al-Aqsa and spent the night there, coordinated with other student blocs from the West Bank, and deceived the Israeli army as going to a match.
This passion culminated in his naming of Hamas’s most audacious military campaign in October 2023 as “Operation Al-Aqsa Flood”, which dramatically escalated heroic resistance against Israeli and set the stage for nearly a year of war and destruction in Gaza.
Sinwar the Strategist
In the early 1980s, Sinwar led Hamas’s secretive internal security operations, including the founding of the “Majd” apparatus to track and eliminate collaborators with Israel. Israeli courts sentenced him in 1988 to four life sentences and 25 additional years for his role in killing collaborators and an alleged connection to the killing of Israeli soldiers.
In prison, Sinwar became known as a formidable organizer and ideologue. Fluent in Hebrew and well-read in both Islamic and political texts, he earned the nickname “The Bulldozer” for his relentless efforts to build organizational strength among Hamas prisoners.
He led hunger strikes, developed communication methods to evade prison surveillance, and even attempted two escapes from Gaza and Askalan prison, one of which involved drilling through a prison wall and painting over it with toothpaste.
Key Role in the Shalit Deal
Sinwar played a crucial role in negotiating the 2011 prisoner exchange for Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit. Notably, he initially blocked the deal because it did not include prisoners from Jerusalem and Palestinian citizens of occupied territories.
Eventually, he pushed for and secured their inclusion, a move that increased his stature among Palestinians and established his reputation as a principled leader.
From Prison to Battlefield
Since his release, Sinwar rapidly rose through the ranks of Hamas, eventually becoming its leader in Gaza. His tenure saw an increased focus on military capacity and tunnel warfare, intelligence development, and regional outreach.
According to close associates, Sinwar envisioned a broader regional shift against Israel and was deeply involved in strategic planning for the 2023 Al-Aqsa Flood operation.
“He believed that Israel’s dominance in the region had to be shaken,” said political analyst Mamoun Abu Amer. “He wanted the world to stop seeing Israel as an untouchable democracy.”
Sinwar was also reportedly in regular coordination with top Hamas leaders like the late Saleh Al-Arouri, with whom he had discussed launching a cross-border military campaign from Gaza to relieve pressure on the West Bank.
Martyrdom in Rafah
On October 16, 2024, Sinwar’s location was discovered by Israeli forces in Rafah’s Tel Al-Sultan district, in a partially destroyed house.
According to sources familiar with the operation, the Israeli forces did not initially realize the man they were surrounding was Sinwar himself. When they closed in, they found a man wearing his combat gear, fighting back with a pistol and even resorting to a stick once out of ammunition.
Next to his body were a prayer booklet, a rosary, a grenade, and a pistol reportedly recovered by Hamas from a failed Israeli raid in Khan Younis in 2018.
His death is expected to reverberate across the region, affecting not only the dynamics within Hamas but also the broader Israeli-Palestinian struggle. Many in Gaza and the West Bank consider his death a martyrdom in line with the life he led, a life of total commitment to confrontation.
“He died as he lived,” said one of his longtime friends. “Uncompromising, steadfast, and with his finger on the trigger.”
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