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The Myth Of The Palestinian People
Israel National News ^ | 26 December 2001 | Yehezkel Bin-Nun

Posted on 12/26/2001 7:05:20 PM PST by Optimist

The Myth Of The Palestinian People
Yehezkel Bin-Nun
26 December 2001

Palestinians doubt Blair can deliver,” announces the BBC. “Four Palestinians die in West Bank,” reports CNN. “IDF demolishes building used by Palestinian gunmen,” announces Israel’s government run Channel 1 News. The modern media is filled with stories about the Palestinians, their plight, their dilemmas and their struggles. All aspects of their lives seem to have been put under the microscope. Only one question never seems to be addressed: Who are the Palestinians? Who are these people who claim the Holy Land as their own? What is their history? Where did they come from? How did they arrive in the country they call Palestine? Now that both US President George Bush and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon (in direct opposition to the platform he was elected on) have come out in favor of a Palestinian state, it would be prudent to seek answers to these questions. For all we know, Palestine could be as real as Disneyland.

The general impression given in the media is that Palestinians have lived in the Holy Land for hundreds, if not thousands of years. No wonder, then, that a recent poll of French citizens shows that the majority believe (falsely) that prior to the establishment of the State of Israel an independent Arab Palestinian state existed in its place. Yet curiously, when it comes to giving the history of this “ancient” people most news outlets find it harder to go back more than the early nineteen hundreds. CNN, an agency which has devoted countless hours of airtime to the “plight” of the Palestinians, has a website which features a special section on the Middle East conflict called “Struggle For Peace”. It includes a promising sounding section entitled “Lands Through The Ages” which assures us it will detail the history of the region using maps. Strangely, it turns out, the maps displayed start no earlier than the ancient date of 1917. The CBS News website has a background section called “A Struggle For Middle East Peace.’’ Its history timeline starts no earlier than 1897. The NBC News background section called ‘’Searching for Peace’’ has a timeline which starts in 1916. BBC’s timeline starts in 1948.

Yet, the clincher must certainly be the Palestinian National Authority’s own website. While it is top heavy on such phrases as “Israeli occupation” and “Israeli human rights violations” the site offers practically nothing on the history of the so-called Palestinian people. The only article on the site with any historical content is called “Palestinian History - 20th Century Milestones” which seems only to confirm that prior to 1900 there was no such concept as the Palestinian People.

While the modern media maybe short on information about the history of the “Palestinian people” the historical record is not. Books, such as Battleground by Samuel Katz and From Time Immemorial by Joan Peters long ago detailed the history of the region. Far from being settled by Palestinians for hundreds, if not thousands of years, the Land of Israel, according to dozens of visitors to the land, was, until the beginning of the last century, practically empty. Alphonse de Lamartine visited the land in 1835. In his book, Recollections of the East, he writes "Outside the gates of Jerusalem we saw no living object, heard no living sound…." None other than the famous American author Mark Twain, who visited the Land of Israel in 1867, confirms this. In his book Innocents Abroad he writes, “A desolation is here that not even imagination can grace with the pomp of life and action. We reached Tabor safely…. We never saw a human being on the whole journey.” Even the British Consul in Palestine reported, in 1857, “The country is in a considerable degree empty of inhabitants and therefore its greatest need is that of a body of population…”

In fact, according to official Ottoman Turk census figures of 1882, in the entire Land of Israel, there were only 141,000 Muslims, both Arab and non-Arab. This number was to skyrocket to 650,000 Arabs by 1922, a 450% increase in only 40 years. By 1938 that number would become over 1 million or an 800% increase in only 56 years. Population growth was especially high in areas where Jews lived. Where did all these Arabs come from? According to the Arabs the huge increase in their numbers was due to natural childbirth. In 1944, for example, they alleged that the natural increase (births minus deaths) of Arabs in the Land of Israel was the astounding figure of 334 per 1000. That would make it roughly three times the corresponding rate for the same year of Lebanon and Syria and almost four times that of Egypt, considered amongst the highest in the world. Unlikely, to say the least. If the massive increase was not due to natural births, then were did all these Arabs come from?

