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To: Red Badger

It is my experience that anyone referring to the “Levant”, has as their purpose denying the existence of Israel.


5 posted on 06/24/2021 12:01:08 PM PDT by G Larry (Force the Universities to use their TAX FREE ENDOWMENTS to pay off Student loan debt!!!)
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To: G Larry

“t is my experience that anyone referring to the “Levant”, has as their purpose denying the existence of Israel.”

Probably so, as a general rule.

In this case, I suspect the author of the paper (and source of the quote), one “Israel Hershkovitz” (professor at Tel Aviv U) is probably pretty Zionist.

Sure, I’m working with some stereotypes of my people here, but I think we’re in safe territory on this one.


34 posted on 06/24/2021 12:38:21 PM PDT by Jewbacca (The residents of Iroquois territory may not determine whether Jews may live in Jerusalem)
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To: G Larry

Or maybe they are describing a region not a country.


38 posted on 06/24/2021 12:48:35 PM PDT by Varda
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To: G Larry

We learned the term in my seminary class.


39 posted on 06/24/2021 12:49:51 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: G Larry

What, or where, in hell is ‘the Levant’?
Scientific pointy headed gibberish?


41 posted on 06/24/2021 1:06:53 PM PDT by Terry L Smith
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To: G Larry

It was not always the case but now “levant” is almost invariably used with decidedly anti-Semitic overtones.


54 posted on 06/24/2021 3:36:24 PM PDT by Paal Gulli
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To: G Larry

From the wiki article on the subject:

The term Levant appears in English in 1497, and originally meant ‘the East’ or ‘Mediterranean lands east of Italy’.[23] It is borrowed from the French levant ‘rising’, referring to the rising of the sun in the east,[23] or the point where the sun rises.[24] The phrase is ultimately from the Latin word levare, meaning ‘lift, raise’. Similar etymologies are found in Greek Ἀνατολή (Anatolē, cf. Anatolia), in Germanic Morgenland (lit. ‘morning land’), in Italian (as in ‘Riviera di Levante’, the portion of the Liguria coast east of Genoa), in Hungarian Kelet, in Spanish and Catalan Levante and Llevant, (”the place of rising”), and in Hebrew (מִזְרָח, mizrah, ‘east’). Most notably, “Orient” and its Latin source oriens meaning “east”, is literally “rising”, deriving from Latin orior “rise”.[25]

The notion of the Levant has undergone a dynamic process of historical evolution in usage, meaning, and understanding. While the term “Levantine” originally referred to the European residents of the eastern Mediterranean region, it later came to refer to regional “native” and “minority” groups.[26]

The term became current in English in the 16th century, along with the first English merchant adventurers in the region; English ships appeared in the Mediterranean in the 1570s, and the English merchant company signed its agreement (”capitulations”) with the Ottoman Sultan in 1579.[27] The English Levant Company was founded in 1581 to trade with the Ottoman Empire, and in 1670 the French Compagnie du Levant was founded for the same purpose. At this time, the Far East was known as the “Upper Levant”.[2]


55 posted on 06/24/2021 3:37:42 PM PDT by skepsel
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To: G Larry; All

Not necessarily, Levant also refers to Lebanon and Palestine, and I think parts of Jordan and Syria.


77 posted on 06/26/2021 3:33:27 PM PDT by gleeaikin
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