{ The Second World War and the creation of the State of Israel Sarah Leong, Kayle Cleland, and Ebony Harris.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Conflicts in the Middle East
Advertisements

Arab-Israeli conflict Introduction The land known as Palestine had, by 1947, seen considerable immigration of Jewish peoples fleeing persecution.
The Birth of Israel. Jewish Immigration After the Second World War, refugees and displaced Jews from Europe began to attempt to emigrate to Palestine.
Israel/Palestine Britain had ruled the area of Palestine since 1920 – Remember: Palestine is not a country – After WWII, many Jews return to the.
Arab-Israeli Wars. Founding of Israel After World War II… – Violence in British Mandate of Palestine increased – Thousands of Jewish refugees from Europe.
Conflict in the Holy Land Notice of fair use of copyrighted materials Further use is prohibited.
Conflict in Israel. Arab countries vs. Israel Muslim vs. Jewish.
ARAB-ISRAELI CONFLICT. ISRAEL With the end of WWII, the Arab-Israeli conflict became the major political and military problem in the Middle East. After.
Middle East from WWII and beyond. This conflict begins after WWI, when the Ottoman Empire lost control of the Middle East. The land was divided and European.
Begins after WWI When Ottoman Empire was divided up The European Countries were given mandate over the land Mandate = control.
Chapter 26, Section 4 and Chapter 28, Section 2. During the 1800s, persecution of Jews led to the modern form of Zionism. Zionism is a political movement.
HISTORY REVISION By: Juliana, Nicholas, Nicole.
DO NOW Take out your work from yesterday Take out your work from yesterday We will talk about it in just a moment so make sure it is completed and you’ve.
Turmoil in the Middle East Conflict between Arab countries and Israel.
Conflicts in the Middle East
The Arab-Israeli Conflict. Roots reach back many hundreds of years. Arab world suffered domination by foreign powers well into the 1900s; had strong desire.
Concept: Conflict Creates Change
Created by Mr. C Wright, Dulwich College Shanghai Why did Israel win the war of ? To examine the different causes of the Jewish victory in 48/49.
Daily Objective: How does the Arab-Israeli affect me?
The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: A Lesson in Perspective
The 1948 War Or the May 1948 War Or the War Or the War for Israeli Independence Or the Catastrophe.
Concept: Conflict Creates Change
Conflict in the Middle East
Israel A.Balfour Declaration B.Creation of Israel C.Wars over Israel D.The Palestinians E.Peace in the Middle East?
New Borders and the Arab- Refugee Problem War of Independence  Naqba.
© Students of History -
 Zionism  Movement seeking to establish a Jewish nation  U.N. Resolution 181  Adopted by the U.N. General Assembly  Partitioned Palestine and established.
The Region in Question A Brief Background Diaspora – Jews scattered from the region by the Romans (Romans name the area “Syria Palaestina”) Byzantine.
Arab-Israeli Conflict Arab Nationalism vs. Jewish Nationalism Arab Nationalism vs. Jewish Nationalism.
Unit 4: Modern middle East
By Eric Zacher And AJ Snorf.  After World War II the UN gave land to the Jews  The Jews got their own state on the east cost of the Mediterranean (Palestine).
Palestinian-Israeli Conflict. The Founding of Israel In the late 1800’s Jews in Europe sought to create a homeland for the Jewish people. Jews were subjected.
VI. Creation of Israel A. Jewish and Arab nationalists both wanted to END the British mandate of Palestine. Due to anti Semitism, Zionism became a popular.
Arab-Israeli Conflict. Palestine/Israel Land Claims Jews claim the land (3,000 years ago, Jewish kings ruled Jerusalem) Jews claim the land (3,000 years.
The Arab-Israeli Conflict A Big Problem In The Middle East.
 From the late 1890’s, Zionism grew.  What is Zionism?  Zionism – the idea of national Jewish liberation and a return to Palestine  After the defeat.
Arab-Israeli Conflict Arab Nationalism vs. Jewish Nationalism.
Good Morning/Afternoon Warm-up 1. What did the Truman Doctrine try to accomplish? 2. What did the Marshall Plan accomplish? 3. Describe Containment.
The State of Israel. Zionism and the Jewish connection to the land The Jews felt that Palestine was the land that God promised them thousands of years.
People around the world increase the fight for Jewish homeland in the region where the ancient Hebrews lived …..this is called Zionism.
The U.N. decides to make Israel its own state by a vote of 6 to 4. The US becomes the first to recognize Israel as an independent state. Violence between.
Arab-Israeli Conflict. Palestine/Israel Land Claims Jews claim the land (3,000 years ago, Jewish kings ruled Jerusalem) Jews claim the land (3,000 years.
Israel Creation of a Jewish State and a Half Century of Turmoil.
Israeli-Palestinian Conflict By: Georgia Sutjiadi.
Creating the Modern Middle East. Uniting Peoples:  -Arabs took over the region in the mid 600s.  1. governed for over 150 years  -The Turks led by.
The Middle East Arab Israeli Conflict I. Background A. Palestinians are Arabs B. Palestinians/Arabs are mostly Muslim.
The Modern Middle East. Post WWII Middle East  The creation of Israel after WWII led to many issues in the Middle East  Sought to achieve political.
Do First – Label the following: - Jerusalem - West Bank - Gaza Strip - Sinai Peninsula - Golan Heights.
UNSCOP United Nations Special Committee on Palestine May 1947 Britain ends the mandate granted it after World War One and turns the issue of Palestine.
CONFLICTS IN THE MIDDLE EAST Setting the Stage After WWII the UN decided that the Jewish people in Europe should get their own nation. Came at a.
* The mandate system established after World War I was phased out after World War II by the Unites Nations. Recall that the French mandates were Syria.
Today’s LEQ: How have regional issues contributed to conflicts in the Middle East?
April 8, Who were the Sandinistas? 2.Who were the Contras? 3.Who were the Mujahideen? 4.Why did the soviets invade Afghanistan? 5.What was the US.
The israeli-palestinian conflict
ARAB-ISRAELI CONFLICT
Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Arab-Israeli conflict
Israeli and Arab Conflict
After World War I, the League of Nations gave the lands of the Ottoman Empire to the British and the French as Mandates (to look after until the people.

