Warning... this is somewhat extensive in volume... but necessary
Tammy wrote:


Without alot of insults and heckling, could you please explain to me
what the conflict between Israel and Palestine all started about? I
know it's a Holy War and that's about it.  Also, this being 2004, 
why and whom has stopped any type of comprimise between these people?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The land mass is aproximately 10,000 square miles at the eastern end 
of the Mediterranean Sea. The present state of Israel formally 
occupies all the land from the Jordan river to the Mediterranean 
ocean, bounded by Egypt in the south, Lebanon in the north, and 
Jordan in the East. The recognized borders of Israel constitute 
about 78% of the land. The remainder is divided between land 
occupied by Israel since the 1967 6-day war and the autonomous 
regions under the control of the Palestinian autonomy. The Gaza 
strip occupies an additional  141 square miles south of Israel along 
the sea coast, and  is mostly under the control of the Palestinian 
authority with small areas occupied by Israeli settlements.

Israel has a population of over 6.5 million, of whom about 14.5% are 
Muslims and about 3% are Druze or Christian. Most the remainder are 
Jews. Per capita GDP is about $18,000 and literacy rates are over 
95%. Life expectancy is over 75 years, and infant mortality about 7 
per thousand, comparing favorably with Europe and North America. The 
Palestinian areas account for about 2,800 square miles of the total 
territory. They have a population estimated at about 3 million, per 
capita GDP of under $2,000, literacy rate of about 86% and infant 
mortality of 33 per thousand.

The wildest part of the whole Israeli/Palestinian hate fest is that 
they SHARE common ancestory and are basically brother fighting 
brother. This information was related in a scientific treatise 
wirtten by A. Arnaiz-Villena et al. Hum. Immunol. 62, 889�900;
2001 of the Complutense University in Madrid that was made to be 
recinded because it contained commentary that was not pleasing to 
the Jewish community. The basic information contained in the study 
was that Jews and Palestinians have a close genetic relationship.

Historically speaking... here is an overview...
The Canaanites were the earliest known inhabitants of Palestine. 
They became urbanized and lived in city-states, one of which was 
Jericho . They developed an alphabet. Palestine's location at the 
center of routes linking three continents made it the meeting place 
for religious and cultural influences from Egypt, Syria, 
Mesopotamia, and Asia Minor. It was also the natural battleground 
for the great powers of the region and subject to domination by 
adjacent empires, beginning with Egypt in the 3d millennium BC.

Egyptian hegemony and Canaanite autonomy were constantly challenged 
by such ethnically diverse invaders as the Amorites, Hittites, and 
Hurrians. These invaders, however, were defeated by the Egyptians 
and absorbed by the Canaanites, who at that time may have numbered 
about 200000.

Egyptian power began to weaken, new invaders appeared: the Hebrews, 
a group of Semitic tribes from Mesopotamia, and the Philistines 
(after whom the country was later named), an Aegean people of 
Indo-European stock. (if you are familiar with biblical history you 
will note that Samson was captured and tortured by the Philistines 
after his woman Delilah deceived him by cutting his hair... said to 
be the key to his great powers)

Joshua conquered parts of Palestine. The conquerors settled in the 
hill country, but they were unable to conquer all of Palestine.
The Israelites, a confederation of Hebrew tribes, finally defeated 
the Canaanites but found the struggle with the Philistines more 
difficult . Philistines had established an independent state on the 
southern coast of Palestine and controlled the Canaanite town of 
Jerusalem. Philistines with their superiority in military 
organization using iron weapons severely defeated the Israelites 
about 1050 BC

In 1000 BC David, Israel's great king, finally defeated the 
Philistines, and they eventually assimilated with the Canaanites . 
The unity of Israel and the feebleness of adjacent empires enabled 
David to establish a large independent state, with its capital at 
Jerusalem. nder David's son and successor, Solomon, Israel enjoyed 
peace and prosperity , but at his death in 922 BC the kingdom was 
divided into Israel in the north and Judah in the south.

When nearby empires resumed their expansion, the divided Israelites 
could no longer maintain their independence . Israel fell to 
Assyria. Judah was conquered by Babylonia, which destroyed Jerusalem 
and exiled most of the Jews living there. Nebuchadnezzar entered 
Jerusalem. The Temple was sacked and set fire to, and razed to the 
ground. The Royal Palace and all the great houses were destroyed, 
the population carried off in chains to Babylon. (now Iraq)And they 
lamented on their long march into exile.

Cyrus the Great of Persia conquered Babylonia and he permitted the 
Jews to return to Judea, a district of Palestine. Under Persian rule 
the Jews were allowed considerable autonomy. They rebuilt the walls 
of Jerusalem and codified the Mosaic law, the Torah, which became 
the code of social life and religious observance. The Jews were 
bound to a universal God.

