Arab-Israeli Conflict to 1947 - Sol de...
Transcript of Arab-Israeli Conflict to 1947 - Sol de...
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Arab-Israeli Conflict
Early beginnings : 19th century to
1947
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The pogrom.
• This is the name given to a racist attack, particularly on a Jewish community.
• ‘Pogroms’, as a term, came from Russia in the 19th
century. It means ‘to destroy’.
• Jewish communities had long suffered from pogroms even as long ago as Roman times. As a close-knit group
• Jewish communities had long suffered from pogroms even as long ago as Roman times. As a close-knit group they were small, easily identifiable and as a result were easy to scape-goat (blame for others’ problems ).
• Jewish people had no specifically Jewish country that would defend their rights or allow them a place to flee. They were uniquely vulnerable, sustained only by their faith and traditions.
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A Jewish house after a pogrom.
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Examples of anti-Jewish attacks
• The Roman Emperor Caligula
• 12th century London and York riots
• After the Black Death in Europe.1348
• In Ukraine 1648
• 1821 Ukraine. (the first riot actually called a ‘pogrom’)
• 1881-4 Russia. Few deaths, but much fear and property destruction.• 1881-4 Russia. Few deaths, but much fear and property destruction.
• 1903-6 Russia. Many deaths. Much Jewish emigration to Europe and the USA
• 1918, and beforehand, sporadic outbreaks in Poland.
• 1919 Argentina
• 1927 Romania
• 1933 Germany. The Holocaust
• 1945 Arab states such as Libya
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1905 Jewish victims of a pogrom
in Odessa.
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The Holocaust.• Nazi Germany, and Hitler, perpetrated the worst
‘Pogrom’ in living memory by systematically
trying to eliminate all Jewish people.
• The factory-like process by which Jewish men,
women and children were identified, labelled, women and children were identified, labelled,
moved, stored, abused and finally killed became
called the ‘Holocaust’.
• Over 6 million Jewish people died.
• The Germans did not succeed in eliminating the
Jews however.
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A German death camp at the end
of world war II.
German people are
brought, by the
Americans, to see
the horror of Nazi
brutality against the brutality against the
Jews in a
concentration camp.
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Zionism• Zionists are a political group of Jewish people.
• They argued for a homeland for all Jewish people, a place where Jews would not fear pogroms, and where they could live safely. ’Zion’ is a Biblical name for Israel.
• They received a huge amount of support towards the end of the 19th century when many Jews were being displaced from around the world.
• Zionists looked particularly at the land of their Jewish • Zionists looked particularly at the land of their Jewish ancestors in Palestine, the land that had been called Judea and had given its name to ‘Jew’.Capital city Jerusalem.
• This land was already occupied, however, by Arabic peoples called ‘Palestinians’.
• Many Jewish people were anti-Zionist however despite the pogroms. They felt that a small country would make them easy targets and in any event their ‘Jewishness’ did not make them any less Russian, or German or American. Judaism, they argued, was a religion.
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Palestine
Britain
Egypt
Syria
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Palestine, (called
Judea and Israel
3,000 years ago).
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1920 riots.• The Arabs had been promised Palestine after World War One, but the
British had decided to retain control in the Balfour Declaration of 1917. This supported the Zionists’ idea of a national home for Jews in Palestine whilst promising to curb any erosion of the rights of the local Arab population. Many Arabs did not believe that the British could, or would, protect their rights if many Jewish settlers were to arrive.
• Meanwhile Jewish people who already lived in Palestine had been clashing with their Arab neighbours.
• April 4,1920,during a Muslim procession, a riot broke out in Jerusalem. It lasted 4 days.
• Jewish people- ironically non-Zionists- were the main casualties.
• The consequences were:
that Jewish immigration to Palestine was temporarily stopped (turning the Zionists against the British),and
the Jews themselves realised that they had to defend themselves if they were to survive.
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The dividing up of the Middle East after World War I.
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Palestine 1920.
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The flag of the British Mandate
over Palestine
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1921:more riots.
• Clashes between rival Socialist and Communist Jewish groups in Tel-Aviv reached a peak.
• Arab Palestinians, feeling threatened by the violence, readily joined in and had to be controlled by the British military.
• The Arabs were ever fearful that they were being pushed • The Arabs were ever fearful that they were being pushed out of Palestine by the growing numbers of Jewish immigrants.
• Riots also occurred in Jerusalem.
• Casualties were low, and were mostly where Arab protesters met with a military response from the British.
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The Western Wall- a flash point.
• In Jerusalem, is the Western Wall of the old
temple of Solomon. It is sacred to Jews who
pray there regularly.
• Above the wall is the Al Aqsa Mosque which • Above the wall is the Al Aqsa Mosque which
Arab Muslims revere as the sacred place where
Muhammed (PBUH) ascended to heaven.
• The two sides angrily watched each other here
for the slightest sign of an infringement onto their
territory. This duly came in 1928-9.
