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Sea of Galilee

Braving War Losses and Tough Conditions, Thai Workers Stay Rooted in Israeli Agriculture

Qwon and her husband, Tay, a Thai couple who tend avocado groves in a small western Galilee farming cooperative, joined their Israeli neighbors at a Shavuot celebration in the western Galilee in May 2026, marking the Jewish harvest festival near the fields they help cultivate. In mid-May 2026, days before the celebration, a Hezbollah drone attack had wounded four Israeli civilians, one critically, roughly 13 kilometers (eight miles) away. Yet Qwon said she is not afraid, expressing confidence in Israel's civilian protection.

Even after October 8, 2023, when the Iranian-backed terror group began firing almost daily rockets and drones at northern Israel, Qwon and nine other Thai workers on the cooperative have continued tending 1,000 dunams (250 acres) of avocados alongside their Israeli counterparts, often under fire. Violence has eased since a fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, mediated by the Trump administration, took effect on June 19, 2026, though farmers and workers in the north remain exposed. Qwon and Tay are among the tens of thousands of Thai laborers who have become essential to Israeli agriculture, helping tend the fields that supply much of the country's produce.

Thai citizens have borne some of the heaviest costs of the war. Forty-six were killed in southern Israel on October 7, 2023, when thousands of Hamas-led terrorists stormed across the border from Gaza, and 31 of the hostages seized that day were from Thailand; 28 were eventually released, while three died in captivity. Five Thai farm workers were later killed by Hezbollah rocket fire in the north. Still, looking around at the Israelis celebrating the holiday, Qwon remained upbeat: “I like Israelis,” she said. “Even though I'm a laborer, the people here have never shown any prejudice toward me.”

(TOI/VFI News)