Middle East, 1945-present.
Conflicts in the Middle East
Palestine Partition & War for Israel’s Independence
Israeli-Palestine Conflict
End Four Minutes #4 First Four Chart Date & label your work
© Students of History -
Concept: Conflict Creates Change
Arab-Israeli Conflict
Israel/Palestine Timeline
Arab-Israeli Conflict
Presentation transcript:

{ The Second World War and the creation of the State of Israel Sarah Leong, Kayle Cleland, and Ebony Harris

 -Zionism (Belief that Palestine rightfully belongs to the Jewish people) becomes prominent  Palestine under British control  Arabic discontent  White paper 1939  SS Struma  “We will fight the war as if there is no White Paper, and we will fight the White paper as if there is no war WW2 impact on Palestine leading up to the issue of separate states

Mandate of Israel- British possession  Stage 1: - The British mandate was unpopular amongst the Jews in ‘Israel.’ - Chairman of the Jewish Agency Executive and later Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion, "We will fight Hitler as if no white paper existed and we will fight the white paper as if Hitler did not exist." - The Irgun (Jewish National Military Organization) spilt from Avraham Stern & LEHI (Freedom Fighters of Israel.) - In 1942 Stern was arrested and killed by the British but his legacy lived on. - On February the first 1942, the leader of the other half of the Irgun, Menachem Begin announced that the Irgun was to start fighting against the British

 Stage 2: - In 1947 due to pressure and violence from the Jews, the British withdrew and handed the mandate over to the UN - United Nations Special Committee on Palestine: sent by UN to prepare report, 11 members (Sweden, Australia, Canada, Holland, Czech, Yugoslavia, Indian, Iran, Guatemala, Peru, Uruguay) - Decided on two-state solution- Arab state and Jewish state- Resolution 181 Mandate of Israel- UN possession

 May 1948: On the same day Israel was declared independent, Arab forces invaded  Israel vs League of Arab States; Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia  New Israel State Independence vs Palestine as a unitary state  Series of conflicts The 1948 Arab-Israeli War Mid-May-11 June: Mid-May-11 June: -Israel surprisingly kept Arab armies pushed back -Truce was called by the UN but was rejected

8-18 July: 8-18 July: -Fighting continued, heavy battles with the Egyptian and Syrian forces -Still Israeli forces dominated 15 Oct- 20 July 1949: 15 Oct- 20 July 1949: - “Green Line”: Israeli army extended borders 50% larger than UN allowed - Armistice Agreement: separate peace treaties signed between Israel and Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, and Syria  Israeli victory over Arab defeat The 1948 Arab-Israeli War

Arab vs Israeli Arab Weaknesses Israeli Strengths - The armies were not united under any form of leadership - Haganah group became the Israel Defense Forces, totaling 100,000 fighters - They acted separately and suspiciously on one another - Well trained with experience from WWII - They could not coordinate their attacks - Well equipped with arms from Czechoslovakia and secretly imported B-17 bombers -Negotiated separate peace talks - Farmland provided geographic defense - Lost 7,000 soldiers - Lost 6,000 soldiers (1% of the population)

 Sent in Count Folke Bernadotte as an UN mediator to re-enforce Resolution 181  Both sides rejected and questioned his appeals  Was assassinated, mid-truce, in September by an Israeli group UN Involvement

 Left behind a violent and continuing legacy…  Israeli side: - Increased land coverage - Increased nationalism - ½ million Jewish settlers - Still not recognized by Arab states  Arab side: - Palestinian refugees, totaling 2,000,000 - Palestinians were harassed by the Israeli army, forced to follow Jewish rules, and were economically dependent on the Jewish job market - A major blow to Arab pride and unity  Led to additional conflicts/later effects - Six Day War Resolution “Crossing” War Israeli-Jordanian Peace Treaty Palestinian Liberation Organization - Intifada - Involvement of international powers like the US The Legacy

  AICE (2012) The Israeli War of Independence (1948). [online] Available at: [Accessed: 26 Aug 2012].   Trueman, C. (2010) Israel and the 1948 War. [online] Available at: [Accessed: 26 Aug 2012].   Habibi, M. et al. (2010) History of Europe and the Middle East. New York: Oxford Universtiy Press, p   Jewishagency.org (1986) The Ben Gurion Years Activities [online] Available at ing content/ ing content/   Jewishvirtuallibrary.org (1948) The Declaration Of The Establishment Of The State Of Israel. [online] Available at: [Accessed: 27 Aug 2012].   Stateofisrael.com (2000) World War II. [online] Available at: [Accessed: 27 Aug 2012]. Bibliography