Persian domination of Palestine was replaced by Greek rule when 
Alexander the Great of Macedonia took the region. Alexander's 
successors, the Ptolemies of Egypt and the Seleucids of Syria, 
continued to rule the country . The Seleucids tried to impose 
Hellenistic (Greek) culture and religion on the population. Jews 
revolted under the Maccabees and set up an independent state.
Jews revolts erupted, numerous Jews were killed, many were sold into 
slavery, and the rest were not allowed to visit Jerusalem. Judea was 
renamed Syria Palaistina.

Jerusalem was overrun by Rome. Herod was appointed King of Judea. He 
slaughtered the last of the Hasmoneans and ordered a lavish 
restoration and extension of the Second Temple. A period of great 
civil disorder followed with strife between pacifists and Zealots, 
and riots against the Roman authorities. During the rule of King 
Herod the Great Jesus of Nazareth was born. And years after, he 
began his teaching mission. His teachings were judged subversive by 
the authorities. He was tried and sentenced to death.

Titus of Rome laid siege to Jerusalem. The fiercely defended Temple 
eventually fell, and with it the whole city. Seeking a complete and 
enduring victory, Titus ordered the total destruction of the 
Herodian Temple. A new city named Aelia was built by the Romans on 
the ruins of Jerusalem, and a temple dedicated to Jupitor raised up.
Palestine received special attention when the Roman emperor 
Constantine I legalized Christianity. His mother, Helena, visited 
Jerusalem, and Palestine, as the Holy Land, became a focus of 
Christian pilgrimage. A golden age of prosperity, security, and 
culture followed. Most of the population became Hellenized and 
Christianized.

Constantine of Byzantium marched on Aelia. He rebuilt the city walls 
and commissioned the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, and opened the 
city for Christian pilgrimage. Byzantine (Roman) rule was 
interrupted , however , by a brief Persian occupation and ended 
altogether when Muslim Arab armies invaded Palestine and captured 
Jerusalem in AD 638.

The Arab conquest began 1300 years of Muslim presence in what then 
became known as Filastin. Eager to be rid of their Byzantine 
overlords and aware of their shared heritage with the Arabs, the 
descendants of Ishmael, as well as the Muslims reputation for mercy 
and compassion in victory, the people of Jerusalem handed over the 
city after a brief siege. They made only one condition, That the 
terms of their surrender be negotiated directly with the Khalif 
'Umar in person. 'Umar entered Jerusalem on foot. There was no 
bloodshed. There were no massacres. Those who wanted to leave were 
allowed to, with all their goods. Those who wanted to stay were 
guarantee protection for their lives, their property and places of 
worship.

Palestine was holy to Muslims because the Prophet Muhammad had 
designated Jerusalem as the first qibla (the direction Muslims face 
when praying) and because he was believed to have ascended on a 
night journey to heaven from the the old city of Jerusalem (al-Aqsa 
Mosque today) , where the Dome of the Rock was later built. 
Jerusalem became the third holiest city of Islam. The Muslim rulers 
did not force their religion on the Palestinians, and more than a 
century passed before the majority converted to Islam. The remaining 
Christians and Jews were considered People of the Book. They were 
allowed autonomous control in their communities and guaranteed 
security and freedom of worship. Such tolerance was rare in the 
history of religion . Most Palestinians also adopted Arabic and 
Islamic culture. Palestine benefited from the empires trade and from 
its religious significance during the first Muslim dynasty, the 
Umayyads of Damascus.

The power shifted to Baghdad with the Abbasids, Palestine became 
neglected. It suffered unrest and successive domination by Seljuks, 
Fatimids, and European Crusaders. It shared, however, in the glory 
of Muslim civilization, when the Muslim world enjoyed a golden age 
of science, art, philosophy, and literature. Muslims preserved Greek 
learning and broke new ground in several fields, all of which later 
contributed to the Renaissance in Europe. Like the rest of the 
empire, however, Palestine under the Mamelukes gradually stagnated 
and declined.

The Ottoman Turks of Asia Minor defeated the Mamelukes, with few 
interruptions, ruled Palestine until the winter of 1917-18. The 
country was divided into several districts (sanjaks), such as that 
of Jerusalem. The administration of the districts was placed largely 
in the hands of Arab Palestinians, who were descendants of the 
Canaanites. The Christian and Jewish communities, however, were 
allowed a large measure of autonomy. Palestine shared in the glory 
of the Ottoman Empire during the 16th century, but declined again 
when the empire began to decline in the 17th century.


