What’s the Israel-Palestine conflict about? A simple guide

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It’s killed tens of thousands of people and displaced millions. And its future lies in its past. We break it down.

 

 

The Israeli-Palestinian conflict has claimed tens of thousands of lives and displaced many millions of people and has its roots in a colonial act carried out more than a century ago.

With Israel declaring war on the Gaza Strip after an unprecedented attack by the armed Palestinian group Hamas on Saturday, the world’s eyes are again sharply focused on what might come next.

 

Hamas fighters have killed more than 800 Israelis in assaults on multiple towns in southern Israel. In response, Israel has launched a bombing campaign in the Gaza Strip, killing more than 500 Palestinians. It has mobilised troops along the Gaza border, apparently in preparation for a ground attack. And on Monday, it announced a “total blockade” of the Gaza Strip, stopping the supply of food, fuel and other essential commodities to the already besieged enclave in an act that under international law amounts to a war crime.

But what unfolds in the coming days and weeks has its seed in history.

For decades, Western media outlets, academics, military experts and world leaders have described the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as intractable, complicated and deadlocked.

Here’s a simple guide to break down one of the world’s longest-running conflicts:

What was the Balfour Declaration?

  • More than 100 years ago, on November 2, 1917, Britain’s then-foreign secretary, Arthur Balfour, wrote a letter addressed to Lionel Walter Rothschild, a figurehead of the British Jewish community.
  • The letter was short – just 67 words – but its contents had a seismic effect on Palestine that is still felt to this day.
  • It committed the British government to “the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people” and to facilitating “the achievement of this object”. The letter is known as the BALFOURD
  • In essence, a European power promised the Zionist movement a country where Palestinian Arab natives made up more than 90 percent of the population.
  • A British Mandate was created in 1923 and lasted until 1948. During that period, the British facilitated mass Jewish immigration – many of the new residents were fleeing Nazism in Europe – and they also faced protests and strikes. Palestinians were alarmed by their country’s changing demographics and British confiscation of their lands to be handed over to Jewish settlers.

 

What happened during the 1930s?

    The Arab Revolt, which lasted from 1936 to 1939, resulted from escalating tensions.
    To protest British colonialism and rising Jewish immigration, the newly created Arab National Committee called for Palestinians to go on strike, withhold tax payments, and boycott Jewish products in April 1936.
    The British brutally crushed the six-month strike, launching a huge arrest campaign and carrying out punitive home demolitions, a technique that Israel continues to use against Palestinians today.
    The Palestinian peasant resistance organization led the second phase of the revolution, which targeted British forces and colonialism.
    Britain had amassed 30,000 troops in Palestine by the second half of 1939. Villages were bombarded from the air.


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