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Alan Segal's avatar

The author fails to acknowledge the religious component to the conflict. Muslims will never accept Jewish sovereignty on land Muslims claim for themselves. Before there was a Jewish state, Muslims killed Jews for no other reason then because Jews existed in the same space as Muslim Arabs.

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Liat Portal's avatar

Thank you so much to all the readers! I was honored to read your comments and see the conversations sparked by the recent blog post here.

First, let me clarify that this current post is part of a series that describes the hardships faced by Jewish people who arrived in the Land of Israel region in the late 19th century from the Russian Empire until World War I and before the British Mandate took effect. The series described what happened to the Jewish community since the assassination of Tzar Alexander, including the sanctions and laws enacted by the Russian Empire specifically targeting the Jewish community. These laws and sanctions forbid Jews from owning land and deny them employment in certain professions or conducting trade on specific days, which led to mass emigration. While many Jews emigrated to the Americas, only a small fraction - less than 3% - chose to come to the Land of Israel. The series highlights that the Jews chose to emigrate to the less popular region at that time to build a new life in other parts of the world where they wouldn’t face oppression. They embodied initiative, vision, and the creation of alternatives, forming entire communities in times when Jews faced extreme oppression in Europe and Russia, leading up to the Holocaust during World War II. In other words, despite everything that jews faced since the Babylonian exile, which included pogroms, oppressive laws, massacres, and humiliations, they did not adopt a victim mindset. Instead, they forged alternatives and created a new life for themselves rather than dwelling on past grievances or seeking revenge.

In describing this post's context, I shed light on the changes within the Ottoman Empire that affected its citizens internally, aspects often overlooked or unmentioned in many historical discussions. It’s often forgotten that the Ottoman Empire, an Arab - Muslim empire, ruled over the Arab world for 600 years, during which it oppressed, exploited, and weakened its people. This empire served only the elite, the aristocracy, and the Muslim religious leadership, ensuring that its residents remained uneducated, lacking legal status, and denied any concern for their well-being, health, or livelihood. Due to the transformations in land ownership in the world during the 19th century, the wealthy Muslim landowners, concerned only with their tax payments, sold extensive lands to Jews without any compassion or concern for the fellahin (peasants) who had worked these lands for generations. This indicates that the elite and aristocracy had low moral values, a lack of basic ethics, and disgraceful attitudes that were customary and common among them toward the lower classes within their own empire. This is something the Arab world needs to deal with; even more than a century has passed because their own leadership betrayed them first. Moreover, as part of the Industrial Revolution, these wealthy landowners refused to invest in agricultural technology that could have advanced these peasants, keeping them ignorant and incapable of competing with the industrialized world’s production pace. They abandoned the peasants without notice and simply sold the lands to anyone who could pay.

Understanding this perspective does not detract from the Jewish claim to the land of Israel; rather, it strengthens two main points. First, in the Arab world, there is a lack of mutual responsibility and concern for the weaker citizens. Even today, more than a hundred years later, they don’t have organizations to help the people; they don’t have unions or provide decent healthcare as a social responsibility. No national systems are dedicated to education, health, employment, or human capital investment. In 2024, we keep hearing that women are not allowed to go to school, hold specific professions, or issue driver's licenses. In some regions, people have succeeded in acquiring education and creating alternatives. Still, as a collective Arab group, the Arab nation suppresses education, progress, and knowledge, dragging their entire community down in comparison to Europe or the United States nations.

Second, the Jews, who believed in their right to the land since biblical times, did not foresee in the late 19th century that World War I would break out in 1914, bringing an end to the Ottoman Empire, nor did they anticipate the British Mandate or that in 1948 David Ben-Gurion would declare the establishment of the State of Israel. When the Russian Empire enacted laws against Jews, they chose to immigrate to the Land of Israel, found a way within the Ottoman legal system to own land, and purchased lands legally. They learned what was needed to establish Jewish settlements, how to purchase land legally, and how to build settlements (they tried dozens of settlement types that failed, and most people aren’t aware that only the Moshav and Kibbutz models survived after costly lessons). They learned how to build a community, create a culture, establish educational institutions, and invest in compulsory education. The Jewish community established organizations to aid settlement in Israel and institutions that would serve a future country without knowing when this country would happen. They worked hard to build the foundation and the infrastructure for a country they dream of having. They created, innovated, failed, and kept moving forward, not complaining that this was their land 2000 years ago or fostering a victim mindset over grievances toward the Romans, Mamluks, Crusaders, Byzantines, Hasmoneans, or Ottomans. They stood up and created despite being oppressed, massacred, defined as second-class citizens, or when they went through the Holocaust. They did not bury themselves in the past or nurture resentment. They rose every time they were knocked down and created a new reality.

In conclusion, the Arab world consistently nurtures resentment toward the British, French, Americans, and Jews over the period between World War I and World War II. However, this period was merely 40-50 years, after 600 years, during which the Arabs were the ones in control and oppressed the people of the Ottoman Empire far more than any other external force. It is time for the Arab world to take direct responsibility for its own leadership and demand accountability. Their governments need to care for the well-being of their people now, to move beyond the past and build a new future instead of brainwashing these people that in a few years, all Muslims in the world will control Israel, Europe, and the United States. The mechanism of maintaining resentment and hatred continues to oppress Arab people and upholds a regime that harms them in every aspect of life more than anything else.

It is time they realize that they are the only ones responsible for their fate and that creating a better life is in their hands.

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