This article traces the research trajectory of the Institute of Community and Public Health (ICPH) at Birzeit University, whose work focuses on life and health outcomes for Palestinians living in chronic warlike conditions under Israeli settler-colonial rule. Over decades of field-based work, ICPH researchers came to the realization that medicalized responses to trauma contributed to concealing the social and political meaning that Palestinians attribute to their collective experience. By adopting an approach that linked the biological/ biomedical sphere to the political sphere through the concept of suffering, and exposing the sociopolitical conditions of life and the collective trauma-inducing nature of Israeli military occupation and repression, ICPH's research has allowed for the simultaneous personalization of war and politicization of health. In addition to discussing some of the health problems identified by ongoing investigations, the article also touches on the ways in which institution building and research production are linked to the capacity of Palestinians to endure and resist violation in their struggle for justice.THE MISSION of the Institute of Community and Public Health (ICPH) at Birzeit University (BZU) is primarily defined by the extraordinary conditions of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip as territories under protracted Israeli military occupation, now spanning half a century. The institute's work aims to contribute to the protection and improvement of the health of Palestinians: by conducting research, producing knowledge, and generating the evidence required to develop independent and informed health policies, plans, and programs; through teaching; and by strengthening the capacity of public health professionals. Given its public health focus, the institute's primary objective is to test existing health measures or develop new ones, and to produce numerical evidence linking health to the broader context in which people live.ICPH's approach has been interdisciplinary almost from the beginning, with public health defined as a field of inquiry drawing on relevant conceptualizations from the medical sciences, the social sciences, and related disciplines that are subjected to empirical scrutiny. This interdisciplinary approach comes from firsthand experience with life under military occupation and colonization, and is inspired by the work of Rudolf Virchow, the nineteenth-century father of social medicine who coined the aphorism: "Medicine is a social science, and politics is nothing else but medicine on a