Leaders at Masjid Omar in Harvey, La., spent hours consoling Abdel Jabbar’s shocked former classmates before going to his uncle’s house to process what had happened, Abukhader said.
“Are you sure he died?” Abukhader recounted one student asking. “Are you sure that’s our Tawfic?”
The State Department confirmed that an American civilian had died Friday, though it said that it is still examining the circumstances of the death in the West Bank.
Israeli police said that the incident involved an off-duty law enforcement officer, a soldier and a civilian and that they were launching a “comprehensive investigation.” The Israel Police media office said in an unsigned statement that gunfire was reported after apparent “rock-throwing activities.”
The Washington Post could not immediately confirm the circumstances of what happened.
Abdel Jabbar had attended high school in the New Orleans area and was a member of Masjid Omar, according to Abukhader. The teenager had switched between public school and the mosque’s Muslim Academy Gretna Islamic School, where he spent his sophomore and junior years.
“The whole community and our mosque are devastated by the news,” Abukhader told The Post.
He criticized the Biden administration for its support of Israel’s war against Hamas, which the Gaza Health Ministry said has killed about 25,000 people there after Hamas militants killed about 1,200 people in an Oct. 7 attack on Israel. In the West Bank, Israeli forces have intensified raids on Palestinians, destroyed houses and displaced more than 1,200 people, The Post reported last month. About 365 people have been killed in the West Bank since the war began, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry based in Ramallah.
Abukhader called for an end to the fighting “so all these kids — whether they are Arab, Muslim, Israeli, Jewish, Christian — have the chance to have a life, to help society and be good citizens.”
Abdel Jabbar was a second-generation American born in Louisiana, according to Abukhader. He moved to the West Bank in May with his father, mother and siblings for his senior year of high school. His family, Abukhader said, wanted the teen to better connect to his heritage and improve his Arabic language skills.
Abdel Jabbar hoped to return to the United States and attend the University of New Orleans or a community college, maybe to study business management.
“He used to come in Friday nights and play basketball with his classmates and friends,” Abukhader said.
The mosque planned to hold a vigil Saturday evening with classmates and relatives, who found out about his death through news articles and other family members.
Andrew Jeong and Itay Stern contributed to this report.