Thursday, March 19, 2020
Arab-Israeli Conflict Essays - Zionism, Land Of Israel, Free Essays
Arab-Israeli Conflict Essays - Zionism, Land Of Israel, Free Essays    Arab-Israeli Conflict    The Arab-Israeli conflict came about from the notion of Political Zionism. Zionism is the belief   that Jews constitute a nation (or a people) and that they deserve the right to return to what they consider to   be their ancestral home, land of Israel (or Palestine). Political Zionism, the belief that Jews should   establish a state for themselves in Palestine, was a revolutionary idea for the 19th Century.  During World War I, Jews supported countries that constituted the Central Powers because they   detested the tyranny of czarist Russia. Both the Allies and Central Powers needed Jewish support, but   Germany could not espouse Zionism due to its ties with the Ottoman Empire, which still controlled   Palestine. British Prime Minister Lloyd George & Foreign Secretary Lord Balfour, favored Zionism and   supported their cause in a letter that became known as the Balfour Declaration, ensuring that the British   government would control Palestine after the war with a commitment to build the Jewish national home   there, promising only to work for the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine and not harm the civil and   religious rights of Palestine?s "existing non-Jewish communities".  After the Great War, Britain?s Forces jointly occupied the area known as Palestine with Faysal?s   (Iraq) Arab army. The British set up a provisional military government in Jerusalem that soon became a   struggle between Jewish settlers and the Arab inhabitants. In April 1920, the Palestinian Arabs revolted,   killing Jews and damaging property, opening the Arab nationalist revolution in Palestine.  The League of Nations awarded the Palestine mandate in 1922, charging Britain with carrying out the   Balfour Declaration, encouraging Jewish migration to Palestine and help create the Jewish "national home".   But the Arabs suspected the British mandate would hold them in colonial bondage until the Jews achieved a   majority in Palestine.  Winston Churchill issued a white paper denying that the British government meant to give   preferential treatment to Jews with a proviso for restricting Jewish immigration to conform with Palestine?s   "absorptive capacity". Another action that seemed to violate the mandate was the creation of the Emirate of   Transjordan, removing two-thirds of Palestine that lay east of the Jordan River from the area in which Jews   could develop their national home, claiming the partition was only temporary.  During the first civilian governor of Palestine, it looked as if Jewish-Arab differences would be   resolved when more Jews emigrated out of Palestine than immigrated and with the presence of a   complementary relationship among the two peoples, but the hopes dissipated during the 1929 "Wailing   Wall Incident". The Wailing Wall (a.k.a. the Western Wall) is a remnant of the second Jewish Temple,   symbolizing the hope that one day the Temple will be rebuilt and the ancient Jewish rituals revived; but the   Wall also forms a part of the enclosure surrounding the Temple Mount, which the Dome of the Rock and   al-Aqsa mosque stand atop; Muslims feared that Jewish actions before the Western Wall could lead to their   pressing a claim to the historic site.  In 1928, Jewish worshipers brought some benches to sit on. The police took them away several   times, but the Jews kept putting them back. To Muslims, this activity was an attempt by the Jews to   strengthen their claims to the Wall and retaliated by running a highway past it to distract the worshipers.   Several fights broke out that escalated into a small civil war. Arabs perpetrated massacres in other places   in Palestine. The British constabulary was inadequate and Britain sent a commission of inquiry; later   issuing a report that justified the Arab position. The colonial secretary, Lord Passfield, placed blame on the   Jewish Agency and the Zionists, and Britain tightened restrictions on Jewish immigration. Due to domestic   embarrassment, the British government issued a letter explaining away the Passfield condemnation, hardly   appeasing the Zionists, but angering the Arabs.  As Arab animosity increased, the Arab Higher Committee in Palestine called for a general strike,   paralyzing the country for several months. The British sent another commission of inquiry, headed by Lord   Peel, which recommended partition, giving a small area of northern and central Palestine to the Jews, while   leaving the most to Arabs. But the Palestine Arabs opposed the partition, fearing its? acceptance would be   a step toward their loss of Palestine. Britain scaled    
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