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The Western Wall in Jerusalem and above it the dome of the Al Aqsa
Mosque.
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1928-9• September 1928. Jewish people were seen putting out chairs (!)in
the area of the Western Wall.
• The Arab Muslims were furious because the Jews had never been allowed to build anything in this sensitive area. This was seen as Jewish people marking out territory, a deliberate provocation.
• 1929. Jewish Zionists met at the wall shouting that it was theirs!
• This infuriated the Arab Muslims who began rioting. Many Jews were killed by the Arabs who, in turn were shot by the British police who came to restore order.
• The British police were vastly outnumbered however. There were merely 300 to cover the whole country. They just couldn’t control the fighting everywhere.
• In nearby Hebron over 60 Jews were murdered in other riots. The single policeman could only telephone for assistance and watch helplessly.
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Blood dripping
down steps after
the massacre in
Hebron 1929.
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1936-9 Arab Revolt.
• The British tried in vain to compromise between the two sides.
• 1936, an Arab leader suggested a general strike as a protest to Britain against giving Jewish immigrants permission to settle and buy land in Palestine.
• Elsewhere Palestinian Arabs became more organised • Elsewhere Palestinian Arabs became more organised and deadly. Outlying Jewish areas were attacked, buses bombed and the oil pipeline blown up.
• A British Commissioner was assassinated.
• Still the Jewish immigrants arrived.
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Armed and organised Arab fighters launch an attack on a
Jewish settlement.
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The British response.• Over 20,000 soldiers were sent to Palestine. The main
Arab leaders either fled, or were expelled.
• 120 Arabs were executed. Houses were demolished. People were arrested without trial.
• The British began cooperating with the rudimentary Jewish forces ‘Haganah’ to restore order.Jewish forces ‘Haganah’ to restore order.
• Some of the Jewish settlers decided to launch revenge attacks of their own however. The fighting was often indiscriminate and this made the conflict nasty for men, women and children alike.
• Some historians take 1929 as the time when Israel actually began functioning as a state independent of Palestine.
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The Haganah- the Jewish
settlers’ ‘self-defence’ force.
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The British mandate of
Palestine. 1923.
The area labelled ‘Palestine’ by 1936
had become a war zone with regular
clashes between Arab and Jewish
settlers.settlers.
By 1939 however the Arabs were
completely repressed by the harsh
British military presence.
A Jewish military was being
encouraged, and the partition of
Palestine would seem to be an
acceptable solution along the line
shown on this map.
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World war II 1939-1945
The British Empire was severely shocked by the war and needed men fast.
It was proposed that Palestine could be a recruiting base for Jewish soldiers.
The government agreed and a Jewish Brigade was The government agreed and a Jewish Brigade was established. It was even allowed the Zionist emblem as its flag.
By the end of the war the British sought to break up the Brigade. They confiscated equipment- but military knowledge they couldn’t erase.
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World war II
• The discovery of Hitler’s death camps profoundly
shocked the world and highlighted the case of
the Jewish people who had survived.
• Many Jewish people began seeking refuge in • Many Jewish people began seeking refuge in
Palestine.
• The Arab states near Palestine were,
meanwhile, throwing off colonial rule and getting
together to preserve Palestine for the Arabs.
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Jewish refugees arriving in
Palestine.
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A Jewish refugee centre. 1947
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Orange marks
Jewish settlers’
land.
Yellow marks Arab
Palestinian land.
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The Arab League.
• The Arab states now combined together to
form the “Arab league”
• The Arab league consisted of Syria,
Egypt, Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon, Saudi Egypt, Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon, Saudi
Arabia and Yemen, and it became a
formidable Arab force arranged against
the Jewish settlers.
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The Arab league today (in green) and Israel in blue.
This huge imbalance between the Jewish settlers in 1947 and their
Arab adversaries has changed little.
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The United Nations Plan of 1947• The world was sick of war by 1945 and the prospect of another
starting in the Middle East cheered no-one up.
• The United nations decided to partition Palestine as a way to separate the warring Arabic and Jewish peoples.
• Neither the British, nor the United Nations implemented this plan, and the cavalier way in which it was seen to be an outside imposition did not appeal to Jew or Arab.and the cavalier way in which it was seen to be an outside imposition did not appeal to Jew or Arab.
• British limits on immigration also further angered Zionist groups.
• The idea of an ‘international’ city (Jerusalem) was also found to be unworkable. Neither side could recognise others’ control of their most special places.
• The rejection of the plan laid the path clear for the Arab-Israeli war of 1948
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The UN Plan
for partition
1947.
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The refugee ship ‘Exodus’.
Meanwhile Jewish
refugees continued to
arrive from war-torn
Europe.
Many arrived with, or
without, British
permission to land.
This was like adding
petrol (gas) to a
smouldering fire. It would
make it burst into flame.
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Jewish refugees being stopped from entering Palestine by a
British soldier.
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British soldiers arresting refugees as
they land illegally in Palestine.