Some 400 activists took part in a "water march" in the southern Hebron hills on Saturday demanding for Palestinians and an end to Israeli settler violence.
The protesters, both Israelis and Palestinians, walked to several villages including Khirbet al-Mufkara, where clashes broke out earlier in the week. Dozens of masked settlers attacked Palestinians and as well as damaged vehicles and water tanks.
Saturday's march was organised by local activists and included two members of Knesset as well as "Breaking the Silence", an organisation, and "Machsom Watch", an Israeli women collective against the occupation.
"We're on the move from the town of A-Twani to Mufkara," wrote Breaking the Silence on Twitter. "Because access to water is a basic right. Because settler violence must be put to an end."
Footage of the march showed activists holding banners that read "This is a non-violent protest", as they waved Palestinian flags.
A tractor carrying a water tank for local communities was driven among the protesters.
Israeli forces were waiting by a near outpost as the march was taking place, according to photos shared by Israeli media. The march ended without violence, reported Haaretz.
have been accused of "drying up" Palestinian neighbourhoods as part of their punitive occupation.
While citizens of the Jewish state are able to access the national water grid, Palestinians in the South Hebron Hills are barred from doing so and are prohibited by authorities from maintaining cisterns for storing rainwater.
As a result, they are forced to travel long distances for water or pay inflated prices.
Some Palestinians in the South Hebron Hills pay more than four times in Israel and end up spending as much as a third of their monthly income on the basic resource, according to human rights group B'Tselem.
"Often the [Israeli] army will confiscate or destroy [water] containers carried by Palestinian families," said Daphne Banai from Machsom Watch.
Banai also said that the Israeli army has destroyed water pipelines and obtaining a permit to build a makeshift pipeline is very difficult for communities in the West Bank.
"Water is a given for most Jewish Israelis. Palestinians in the Jordan Valley and the South Hebron Hills must struggle every day to secure every drop of water for themselves and their families," said Banai.