- LadyinRetirement wrote:
- I don't know an awful lot about this, Paul. I see that there was a protest (or have you already mentioned that in one of the links cited) by Palestinians last year. [url=https://www.independent.co.uk %E2%80%BA News %E2%80%BA World %E2%80%BA Middle East]https://www.independent.co.uk › News › World › Middle East[/url] A neighbour I was quite friendly with who sadly died of cancer a little over 5 years ago was the widow of a Palestinian man. He was from a Christian background and apparently he said that pre-1948 (he was older than his wife though she was a widow by the time I knew her) people got along reasonably well in what was then Palestine, in fact his first girlfriend was Jewish.
It's probably coincidence but for some of the time I worked in London I lodged in what used to be "metropolitan Essex" in Ilford (now part of the London Borough of Redbridge). There was a housing estate there which was either Victorian or Edwardian, I'm not sure which but it was called "The Commonwealth Estate" because all or most of the roads were named after places in the British Commonwealth. There was - and still is - a Balfour Road there but I'm not sure if it was called after Balfour in Tasmania or Balfour Town in the Turks and Caicos islands.
Lady, thanks for your reply and coincidentally I just lost a message about all this a minute ago. Perhaps to too much googling while I was at my message..even the whole pagina closed and had to close my window and restart...
Yes, in my message I mentioned a book of the local library about a German Jew living in a kibbutz in the Twenties (not avaivlalble anymore I found out) and in the beginning there was cooperation as Jews buying land from local Arabs and even from Arab landlords not living there, but then they started with raids to occupy land and at the end the Arabs weren't happy anymore...but still when I visited Israel end of the Seventies, Jews said to me that they visited the Gazastrip for their teeth, while the dentists there were much cheaper...and see now...
I start again my lost message:
Seeking for the 100 anniverseary of the "declaration" and as I now have finished my research...I see of the 76 words declaration quite another interpretation by the Jews as by the Palestines..one emphasizing some words and the other other words... national home...without endagering the rights of other religions and persons in the regio...
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-41765892In the time of the BBC board I did a lot of research and contributing to threads about the Jewish-Palestinian question...it is not an easy question...but also a lot of irrationalism...saw a Frech documentary sometime ago about Jewish settlers on Palestine ground...a lady, very stringent saying...but that is land given by God to us...if you start with God in history...frightening...
I said also once that the British started perhaps with the Jewish home a day...but later another day in 1946..they had that much trouble that they even shortly had a British Madagascar Plan, shot down in flames because of the negative connotation of the German Madagascar Plan and on the French Passion Histoire there was even a lot of controversy about the French-Polish Madagascar Plan.
If I type "British Madascarplan 1946" I came immediately with one entry or two to my mentioning of it on Historum
But I read it all in an in depth study from Hans Jansen about the several Madagascar plans:
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13414180-het-madagascar-planI can it still consult in the local library. In the meantime there is now a German translation.
In the time I found on the internet that there were two Hans Jansen, a Dutch one and if I remember it well a Belgian from the VUB (university) and shortly religious teacher...but today nothing anymore, only the mentioned book...of the Belgian one...
Kind regards from Paul.