All the evidence points to the neighboring Arab states of Egypt, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan. In 1922 the British Governor of the Sinai noted that “illegal immigration was not only going on from the Sinai, but also from Transjordan and Syria.” In 1930, the British Mandate -sponsored Hope-Simpson Report noted that “unemployment lists are being swollen by immigrants from Trans-Jordania” and “illicit immigration through Syria and across the northern frontier of Palestine is material.” The Arabs themselves bare witness to this trend. For example, the governor of the Syrian district of Hauran, Tewfik Bey el Hurani, admitted in 1934 that in a single period of only a few months over 30,000 Syrians from Hauran had moved to the Land of Israel. Even British Prime Minister Winston Churchill noted the Arab influx. Churchill, a veteran of the early years of the British mandate in the Land of Israel, noted in 1939 that “far from being persecuted, the Arabs have crowded into the country and multiplied.”

Far from displacing the Arabs, as they claimed, the Jews were the very reason the Arabs chose to settle in the Land of Israel. Jobs provided by newly established Zionist industry and agriculture lured them there, just as Israeli construction and industry provides most Arabs in the Land of Israel with their main source of income today. Malcolm MacDonald, one of the principal authors of the British White Paper of 1939, which restricted Jewish immigration to the Land of Israel, admitted (conservatively) that were it not for a Jewish presence the Arab population would have been little more than half of what it actually was. Today, when due to the latest “intifada” Arabs from the territories under 35 are no longer allowed into pre-1967 Israel to work, unemployment has skyrocketed to over 40% and most rely on European aid packages to survive.

Not only pre-state Arabs lied about being indigenous. Even today, many prominent so-called Palestinians, it turns out, are foreign born. Edward Said, an Ivy League Professor of Literature and a major Palestinian propagandist, long claimed to have been raised in Jerusalem. However, in an article in the September 1999 issue of Commentary Magazine Justus Reid Weiner revealed that Said actually grew up in Cairo, Egypt, a fact which Said himself was later forced to admit. But why bother with Said? PLO chief Yasir Arafat himself, self declared “leader of the Palestinian people”, has always claimed to have been born and raised in “Palestine”. In fact, according to his official biographer Richard Hart, as well as the BBC, Arafat was born in Cairo on August 24, 1929 and that’s where he grew up.

To maintain the charade of being an indigenous population, Arab propagandists have had to do more than a little rewriting of history. A major part of this rewriting involves the renaming of geography. For two thousand years the central mountainous region of Israel was known as Judea and Samaria, as any medieval map of the area testifies. However, the state of Jordan occupied the area in 1948 and renamed it the West Bank. This is a funny name for a region that actually lies in the eastern portion of the land and can only be called “West” in reference to Jordan. This does not seem to bother the majority of news outlets covering the region, which universally refer to the region by its recent Jordanian name.

The term “Palestinian" is itself a masterful twisting of history. To portray themselves as indigenous, Arab settlers adopted the name of an ancient Canaanite tribe, the Phillistines, that died out almost 3000 years ago. The connection between this tribe and modern day Arabs is nil. Who is to know the difference? Given the absence of any historical record, one can understand why Yasser Arafat claims that Jesus Christ, a Jewish carpenter from the Galilee, was a Palestinian. Every year, at Christmas time, Arafat goes to Bethlehem and tells worshippers that Jesus was in fact “the first Palestinian”.

If the Palestinians are indeed a myth, then the real question becomes “Why?” Why invent a fictitious people? The answer is that the myth of the Palestinian People serves as the justification for Arab occupation of the Land of Israel. While the Arabs already possess 21 sovereign countries of their own (more than any other single people on earth) and control a land mass 800 times the size of the Land of Israel, this is apparently not enough for them. They therefore feel the need to rob the Jews of their one and only country, one of the smallest on the planet. Unfortunately, many people ignorant of the history of the region, including much of the world media, are only too willing to help.

