By 1916, towards the end of Ottoman rule in Palestine, Salfit was one of the two largest villages in the District of Nablus that produced olive oil. At the time there were tensions between the residents of the village and the merchants of the administrative center of Nablus. The boys’ school had about 100 pupils while the girls’ school had 10 pupils. One of the reasons for the disparity was the locust attack on Salfit’s crop earlier the previous year which had destroyed the village’s harvest. Because of the consequent poverty and state of demise, parents kept their daughters at home to care for the family.