One thing that must be understood when looking at the current situation in Gaza and the west bank is how exactly things got to the point they currently are. Below are excerpts from 'Big Lies: Demolishing the Myths of the Propaganda War Against Israel' along with a few of my own words.
Let's begin by understanding that: 1 There never has been a country called Palestine. There was an area of the Ottoman empire, previously controlled by Byzantium, that had been delegated "Palestine" by its' previous controllers the Romans. This area consisted of parts of Syria, modern day Lebanon, Jordan, Israel and what is now called Gaza and the west bank. The name Palestine was given by the Romans to this area as an insult to the Jewish people whose ancient enemies, now long since extinct, were the Philistines. In fact nobody but Jews identified themselves with the moniker "Palestinians" preceding 1967. Inquiries made by the UN in 1947 showed that Arabs did not identify themselves as Palestinians but considered the area in question to be part of southern Syria and had known it for centuries as "balad esh-sham" (the country of Damascus)
In a March 31, 1977 interview with the Amsterdam-based newspaper Dagblad de Verdieping Trouw, PLO executive committee member Zahir Mushe'in said: "The Palestinian people does not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle against the state of Israel for our Arab unity. In reality today there is no difference between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese. Only for political and tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that we posit the existence ofa distinct 'Palestinian people' to oppose Zionism. For tactical reasons, Jordan which is a sovereign state with defined borders, cannot raise claims to Haifa and Jaffa, while as a Palestinian, I can undoubtedly demand Haifa, Jaffa, Beer-Sheva and Jerusalem. However, the moment we reclaim our right to all of Palestine, we will not wait even a minute to unite Palestine and Jordan."
2. Jews obtained the land they now control legally and often at great cost in lives as well as money. Zionist pioneers from the middle of the 19th century onward joined the local Jewish communities in rebuilding a Jewish homeland in what was then the Turkish Crown and from Arab landowners (effendi). There was no invasion, no conquest, and no theft of Arab land_and certainly not of a land of Palestine, since the Arabs living in the region had been Turkish subjects for 400 years. Unarmed and possessing no military, the Jews bought so much land from Arabs that in 1892, a group of effendi sent a letter to the Turkish Sultan, requesting that he make it illegal for his subjects to sell land to the Jews. Their successors did the same thing, via a telegram, in 1915. Evidently, the very presence of Jews owning land in the Middle East_however legally acquired_was offensive to some.
It is indisputable that there was no theft, because no one complained of any. No Arabs were driven from their homes. In fact, as a demographic study published by Columbia University demonstrates, the Arab population of the area grew tremendously during this period in part because of the economic development that the Jews helped to generate. Between 1514 AD and circa 1850, the Arab population of this region of the Turkish Empire was more or less static at about 340,000. It suddenly began to increase around 1855, and by 1947 the Arab population stood at about 1,300,000_almost quadrupling in less than 100 years.
Much of the land that the Zionists purchased was desert and swamp, uninhabited and deemed uninhabitable by the Arabs. Modern agrarian techniques instituted by the Jews and the blood and sweat of thousands of idealistic Zionists reclaimed that land and turned it into prime real estate with flourishing farms and rapidly growing communities sporting modern technology and a healthy market economy. As a result, Arab migrants poured into the region from surrounding states, with hundreds of thousands seeking a better life and greater economic opportunity.
Validation of this history, which is quite at variance with the standard Arab propaganda, comes from a surprising source. Sheikh Yousuf al-Qaradhawi, international Arab terrorist and lieutenant to Osama bin Laden, in a televised speech in May, 2005 chided his followers with the following words; "Unfortunately, we [Arabs] do not excel in either military or civil industries. We import everything from needles to missiles...How come the Zionist gang has managed to be superior to us, despite being so few? It has become superior through knowledge, through technology, and through strength. It has become superior to us through work. We had the desert before our eyes but we didn't do anything with it. When they took over, they turned it into a green oasis. How can a nation that does not work progress? How can it grow?" (emphasis mine)
I will tackle the "Palestinian" refugee problem in my next post.