It is interesting to note that the Bible makes reference to a fictitious nation confronting Israel. “They have provoked me to jealously by worshipping a non-god, angered me with their vanities. I will provoke them with a non-nation; anger them with a foolish nation (Deuteronomy 32:21).”

On second thought, it may be unfair to compare Palestine to Disneyland. After all, Disneyland really exists.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: napalminthemorning; wot
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To: RLK
Those 1,269,000 think they got screwed, and that the U. S. was in on it. Part of the consequence was the 9/11 bombing in revenge.

First, an answer to my question didn't come from you. Second, your use of the term "disenfranchisement" is awfully reminiscent of the state of Florida in the year 2000. Third, "democracy" is not a good thing. It's three wolves and a sheep voting on what's for dinner this evening and you will never see me defending such a system. Lastly, and this flows perfectly with my point about the Florida fiasco, you love to blame the U.S. for the act of war against us just like the Leftists do. Blame-America-First is your mantra.

This doesn't bother you?

Israel is right to be where she is, and justified as well. How many wars did they win? Don't the spoils go to the victor? Why didn't/don't fellow Arab/Muslim nations offer sanctuary to their fellow Arabs/Muslims, the Palestinians?

Any justification of the so-called Palestinians and their so-called cause is both fallacious and intellectually dishonest.

There's a deeper meaning underneath it all.

81 posted on 12/29/2001 12:08:21 AM PST by rdb3
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To: RLK
I never said it was a "slur." If you think I did, post your evidence.
82 posted on 12/29/2001 12:08:21 AM PST by rdb3
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To: dennisw
I haven't left anything out. I've stuck to the relevant points that you don't happen to like. What you are trying to tell me is 600,000 people can impose their beliefs on 1,2000,000 and it's going to be acceptable to those 1,200,000 and that those 1,200,000, and the people who share their religion, won't be angry with the U. S., Israel, and many othere. Good luck with finding a person with a non ideologically committed mind who will believe it.

As far as Mohammedism is concerned, I've gone on record many times saying it's an aggressive nuthouse religion.

The Jews, like it or not, should have chosen another part of the world to create their nation. As it is, they are eternally surrounded by hostile neighbors, and America is now also facing reprisal for it's having supported what happened. Get used to it.

83 posted on 12/29/2001 12:08:25 AM PST by RLK
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To: RLK
The Jews, like it or not, should have chosen another part of the world to create their nation.

_________

Get real! There is only one Jerusalem. BTW....That land (West Palestine) was empty when the Jews came in great numbers 1870. Just like Arizona was when the White Man came. People per square mile was very low in the West Palestine of 1870. Arabs are just mad dogs like most other Muslims. Because of their 3rd world rage you buy into their myths. Liberals do this but you should not. With all due respect, your read on the history of Palistine/Israel is incomplete.

84 posted on 12/29/2001 12:08:27 AM PST by dennisw
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To: RLK
What you are trying to tell me is 600,000 people can impose their beliefs on 1,2000,000 and it's going to be acceptable to those 1,200,000 and that those 1,200,000, and the people who share their religion, won't be angry with the U. S., Israel, and many othere.

Hmmm... So could we annex Canada because there are 250 million of us and only 20 million of them?

How does this international democracy work? It seems like a rather novel theory.

85 posted on 12/29/2001 12:08:40 AM PST by scooby
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To: scooby
BTW, is there a list for stuff on the ME and Israel?
86 posted on 12/29/2001 12:08:41 AM PST by scooby
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To: dennisw
Screw Jerusalem. It's only use is superstition and obsolete fanaticm uncharacteristic of a developed people. There's not a damned thing in the middle east worth fighting over beyond desert, barrenness, and harsh conditions. Israel is overcrowded and surrounded by idiots. If the Jews were smart, they'd pack up and leave. If Jerusalem is so important, take it with them. Build a nation someplace such as central Africa where there is little polulation and the indiginous people would welcome the improvement. In twenty years the Jewis people could create an expansive paradise there without the bull shit. Leave the Palestinian and others with what they wanted. to starve on it.
87 posted on 12/29/2001 12:08:42 AM PST by RLK
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To: RLK
If the Palestinians were smart, they'd quit their bitching and just breed until they could outvote the Jews.

