Tuesday, June 2, 2020

Israel became a nation in 1313 BCE, 2,000 years before the birth of Islam

Israel became a nation in 1313 BCE,

2,000 years before the birth of Islam

Israel became a nation in 1313 BCE, 2,000 years before the birth of Islam. Forty years later, in 1273 BCE the Jews conquered Eretz Israel and enjoyed dominion over the land for a thousand years. Even after the Babylonians and then the Romans put an end to the Jewish sovereignty, Jews continued to reside there throughout all of their history. 

In short, the Jews have had a continuous presence in the land of Israel for the past 3,400 years. “You are thieves” The great 11th Century French biblical commentator, Rashi (Rabbi Solomon Yitzchaki), one of the greatest sages in the history of the Jewish people, asks the following question in his commentary on the opening verse of Genesis. If the Hebrew Bible is a book of Jewish theology and law, why does it begin with the story of creation, and not proceed immediately to the story of Exodus and the first mitzvah given to the Jews? Rashi, who wrote these words as Christian crusaders were attempting to “purge” the land from Muslim rule, presents an incredible answer. One day in the future, Rashi says, the nations of the world will turn to the Jewish people and declare, “You are thieves! You have stolen the land of Israel from non-Jewish tribes.”
What ought to be the appropriate Jewish response? To answer this question, the Bible commences its text with the story of creation of the universe, this in order to grant the Jew the best and truest answer to the accusation that he is a bandit. 

The entire universe, the Bible is saying, belongs to  G-d. He created it. Every piece of land belongs to Him, and He chose to give the Land of Israel to the Jewish people. To call Israel occupiers of the West Bank aka Judea and Samaria, Gaza and Eastern Jerusalem is akin to calling France occupiers of Paris or Britain occupiers of London.
The Bible — a book embraced by billions of Muslims and Christians as the word of G-d — states clearly that the entire country, including the West Bank, Gaza and Jerusalem, is G-d’s eternal gift to the Jewish people. In fact, our ownership of the land of Israel surpasses that of any other nations ownership of its country. 

Every other nation in the world bases its claim to its land on conquest. A people came, conquered the indigenous people, took the land, settled it, and called it by a new name. “Might makes right” is the historical claim of almost all nations in history. Possession is nine tenths of the law.

With one exception: Eretz Israel. This country belongs to the Jewish people because, as the Bible states hundreds of times, G-d gave it to them as their eternal heritage. It is the most moral claim, because G-d is by definition the essence of morality.
What about the Arab-Palestinian people? How about the ingrained notion that the Arab/Palestinians are fighting for their ancient homeland annexed by the Jews? The truth about this matter has been so deliberately obscured and falsified that even to raise the issue seems strange to many people.
Let us reflect on some undisputed historical facts. In the 1967 war, did Israel annex territory from an Arab/Palestinian nation? No, not a single inch. There is not, nor has there ever been, an Arab/Palestinian nation. 

Israel liberated and re-captured the West Bank aka Judea and Samaria and Eastern Jerusalem from Jordan’s King Hussein and the Gaza Strip from Egypt, after they declared war against the Jewish State. 

It was only following the Six-day War in 1967 that Arab refugees living in these territories began identifying themselves as part of an Arab “Palestinian people.” One can’t help but wonder why these Arab/Palestinians suddenly discovered a national identity (at the urging of Russia) after Israel won the war, but not during the “Jordanian occupation”? 

Yashiko Sagamori, a spokesman for the National Unity Coalition for Israel, made the point very well in a recent article: ”If you are so sure that Arab/Palestine, the country, goes back through most of recorded history, I expect you to be able to answer a few basic questions about this country of Palestine:                  1. “When was it founded and by whom?                    2. What were its borders?                                          3. What was its capital?                                      4.What were its major cities?                                     5. What constituted the basis of its economy?          6. What was its form of government?                         7. What was its currency?                                         8. Can you name at least one Arab/Palestinian leader before Arafat?                                                  9. Was Arab/Palestine ever recognized by a country whose existence, at that time or now, leaves no room for interpretation?                                                     10. What was the language of the country of Arab/Palestine?                                                         11. What was the prevalent religion of the country of Arab/Palestine?                                                        12. What was the name of its currency?                   13. Choose any date in history and tell what was the approximate exchange rate of the Arab Palestinian monetary unit against the US dollar, German mark, GB pound, Japanese yen, or Chinese yuan on that date.                                                                         14. And, finally, since there is no such country today, what caused its demise and when did it occur?       15. “And here is the least sarcastic question of all: If the people you mistakenly call “Palestinians” are anything but generic Arabs collected from all over – or thrown out of — the Arab world, if they really have a genuine ethnic identity that gives them right for self-determination, why did they never try to become independent until Arabs suffered their devastating defeat in the Six Day War?” 

