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Conflicts along Religious Borders

Conflicts along Religious Borders. Chapter 7 Key Question 4. Israel and Palestine.

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Conflicts along Religious Borders

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  1. Conflicts along Religious Borders Chapter 7 Key Question 4

  2. Israel and Palestine Judea, home of the Jews in ancient times, was conquered by the Romans and renamed Palestine. a thousand years. The Zionist movement arose to restore the Jews to Israel, largely ignoring the existing Arab population. Palestine was granted to Britain as a League of Nations mandate to build a national home for the Jewish people. The Arabs resented the Jews coming in to take their land. The Jews won and created many states and Palestinian refugees. Today, they both blame each other.

  3. Israel And Palestine

  4. The Horn of Africa The Horn of Africa is one of the most complex and conflicted regions of the world. Each of the countries of the Horn—Somalia, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Djibouti and Sudan—suffers from protracted political strife, arising from local and national grievance, identity politics and regional inter-state rivalries. For 150 years, the Horn has also been a theater for strategic power struggles—the British Empire’s demand to control the Red Sea, Egypt’s attempt to control the Nile Waters, the Cold War confrontation in which each of the principal countries of the Horn switched sides at crucial junctures, and most recently the U.S. Administration’s “Global War on Terror.”

  5. The Horn of Africa cont. The rise of the Union of Islamic Courts in Somalia, the Ethiopian invasion to install the President AbdullahiYousif in power, and the U.S. bombing raids aimed at suspected al Qa’ida members have again highlighted the turbulence of the Horn. The resurgent conflict in Somalia comes against the backdrop of a successful exercise in locally-driven reconstruction in Somaliland (north-west Somalia), an unresolved war between Ethiopia and Eritrea, internal political crises in both countries, and a host of active, latent and imminent conflicts in Sudan. Meanwhile, African institutions—notably the African Union, headquartered in Addis Ababa—are struggling to establish new principles and an architecture for regional peace and security.

  6. Horn of Africa

  7. The Former Yugoslavia Ethnicity: between Serbs, of Slavic origin, and ethnic Albanians who are Illyrian in origin. Bullet Religion: between Serbs, who are almost entirely followers of the Serbian Orthodox Church, and non-Serbs, who are overwhelmingly followers of Islam, and Roman Catholicism. There is also a minority of ethnic Albanians who follow the Albanian Orthodox Church. However, there would be no significant friction, on religious grounds, between Albanian and Serbian Orthodoxy.

  8. Yugoslavia

  9. Northern Ireland • The history of Northern Ireland can be traced back to the 17th century, when the English finally succeeded in subduing the island after successfully putting down a number of rebellions. Much land, especially in the north, was subsequently colonized by Scottish and English Protestants, setting Ulster somewhat apart from the rest of Ireland, which was predominantly Catholic.

  10. Northern Ireland Cont. During the 1800s the north and south grew further apart due to economic differences. In the north the standard of living rose as industry and manufacturing flourished, while in the south the unequal distribution of land and resources—Anglican Protestants owned most of the land—resulted in a low standard of living for the large Catholic population.

  11. Northern Ireland Cont. Political separation of Northern Ireland from the rest of Ireland did not come until the early 20th century, when Protestants and Catholics divided into two warring camps over the issue of Irish home rule. Most Irish Catholics desired complete independence from Britain, but Irish Protestants feared living in a country ruled by a Catholic majority.

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