Unfortunately, they have an unshakable death wish.

88 posted on 12/29/2001 12:08:47 AM PST by scooby
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To: scooby
When Israel was created they could outvote the Jews nearly two to one. They still had no say in what happened.
89 posted on 12/29/2001 12:09:00 AM PST by RLK
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To: LLAN-DDEUSANT
LOL...pretty pathetic, but I suppose it's the best you can do.
90 posted on 12/29/2001 12:10:28 AM PST by BenF
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Comment #91 Removed by Moderator

To: RLK
Are you an atheist? Others are not. Jews and Christians take Jerusalem quite seriously.

I don't want Muslims in charge there. Screw 'em. THey're not worthy

92 posted on 12/29/2001 12:11:37 AM PST by dennisw
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To: Old Hickory
No, no. You misunderstood me completely.

I used that quote from the Book of Proverbs with respect to you explaining yourself when no one accused you of anything. Hence, "when no one pursues." I never said that you were "trumped."

I believe that Israel belongs to the Jews. End of story. And this is necessary for the unfolding of prophecy. I also believe the Lord when he said about Abraham's seed after the promise that He will bless those that bless them, and curse those who curse them. I believe as a believer that we are to pray for the peace of Jerusalem.

Lastly, how anyone believes a word that comes out of Arafat's mouth is beyond me.

93 posted on 12/29/2001 12:12:06 AM PST by rdb3
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To: Old Hickory
Amen to your #91.
94 posted on 12/29/2001 12:14:08 AM PST by RLK
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To: RLK
You are a terrorist sympathizer. You picked the wrong team.
95 posted on 12/29/2001 12:14:09 AM PST by Conservative til I die
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To: Conservative til I die
Wrong! Go back and read what I said again until you finally get it--if it's within you capability.
96 posted on 12/29/2001 12:14:10 AM PST by RLK
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To: RLK
...leaving nearly 1,300,000 Arabs in the area stammering in helpless rage. That is part of why they fly airplanes into buildings when they can manage it

and it took over 50 years?

Exactly which Palestinian group hijacked US planes? Do you have more information than has been released? OBL is a SAUDI. Arafat is EGYPTIAN. It would seem that the arab "welfare whores" are the ones most upset and continue to incite the population.

Last I heard, Islamic groups in the US denounced the Assault on the WTC (although many support suicide bombing within Israel) and the Terrorist groups within Israel were "spared" the wrath of W partly because, among other things,they (a)were not international and (b)claimed no relationship to OBL

It would appear that, by your statement, it is the people you defend should be the next target of the US. I however would place the targetting laser on their leadership who have lead their own people down a path of self-destruction rather than live peacefully with their neighbors and enjoy whatever benefits they can EARN.

Certainly there is a dislike for the US, just like Israel, in part because of the successes we have enjoyed in each of our countries's short lifespans. But much of that dislike is fomented by religious leaders, educational institutions, and neighboring Arab countries that apparently would rather have this group of people die in squallor (or a suicide attack)than offer humanitarian support

97 posted on 12/29/2001 12:17:07 AM PST by Optimist
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To: Optimist
Bump
98 posted on 12/29/2001 8:58:15 AM PST by Tom Jefferson
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To: RLK
The Jews were not Canaanites

And who ever said that the Jews are/were Canaanites?

99 posted on 12/29/2001 9:10:17 AM PST by arthurus
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To: Old Hickory
See, the weirdness starts when you throw Christian Americans in the mix. The Philistines that one reads about inthe bible are today's Palestinians. That little fact gets skipped over often times. Christian Americans are swayed to think that the Israel that they read about in their bible is the same country that exists today... they have no clue that it was formed after WW II.

Somebody please send this guy a clue.

100 posted on 12/29/2001 9:13:14 AM PST by arthurus
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