Mr. Sagamori stated the facts correctly. There has never been a land known as Arab/Palestine governed by Arab/Palestinians, there is no coinage.
Arab/Palestinians are regular Arabs, indistinguishable from Jordanians, Syrians, Lebanese, Iraqis, Egyptians, etc., who have all lived for hundreds of years under Turkish rule, and then, after World War I, under British rule. There is no language known as Arab/Palestinian. There is no distinct Arab/Palestinian culture. There is no such an entity as an Arab “Palestinian people.” The name “Palestine” was created in the year 70 CE when the Romans committed genocide against the Jews, smashed the Temple and declared that the land of Israel would be no more. From then on, the Romans promised, it would be known as Palestine. The name was derived from the Philistines, a Goliathian people conquered by the Jews centuries earlier (who are no longer in existence). It was a way for the Romans to add insult to injury. (They also tried to change the name of Jerusalem to Aelia Capitolina, but that had even less staying power.) 

The present conflict between Israel and the Arabs has absolutely nothing to do with any occupation. In 1967, when there was not one standing Jewish settlement and no habitation or occupation, five Arab countries — Jordan, Syria, Egypt, Iraq and Lebanon joined by Saudi Arabia — contrived a plan to annihilate Israel and “drive the Jews into the sea.”
Israel fought back and won the war — and liberated the territories from which it was attacked. Keep in mind that in 1967 the Arabs controlled 99.9 percent of the Middle East lands. The over 6 million sq. mi. of territory allocated to the Arabs by the Supreme Allied Powers which at the April 1920 San Remo Conference, also incorporated the 1919 Balfour Declaration and allocated all of Palestine about 120,000 sq. km. or 47,000 sq. miles to the Jewish people as their reconstituted historical land under international law and agreements. It also nominated the British as trustee for the Jewish people to implement the Mandate for Palestine, promote Jewish immigration and help in re-establishing Palestine - Israel as the National Home for the Jewish people on their ancestral land. There was also the January 1919 Faisal Weizmann Agreement. 

Israel represented less than one-tenth of 1 percent of the land mass, since the Arabs were given over 6 million sq. mi. of territory with a wealth of oil reserves after WWI. But even that was too much for the Arabs. They wanted it all. No matter how many land concessions the Israelis make, it will never be enough for the Arab/Palestinians.                                    During the summer of 2000 at Camp David, Yasser Arafat was offered by Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak 98 percent of the so-called “occupied territories” and a first time ever an Arab/Palestinian State with its capital in East Jerusalem. Arafat rejected the Israeli offer and initiated three years of horrific bloodshed in Israel.
The history of the Arab/Palestinians In Hal Lindsey’s book “Everlasting Hatred: The Roots of Jihad,” he traces the history of the people now being deceptively called the “Palestinians.” I want to quote a few critical paragraphs. “In the 7th century, the Muslims took control of Jewish Palestine for the first time. From 635 CE until the Crusaders and afterwards until 1917, the Muslims ruled it with different governments, with only a few interruptions by the European Crusaders. During that span of time, the land was plundered and reduced to total desolation. Many people who traveled the land in the 19th century remarked on the fact that Palestine - Israel was as desolate as the moon and very few people lived there. 

”In 1867, Mark Twain remarked about his visit to the Holy Land in his book, ‘The Innocents Abroad.’ He lamented: ‘Stirring scenes occur in the valley [of Jezreel] no more. There is not a single village throughout its whole extent – not for 30 miles in either direction. There are two or three small clusters of Bedouin tents, but not a single permanent habitation. One may ride 10 miles hereabouts and not see 10 human beings.’ Twain described the country as ‘A desolate country whose soil is rich enough but is given over wholly to weeds. A silent, mournful expanse. We never saw a human being on the whole route. There was hardly a tree or a shrub anywhere. Even the olive and the cactus, those fast friends of a worthless soil, had almost deserted the country.’
”By all eyewitness accounts of that era, Palestine - Israel was a total desolation. There were virtually no trees and no people. Because of lack of trees, the weather changed and it rarely ever rained. The irrigation systems of the once fertile valleys were all destroyed, rendering most areas into malaria-ridden swamps. The terraces of the mountainsides were torn down, causing terrible erosion that left only barren rocks. This was the condition of Palestine - Israel by the beginning of the 19th century. 

