Mt5 LT1 Handout #1 Name:___________________________ Date: _____ Block: ______ World History Measurement Topic 5: The Cold War Learning Target #1: Explain the development of the Jewish state: Israel Directions: 1st- Number the paragraphs 2nd - Independently read the passage, and circle words you don’t know. Predict the meaning of the words. 3rd- Read the passage a second time with a partner, highlight information and write side notes. 4th- Answer the questions in complete sentences. Why was Israel created as a Jewish state in 1948? Ancient Palestine Israel, once known as Palestine, is the ancient homeland of both the Jewish Israelis and Arab Muslim Palestinians. The first Jews came to Palestine around 2000 BC from southern Mesopotamia, now Iraq. Initially settling in the hilly interior of Palestine, the Jews believed this land was their Promised Land, the land that had been given to them in a covenant by their God in exchange for their promise to live according to God’s laws. The Palestinians, on the other hand, were of Greek origin who initially settled on the coastal plain around the same time. The Diaspora About 200 years after both groups settled in the area, the Jews established a kingdom called Israel. The Roman Empire later conquered the Israeli kingdom and renamed it Palestine. The Jews revolted against Roman rule in 70 AD. The Jewish revolt resulted in the diaspora, during which the majority of Jews were forced from Palestine and scattered throughout Southwest Asia and Europe. While the Jewish population dispersed, the Palestinians remained in the region and mixed with other people there, mainly Arabs. Zionism After the Roman expulsion, the Jews who were forced out lived as minorities in different lands, particularly Europe. These Jewish minority groups were often unwelcome guests in their new countries. As outsiders, these Jews faced anti-Semitism, or hatred and discrimination towards Jewish people. From the time of the diaspora, most Jews dreamed of a return to their ancestral homeland in the region of Palestine. In the 1800s, European Jews began organizing political movements aimed at moving back to Palestine and recreating a Jewish state. This movement became known as Zionism. In both western and eastern Europe, many Jews were tired of anti-Semitism. Therefore many joined the Zionist cause, participating in boycotts and protests. Jewish Immigration into Palestine Thanks to Zionism, waves of Jews had already begun immigrating to Palestine in the late 1800s. By 1914, Jews made up almost 10% of Palestine’s population. At this time, Palestine was ruled by the Ottoman Empire and occupied mostly by Arab Muslims. These Palestinians increasingly feared that Zionism was an extension of European colonialism in Palestine, taking their land and rights. Eventually, increased Jewish immigration and land purchases intensified these fears of Zionism among the Palestinian peasants. While initially most Jewish immigrants were poor, over time, their situations improved as they settled the land and formed communities. Meanwhile, Palestinian refugees who had been displaced from their land as a result of Jewish Zionist settlements moved into overcrowded cities and became increasingly impoverished. Mt5 LT1 Handout #1 Name:___________________________ Date: _____ Block: ______ Ottoman Empire Collapses In World War I (1914-1918), the Ottoman Empire, who controlled most of Southwest Asia, joined forces with France, and Russia. During the war, Zionist leaders lobbied the British to allow for a Jewish country in Palestine should the British win. After winning WWI, the Allied Powers officially claimed the remnants of the former Ottoman Empire in the SanRemo Agreement of 1920. According to this agreement, Britain would take control of Palestine under the mandate system. Although many religions claim ownership of Palestine, British control over the region did not become a large problem until about the 1930’s and 40’s. During this time, World War II was beginning and the Jewish community was being persecuted by Hitler’s Nazi party in the Holocaust. Looking for a safe haven during a turbulent time, Jews opted to immigrate to Palestine, which they believed was their rightful home. UN Partition Plan By 1936, Arab Palestinian discontent with British colonial rule and mass Jewish immigration erupted in a three year violent conflict known as the Arab Revolt. By 1947, with British soldiers tired of policing Arab-Jewish violence, the British government turned Palestine over to the United Nations (U.N). The U.N. intended to solve the Palestinian-Israeli conflict by partitioning Palestine into two states, one Jewish and one Arab (Palestinian). While Zionist leaders initially accepted this plan as a step towards reclaiming the Promised Land, Arab leaders were strongly against any plan that called for the division of their homeland. At this time, there were 1.3 million Palestinians and a little over half a million Jews living in Palestine. As the majority population that had lived there for thousands of years, the Palestinians believed they had the right to govern all of Palestine. Even so, Jews favored a division of Palestine, and used biblical claims and anti-Semitic persecution as evidence that they should have their homeland. the Central Powers of Germany and Austria-Hungary in the fight against the Allied Powers of Great