Muhammad Ali, the modernizing viceroy of Egypt, expanded his rule to 
Palestine . His policies modified the feudal order, increased 
agriculture, and improved education. In 1897 the first Zionist 
Congress held Basle, Switzerland, issued the Basle programme on the 
colonization of Palestine. The Ottoman Empire reasserted its 
authority, instituting its own reforms. ewish in Palestine were 
12,000 increased to 85,000 by 1914. All people in Palestine were 
Arabic Muslims and Christians.

Aided by the Arabs, the British captured Palestine from the Ottoman 
Turks in 1917-18. The Arabs revolted against the Turks because the 
British had promised them, in correspondence (1915-16) with Shareef 
Husein ibn Ali of Mecca (1856-1931), the independence of their 
countries after the war . Britain , however, also made other, 
conflicting commitments in the secret Sykes -Picot agreement with 
France and Russia (1916), it promised to divide and rule the region 
with its allies . In a third agreement , the Balfour Declaration of 
1917, Britain promised the Jews a Jewish "national home" in Palestine.

This promise was subsequently incorporated in the mandate conferred 
on Britain by the League of Nations in 1922 . During their mandate 
(1922-48) the British found their contradictory promises to the 
Jewish and Palestinian communities difficult to reconcile. The 
Zionists envisaged large-scale Jewish immigration , and some spoke 
of a Jewish state constituting all of Palestine . Palestinians, 
however, rejected Britain's right to promise their country to a 
third party and feared dispossession by the Zionists; anti-Zionist 
attacks occurred in Jerusalem (1920) and Jaffa (1921).

A 1922 statement of British policy denied Zionist claims to all of 
Palestine and limited Jewish immigration, but reaffirmed support for 
a Jewish national home. British proposed establishing a legislative 
council, Palestinians rejected this council as discriminatory.

After 1928, when Jewish immigration increased somewhat, British 
policy on the subject seesawed under conflicting Arab-Jewish 
pressures . Immigration rose sharply after the installation (1933) 
of the Nazi regime in Germany; in 1935 nearly 62,000 Jews entered 
Palestine.

Fear of Jewish domination was the principal cause of the Arab revolt 
that broke out in 1936 and continued intermittently until 1939. By 
that time Britain had again restricted Jewish immigration and 
purchases of land.

The struggle for Palestine, which abated during World War II, 
resumed in 1945 . The horrors of the Holocaust produced world 
sympathy for European Jews and for Zionism , and although Britain 
still refused to admit 100,000 Jewish to Palestine , many Jewish 
found their way there illegally.

Various plans for solving the Palestine problem were rejected by one 
party or the other . Britain finally declared the mandate unworkable 
and turned the problem over to the UN in April 1947. The Jews and 
the Palestinians prepared for a showdown . Although the Palestinians 
outnumbered the Jews (1300000 to 600000), the latter were better 
prepared. They had a semiautonomous government, led by David 
Ben-Gurion, and their military, the Haganah, was well trained and 
experienced. The Palestinians, on the other hand, had never 
recovered from the Arab revolt, and most of their leaders were in exile.

The Mufti of Jerusalem, their principal spokesman, refused to accept 
Jewish statehood. When UN proposed partition in November 1947, he 
rejected the plan while the Jews accepted it. In the military 
struggle that followed, the Palestinians were defeated. Violence was 
used on both sides.

Israel was established on May 14, 1948. Five Arab armies, coming to 
the aid of the Palestinians, immediately attacked it. Uncoordinated 
and outnumbered, they were defeated by Israeli forces. Israel 
enlarged its territory. Jordan took the West Bank of the Jordan 
River, and Egypt took the Gaza Strip. ( Israel occupied these lands 
after the Six Day War of 1967.) The war produced 780,000 Palestinian 
refugees. About half probably left out of fear and panic, while the 
rest were forced out to make room for Jewish immigrants from Europe 
and from the Arab world. The Palestinians spread throughout the 
neighboring countries, where they have maintained their Palestinian 
national identity and the desire to return to their homeland.

Now that you have the historical FACTS of the origins of both 
peoples... you have a better understanding of how we come to this 
present point now. There UNFORTUNATELY are religious dogmas that are 
not represented or considered in my historical overview that shed 
even more light on the present conflict if you are interested in 
knowing more.


http://www.cosmicrose.com




------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Make a clean sweep of pop-up ads. Yahoo! Companion Toolbar.
Now with Pop-Up Blocker. Get it for free!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/L5YrjA/eSIIAA/yQLSAA/XgSolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

     -----
    / o o \
===OO=====OO=============================================
(4)Portals (2)News Wikis (2)Conferences - No BuSHIT!
Start here: http://pnews.org/ (On Internet since 1982)
http://pnews.org/PhpWiki/ (West Coast News Wiki)
http://g0lem.net/PhpWiki/ (East Coast News Wiki)
=========================================================
 FIGHT THE RIGHT!
==================
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rhetoric-list/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Reply via email to