I’m not saying that the Israelis are entitled to that land. But then again, could you blame them? They are always the first group to be persecuted when societies decay, so it was a logical place to settle (however bloody the takeover was). Palestinians are likewise as a group prone to prejudice against Jews and may or may not have welcomed such a large influx of a despised people. — Noah Te Stroete
What would you think if a foreign power forced you to give up half your home to take in a Yemeni refugee family? How would you behave if your child was beaten by Yemenis for protesting? Think about it.See my posts above. I would like to hear your thoughts on this. — Noah Te Stroete
Where should the Jews go, though? — Noah Te Stroete
I did not know all of this. — Noah Te Stroete
What would you think if a foreign power forced you to give up half your home to take in a Yemeni refugee family? How would you behave if your child was beaten by Yemenis for protesting? Think about it.
The genocide of the Jews during World War II was one of the most (if not "the" most) horrible genocides of the 20th century. Not only the Nazis but many conservative people collaborated with it. Sometimes with an intensity that surprised the Nazis (the Croatian Ustashi, for example). But nothing like this can be expected in contemporary Europe or America. Zionism was an ultra-nationalistic response that came especially from the refugees of Eastern Europe. It was not in the majority before World War II. And now Zionism has other different roots that must be related to US policy in West Asia. This is not a question of justice, but of power. — David Mo
I don't see why they couldn't live in Palestine/Israel. They have lived there alongside other religions in relative peace, until people starting getting funny ideas about who else was allowed to live there. — Tzeentch
And what right did the Ottomans have to take over the Middle East?I understand all of your points, but what about the Anglo-American pact to carve up and take over the Middle East after WWII? Surely they are to blame for just as many atrocities. Perhaps that’s a discussion for another thread, but “don’t point out the moat in another’s eye when there is a beam in yours” and all that. — Noah Te Stroete
Sure. One can blame people for what they do, even if others do bad things. And especially since the process simply made them a gathered target. It wasn't even a good choice for their own interests. Treating the already present Palestinians as equals would have saved them untold grief.I’m not saying that the Israelis are entitled to that land. But then again, could you blame them? — Noah Te Stroete
There is general history of arab and Muslim nations dealing much better with Jews than Christian nations have. And note the assumption in your sentence. Of course they should all get to come there. Perhaps this would have caused tensions, but ousting the Palestinians didn't help the safefy of Jews. What gave the newcomers more rights than people already there? (Well, the British did, but that's another story and doesn't make it moral). Of course I have sympathy for the situation the Jews were in, but I don't think their approach there has been good for them, it was certainly not good for the Palestinians and it has continued to create tensions that could lead to world wars. I sometimes wonder if that was not someone's intent. Hey, let's create a permanent tension there where everyone is unsafe cause this is going to piss everyone off forever. This is not meant as a argument, but rather as a reaction to what has really been such a terrible set of ideasPalestinians are likewise as a group prone to prejudice against Jews and may or may not have welcomed such a large influx of a despised people. — Noah Te Stroete
Palestinian violence against the Jews minority (at the beginnings of the 20th century it was very minority) starts with the proclamation of the State of Israel.In any case you cannot claim for a right that supposes equal violation of the rights of other people. — David Mo
The victims of the 1929 Hebron massacre would like a word with you.
Hundreds of arabs walked down a residential street with knives and tools and went from door to door murdering the jewish families - men, women, and children. the women were raped. it was deliberate and encouraged by the grand mufti of jerusalem, but i guess who really cares i mean they were zionists right? — BitconnectCarlos
I argue that Zionism is a minor issue (as the state of Israel already exists) and that the implemented policies are driven by the security viewpoint, not by an ideology. — ssu
The victims of the 1929 Hebron massacre would like a word with you. — BitconnectCarlos
The shape Zionism took in that period is exactly what caused old tensions to reignite.
it is misleading to refer to this incident as a standard for Jewish-Arab relations during the period
The main leaders on both sides were condemned by the British authorities. The Arabs for incitement to hatred and the Jews for possession of arms. It is more complicated than a pogrom.
if it's not a pogram or a massacre then would you mind enlightening me as to what it actually was when hundreds of arabs murdered jews in their living spaces with household tools? — BitconnectCarlos
That legitimizes Zionism. — Tzeentch
Foolish or not, that is the line.It's a foolish argument.
International law often leaves room when it comes to military necessity. As such, whenever Israel breaches international law, and it makes quite a habit of it, it claims there is such a necessity. — Tzeentch
The Israeli government (the right-wing parts, of course) isn't concerned about security. They are concerned about painting Israel/Palestine in the colors of the Israeli flag. — Tzeentch
But to speak of a pogrom, one must assume that it is a massacre of a defenseless Jewish population, like were usual in Czarist Russia. If the figures given by Wikipedia and the response of the British authorities are correct, there was a conflict between two communities and the Jewish community seemed to have good offensive capacity, as the small difference in casualties shows -only about twenty. In these conditions it seems more correct to speak of a conflict between communities in which there was a terrible massacre in Hebron.
Foolish or not, that is the line.
You could argue that it's also foolish to occupy a country, because a financial backer of a terrorist strike lived there (but otherwise the country's regime had no involvement in the terrorist attack). That only the numbers of killed made an otherwise police matter so different that the country eagerly went to war and later invading another country that had absolutely nothing to do with the terrorist strike (and no WMD project whatsoever). Yet that's the reality. — ssu
Of all the excesses, shootings, demolitions of homes and etc. in the Occupied Territories, there still are Jews killed by Palestinians. — ssu
Firstly, you assume the violence was anti-Semitic in nature, while politics played a much larger role in it than you care to admit.
immigration levels were at a relatively low level during that time (1929). — BitconnectCarlos
there are plenty of massacres of jews that occurred before zionism even took force. the idea that the jews were pretty much safe and good until zionism started is just a blatant falsehood. — BitconnectCarlos
Hasn't worked out for Israel? How so?I'm not sure what you're getting at. In both cases things haven't worked out. — Tzeentch
The intervention of Jewish armed groups led by Zeev Jabotinsky and the British army against the Palestinians are two elements that you will not find in any pogrom.David, most of those arabs were killed by the british, not by any sort of significant jewish security apparatus. — BitconnectCarlos
You'll forgive me if I don't go any further, but I am tired too of arguing with the Zionists about the same obvious things. — David Mo
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