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Zionism, The Birth of Israel, and the Palestinian Predicament
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The Zionist movement The British Mandate of Palestine Birth of the Israeli state and the Palestinian catastrophe (al-Nakba) Later Post-WWII conflicts Peace Process
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The emergence of political Zionism: Jews before emancipation Emancipation’s mixed record and the Haskalah Movement and integration attempts Jewish Political Movements ▪ Zionism, Socialism, Folkism, Territorialism Zionism & Development of Nationalist Ideology Adoption of a nationalist ideology ▪ Leo Pinsker’s Autoemancipation (1882) ▪ Eliezer ben-Yehuda’s re-creation of Hebrew in 1880s ▪ Theodor Herzl’s The Jewish State (1896) ▪ First Zionist Congress in Basel (1897)…Palestine ▪ Division of labor: Western European Ideologues & Eastern European migrants Imagining Palestine as an empty land The Balfour declaration (1917)
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1917-20: British military rule 1920-48: Mandate 1920 Appointment of Sir Herbert Samuel as Civilian High commissioner Conflicting “White Papers” Samuel’s 1922 White Paper and Balfour Declaration Divided Arab leadership, strongest component under Mufti Amin al-Husayni. Husayni-Nashashibi rivalry Incoming Jews formed the Jewish Agency to run the Yishuv—a parallel government ▪ Histadrut: ▪ most powerful institution in Yishuv ▪ mainstay of the Labour Zionist movement ▪ Aside from being a trade union, its state-building role made it the owner of a number of businesses and factories Largest employer in the country ▪ Also controlled Jewish Defense Force -- Haganah
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David Ben-Gurion was a kibbutznik who became General Secretariat of the Histadrut. Kibbutzim (collective community based on traditional agriculture. Transformed Histadrut into an institution to help realize the goals of Zionism Immigration was key to Ben-Gurion & used Histadrut to facilitate this Jabotinski’s Revisionist Zionism: “Historical” Israel (Judea and Sumeria) Settlement efforts: Jewish National Fund 1936 & 1937-9 Arab rebellions External effects on Jewish emigration (Hitler & Nazism)
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US post-WWII support for a Jewish state The Jewish insurgency: Haganah guerilla fighting & Irgun terror Haganah defeat of Arab military resistance (1947-48) UNSCOP Partition Plan British withdraw, Ben Gurion declares new state on May 14, 1948 Arab-Israeli war of 1948: Israel holds territory and creation of Armistice Line
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Haganah expulsion of Palestinians and Palestinian flight The Nakba (‘Catastrophe’) The refugee situation Arab Israelis Palestinians in the West Bank & Gaza— creeping colonization Palestinians in Lebanon, Jordan & Syria Nationality Law versus Right of Return
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