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Who are they?

Who are they?. Palestinians and Zionists. 1800s Palestinian Society. Palestinians in the 1800s were found primarily in the Ottoman empire They were Arab speaking and Arab by culture The majority of Palestinians were Sunni Muslim, though there was a substantial Christian minority

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Who are they?

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  1. Who are they? Palestiniansand Zionists

  2. 1800s Palestinian Society • Palestinians in the 1800s were found primarily in the Ottoman empire • They were Arab speaking and Arab by culture • The majority of Palestinians were Sunni Muslim, though there was a substantial Christian minority • Palestinians lived in villages rather than cities • Their society was agriculturally based • Crops grown included citrus fruits, wheat, olives, apples, and figs • Politics were generally local • The top families of the village were the most respected • There was no sense of Palestinian or Ottoman citizenship • Individuals almost worked through their families • There was no nationhood at work yet (no call for a Palestinian state)

  3. 1800s Palestinian Land Ownership • Land codes were passed in 1858 and 1867 • The goals were to make land ownership easier and land registration an official deed of land • This means that there’s a record of who owns it • It’s recorded by the government and a deed is released • This is a western world idea • The problem is that many that lived in the rural populations did not formally register their land • For years, peasants held land according to a traditional landowning rights system where it was understood who lived where

  4. 1800s Palestinian Land Ownership • The new registration process caused problems • Some were unable to register their land because of their debt (it cost $$ to register) • Some were unwilling to register (if we do, we’ll have to take a mandatory military term…if the men die, who will work the land?) • This leads to a market for land that is available to buy, leading to peasants being displaced from their homes

  5. 1800s Zionism • As we already mentioned, Zionism is a Jewish nationalist movement • Nationalism is tying together a group of people through a common language, a common culture, and common experiences • Much of the Zionist movement stemmed from anti-Semitism • Anti-Semitism is prejudice against Jews • Most anti-Semitism came from Europe though, and NOT North Africa • Arab anti-Semitism did not begin until the 20th century • Much of the Jewish migration to Palestine stemmed from the anti-Semitism in Europe • Unlike the Palestinian movement of the time, Zionism IS tied to nationalism, and a call for a Jewish homeland in Palestine • This movement was as much about the culture as it was Judaism

  6. Zionist Land Purchases (1880s) • Beginning in the 1880s families in urban areas of the Ottoman Empire and Western Europeans begin to buy land in Palestine • Once these families get the land deeds, they turn around and sell them to Zionists for a large profit • Much of this land is the same land the rural Palestinians are living on, but don’t have a deed for • As mentioned earlier, the Palestinians don’t have a deed either because they couldn’t purchase it (debt) or wouldn’t purchase it (military) • The Zionists have created a market for land purchases • THE ESSENTIAL QUESTION: WHICH IS MORE BINDING—A DEED TO THE LAND PROVING OWNERSHIP OR A FAMILY THAT HAS FARMED AND LIVED ON THE LAND FOR GENERATIONS (AS MANY AS 14)? • At the same time, Zionism continues to spread in Western Europe, and the idea of a Jewish homeland in Palestine continues to grow

  7. The Destruction of the Ottoman Empire • The Ottoman Empire was on the losing side of WWI • The Ottomans had been slowly crumbling for decades, and WWI toppled the empire for good • What would happen in the former Ottoman region? • Several states emerged, including Turkey, and Egypt took a leadership role in the Middle East • With competing opinions over what should happen in the Middle East, especially as it related to the Zionist question, Jews settling in Palestine had a lot of success building their communities • Tension existed since the Zionist land grabs of the late 19th century, but the Holocaust was the tipping point in the Palestinian-Jewish debate • We’ll talk about the question of Israel, through a game, tomorrow

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