A pack of jackals attacked and bit 11 campers near Duga Beach on the Sea of Galilee on Friday night.

Magen David Adom said it received a call at 2:52 a.m. and dispatched medical teams to the scene.

Several of the injured patients, including a 12-year-old girl, two men in their 30s, and a woman in her 40s, were evacuated to the Tzafon Medical Center (Poriya) near Tiberias with bite wounds. They were treated, vaccinated, and released. Two others were treated on site.

'My daughter was bitten on her face'

Elena, the mother of 12-year-old Alice, described the frightening incident in which her daughter was bitten in the face.

Israelis enjoy the last days of the summer. holiday on an extremely hot day at Duga Beach, on the eastern shores of the Sea of Galilee on August 30, 2022.
Israelis enjoy the last days of the summer. holiday on an extremely hot day at Duga Beach, on the eastern shores of the Sea of Galilee on August 30, 2022. (credit: MICHAEL GILADI/FLASH90)

“We were all sleeping in the tent when suddenly, in the middle of the night, my daughter Alice screamed, ‘It hurts! It hurts!’ I quickly turned on the light, and her entire face was covered in blood. I was terrified,” she said.

“I saw the animal that bit her. I saw it clearly. It was big – enormous, in fact. They said there were five jackals on the beach, and many people had already been injured by them. Unfortunately, my daughter’s injuries were the most severe. Others were bitten slightly on the leg, but her face was severely affected.

“We were evacuated by ambulance to the hospital, where they gave her four injections and three stitches on her face. Now that we’ve been discharged, we came back to the beach to collect our things, and we’re trying to calm down a bit, but she is terrified and traumatized.

“It breaks my heart because in less than a month, on July 7, she has her bat mitzvah. And just a few days before that, on June 19, she has her school graduation ceremony. I really hope she feels better and that this trauma passes before her bat mitzvah.”

Rabies concerns raised by officials

Officials said the animals’ behavior was atypical, raising suspicion that the jackals involved may have been infected with rabies.

Dr. Noa Shacham Hadari, head of the hospital's emergency department, said anyone bitten by or in contact with a wild animal must seek immediate medical treatment and vaccination, and warned the public to avoid contact with stray animals and wildlife.

The Health Ministry reported that there have been 66 cases of rabies exposure in animals this year. Of these cases, dogs are the most frequently reported, accounting for 37 instances, followed by jackals, with 19 cases. In a public statement regarding the recent incident, the Ministry noted that the animals have not yet been captured.

Authorities urged the public to avoid feeding or approaching wildlife and to seek immediate medical attention after any bite or suspected exposure.

The Kinneret Cities Association said it is taking the incident very seriously and called for increased enforcement and monitoring of the jackal population in the area during the summer season.