”It was at this time that Jews began to flee severe persecutions in Russia, Eastern Europe and Arab countries. In the early to mid-1800's, some Jews came to Palestine - Israel and, with the generous aid of some successful Jews, began to buy property from Muslim Ottoman Turks at exorbitant prices. The Muslims thought the land was worthless anyway, so they sold it to the ‘dumb Jews’ for extremely inflated prices. ”To everyone’s amazement, the Jews were very successful at reclaiming the land. Many of them died from malaria and the rigorous life the work demanded, but they performed an agricultural miracle that made the land green and very productive again. As a result of their success, poor migrant workers from the surrounding Muslim countries began to flood in to work for the Jews.
 The Jews literally became victims of their own success – almost all of the people calling themselves “Arab/Palestinians” today are the descendants of those migrant workers. 
”When the Hashemite Tribe, who were rulers over Mecca and Medina (which was a Jewish city for over a thousand years) for centuries, were driven out by the Saudis, the British gave them control over the vastly greater numbers of ‘migrant workers’ in Trans Jordan. The British said this would be, in effect, “The State of Arab/Palestine.” Instead, the Hashemites, who make up only about 20 percent of the population, turned it into their own kingdom and called it the Kingdom of Jordan. The also prohibited Jews from living in those lands, expelled the Jews and confiscated all their assets. ”When the Jordanians and Egyptians controlled the so-called West Bank aka Judea and Samaria and the Gaza Strip for 19 years (1948 to 1967), there was never a thought of giving the disorganized mass of ‘migrant workers’ a state. Why? Because they knew there was no cohesive, homogeneous people known as Arab ‘Palestinians.’
”The current efforts of Jordan and Egypt and all the rest of the Muslim Middle East nations to give these same people a state is clearly a ploy to get a foothold inside Israel. It is a strategic accommodation to establish a base from which the final assault against Israel can be made. What they couldn’t do militarily is now being facilitated through the advisory none-binding recommendation of the United Nations and the European Union. ”Muslims will never accept a permanent presence of infidels in what they claim is sacred Islamic soil. Especially Jewish infidels, for which the Koran reserves its most vehement condemnations. In their minds, the Koran and Allah will not let them accept Jews in what they view as their third holiest site.” 

The truth about the refugees Harvard University professor Ruth Wisse wrote these wise words in The Wall Street Journal (June 16, 2003): “Unfortunately, the Arab war against Israel is no more a territorial conflict than was al Qaeda’s strike against America, and it can no more be resolved by the ‘road map’ than anti-Americanism could be appeased by ceding part of the U.S. to an Islamist enclave.
From the moment in 1947 when Jewish leaders accepted and Arab rulers rejected the none-binding recommendation of the U.N. partition plan of Palestine (which makes the partition non-binding with no legal standing. The U.N. is only an advisory board), the Arab-Israeli conflict bore no further likeness to conventional territorial struggles. Arab rulers defied the U.N. charter by denying the legitimacy of a member state. 

Arab countries refused to acknowledge the existence of a single Jewish land. Arab rulers did not object to Israel because it rendered the Arab/Palestinians homeless. Rather, they ensured that the immigrant Arab/Palestinians should remain homeless so that they could organize their politics around opposition to Israel. “At any point during the past 72 years, Arab governments could have helped the immigrant Arab/Palestinians settle down to a decent life. They could have created the infrastructure of an autonomous Arab/Palestine on the West Bank aka Judea and Samaria of the Jordan and the Gaza territory that Egypt controlled until 1967, or encouraged the resettlement of Arab/Palestinians in Jordan or in the 47,000 sq. mi. of land, the Arab countries confiscated from the million Jewish families they terrorized and expelled. Many Arabs did relocate to Jordan, which constitutes the lion’s share of the original mandate of Palestine that was allocated to the Jewish people as the reconstituted historical National Home. Rather than fund the Arab/Palestine Liberation Organization to foment terror against Israel they could have endowed Arab/Palestinian schools of architecture, engineering, medicine and law.


What Israel did for its expelled million Jewish refugees families and their children from Arab lands, Arabs could have done much more sumptuously for the Arab/Palestinians displaced by the same conflict. Instead, Arab rulers cultivated generations of refugees in order to justify their ongoing campaign against the ‘usurper.’”
The best kept secret The early founding fathers of modern Israel, even if they were not religious, were deeply steeped in the realization of the Jewish Biblical connection to the land. David Ben Gurion, for example, had an appreciation of the necessity of anchoring a modern, even secular Israeli state in biblical and Jewish tradition. Yet, tragically, this has changed dramatically in recent years. You will rarely, if ever, hear an Israeli leader state the truest and most moral justification for a Jewish presence in the Holy Land: G-d’s gift to the Jewish people. I am sure our leaders are trying to do the best for their country, but the practical consequences of this policy are counterproductive. 