Britain, how the Jewish community was increasing in the area, and became fearful that they would lose their land and rights to them. Even though the 1947 U.N. partition plan was meant to solve the Jewish-Arab land dispute, the arrangement proved unpopular. In 1948, conflict between the two sides broke out in the First Arab-Israeli War. On May 14, 1948, towards the end of the First ArabIsraeli War, the Jewish State of Israel officially declared its independence. The First Arab-Israeli War ended in 1949, resulting in a variety of treaties that were supposed to protect both Palestinian and Israeli claims to the land. However, the treaties did not have much meaning and war still continues today, as Israel occupies various territories claimed by the Palestinians and the Palestinians fight for their land and rights. Also, various Arab Muslim political and religious extremist groups, such as Hamas, have committed acts of terror against Israelis, creating even more tension between the Jewish and Arab communities. Currently, the United Nations is still making an effort to resolve this conflict through various peace talks and peacekeeping acts. Questions: 1. Why is the land of Israel important to the religion of Judaism? 2. How did the diaspora affect the Jewish people? 3. What was the Zionism movement and it’s goal? Israeli Independence & More War Although the British believed that Palestine should be a national home for the Jewish people, the Arab Muslim community in Palestine disagreed. They began to notice 4. Why were the Palestinians and Israelis fighting? Mt5 LT1 Handout #1 Name:___________________________ Date: _____ Block: ______ Directions: The following questions are based on the accompanying documents/graphs/maps/quotes. As you read and analyze (think about) each document/graph/map/quote be sure to: 1nd - Independently read the chart, passage, and/or map 2 - Circle words you don’t know. Predict or find the meaning of the words. 3rd- Read the chart, passage and/or map a second time with a partner, highlight information and write side notes. 4th- Answer the questions in complete sentences. Document 1 nd Israeli Declaration of Independence (May 14, 1948) The land of Israel was the birthplace of the Jewish people. Here their spiritual, religious and national identity was formed. Here they achieved independence and created a culture of national and universal significance. Here they wrote and gave the Bible to the world… On November 29, 1947, the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted a Resolution for the establishment of an independent Jewish State in Palestine, and called upon the inhabitants of the country to take such steps as may be necessary on their part to put the plan into effect. This recognition by the United Nations of the right of the Jewish people to establish their Independent State may not be revoked. It is, moreover, the self-evident right of the Jewish people to be a nation, as all other nations, in its own Sovereign State. ACCORDINGLY, WE, the members of the National Council… HEREBY PROCLAIM the establishment of the Jewish State in Palestine, to be called ISRAEL. 1. According to the document, who created the independent Jewish state in Palestine? 2. According to the document, why does the National council feel that Palestine is the place the Jewish people should live? Mt5 LT1 Handout #1 Name:___________________________ Date: _____ Block: ______ Document 2 Arab League, “Declaration on the Invasion of Palestine” (May 15, 1948) The Arab League includes Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Jordan, and Yemen. England administered Palestine in a manner which enabled the Jews to flood it with immigrants and helped them to settle in the country... England did not pay regard to the interests or rights of the Arab inhabitants, the lawful owners of the country… Now that the British mandate over Palestine has come to an end, without there being a legitimate constitutional authority in the country, which would safeguard the maintenance of security and respect for law and which would protect the lives and properties of the inhabitants, the Governments of the Arab States declare the following: First: That the rule of Palestine should revert to its inhabitants… and that [the Palestinians] should alone have the right to determine their future. Second: Security and order in Palestine have become disrupted. The Zionist aggression resulted in the exodus [departure] of more than a quarter of a million of its Arab inhabitants from their homes… Seventh: The Governments of the Arab States recognize that the independence of Palestine, which has so far been suppressed by the British Mandate, has become an accomplished fact for the lawful inhabitants of Palestine. They alone, by virtue of their absolute sovereignty, have the right to provide their country with laws and governmental institutions. They alone should exercise the attributes of their independence, through their own means and without any kind of foreign interference, immediately after peace, security, and the rule of law have been restored to the country. 3. According to the document, who is part of the Arab League? 4. According to the document what should happen since the British mandate over Palestine is no longer in effect? 5. According to the document who should have control over Palestine? Cite evidence!!!!