Take the latest International Court of Justice (ICJ) recommended decision in Hague as an example. Much of the Jewish world is furious at the ICJ who reached a decision (which is only a recommendation) last week that Israel had a right to build a separation wall for self-defense only within its own national borders, not within the disputed territories. Build the wall as high as you like, the ICJ recommendation declared, but only inside Israel, not inside territory which has been annexed.
Israeli leaders, sadly, did not present to the world an authentic response to this decision. Ariel Sharon declared, “We have a right for self defense.” The recommended response of the ICJ was simple: “Great! So build a wall inside your own home; do not build it on Arab/Palestinian soil.” This pattern, in one form or another, has been repeating itself for years now. The Arabs are protesting against Israel, saying, “You have annexed our land; you are building settlements on our soil; you are intruding into our territories.” And Israel routinely responds: “Yes, you have the right to create on these territories an Arab/Palestinian state, but we have a right for self-defense.”
The world, we know, has embraced the Arab point of view. Europe and other nations are supporting BDS against Israel. Condemnation of Israel as an apartheid state has become the norm. Is this pure anti-Semitism? I do not think so. The world is sympathetic to the Arab propaganda against Israel, because Israel left itself has wrongly embraced the Arab version of “truth.”
Israel never refuted the core Arab claim that the territories liberated and captured in the 1967 war constitute ancient Jewish Palestinian land. Israel only states, that notwithstanding the questionable validity of the Arab claim, she has a right for self-defense. So the world says: “OK, so defend yourself in your territories, not in theirs.”
This, I believe, remains Israel’s profoundest diplomatic and strategic error. In many of its actions, it treats the 1967 territories as though they belonged to Israel which is a fact of history; yet in its words, Israel agrees to the Arab claim that this is disputed Arab/Palestinian land. So the world is confused: The Arab position is clear to all; the Israeli position is shrouded in mystery. Do they believe this land belongs to them or not? If yes, let them stop saying that they consent to create an Arab/Palestinian State there. If not, why do they still maintain a presence there? The Arabs are not confused. Israel is. And when Jews are confused about who they are and what they believe in, the world resents them. Today, many in Israel state that there will be no Arab-Palestinian State West of the Jordan River and that Jordan is the Arab-Palestinian State, which is of historical Jewish territory.
“You are the nation who heard G-d speak at Sinai; if you guys can’t speak moral truth, you must be up to something really devilish.” As long as the status of the entire country remains ambiguous, the terror campaign against Israel will, Heaven forbid, continue. The Arabs will view Israel’s moral and political ambiguity as a green-light to proceed with their aspiration to “liberate all of Palestine - Israel from the Zionist entity.” And the world will sympathize with this craving for statehood and freedom.

Israel must stand up and put an end to the ambivalence around Jewish ownership of the land. Israel must state clearly equivocally that “There will be no more negotiations on even a single inch of the land of Israel. We have attempted to negotiate land for peace with our neighbors; we have offered them 98 percent of the territories and an independent Arab state side-by-side with our state. Yet they have reciprocated by sending suicide bombers to our pizza shops, cafés, supermarkets, schools, and private homes. They have blown to pieces hundreds of innocent Jewish men and women. They have stabbed and car bombed many Israelis and used cars to ram and kill people. They consistently fire rockets at Israeli communities. One cannot give land to leaders who teach their followers to play soccer with Jewish skulls and who inculcate in their children’s hearts, from infancy onward, with venomous hatred toward the people of Israel.” 

Israel should allow anybody who wishes to depart for another country to do so. There are 22 Arab countries in the Middle East on over 6 million sq. mi. of territory, with a wealth of oil reserves and one tiny Jewish country, the size of New Jersey. Israel must reclaim its permanent sovereignty over all of the territories and crush every vestige of terror to oblivion. Jews should be encouraged to live in their entire homeland. This will save not only countless Jewish lives, but also scores of Arab lives. It will once and for all purge the region from continuous bloodshed and terror. 

This is not occupied territory. It is the land of Israel, given by G-d to the Jewish people. Let’s set the record clear: This is Jewish land, not Arab land. Let all Jews and people of moral standing unite and encourage Israel to bring life and peace to all good people in the region, Jew and Arab alike. 

P.S.
"No Jew is at liberty to surrender the right of the Jewish Nation and the Land of Israel to exist. No Jewish body is sanctioned to do so. Even all the Jews alive today have no authority to yield any piece of land whatsoever. This right is reserved to the Jewish People throughout the generations. This right cannot be forfeited under any circumstances. Even if at some given time there will be those who declare that they are relinquishing this right, they have neither the power nor the authority to negate it for future generations. The Jewish Nation is neither obligated by nor responsible for any such waiver. Our right to this land, in its entirety, is enduring and eternal. And until the coming of the Redemption, we shall never yield this historic right."
David Ben-Gurion, First Prime Minister of Israel, speech to the 21st Zionist Congress, Basel 1937

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