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https://studentshare.org/history/1438370-war-and-peace.
The Zionist argument is that they appeared in Palestine in the late 19th century to reclaim their ancestral land. Jews purchased land and started putting up the Jewish community. Palestinian Arabs with violent opposition tried to force the Jewish out of the land, but the Zionists reacted with force to defend themselves. This same case exists up to date. The Zionist movement, from the start, desired to completely dispossess the indigenous Arab inhabitants so that Israel could be completely a Jewish state (Bennis 58). The land purchased by the Jewish Fund was in the custody of the Jewish and could not be sold or leased to Arabs.
The Arab population, as it became aware of the Zionists’ desires and intentions, it opposed further immigration of the Jewish. The Arab population also opposed the further sale of land to the Zionists. The sale of land to the Zionists exerted an immense danger to the existence of the Arab community in Palestine. Because of the opposition, the whole project of Zionism could not be realized without the backing of the British military.
The Zionists did not mind the real inhabitants of the land they believed in the colonialist view that the rights of the original inhabitants did not matter. All that the Zionists wanted was total or partial entitlement to the land. On the other hand, the Arab opposition to the Zionists was not based on anti-Semitism, but on a reasonable fear of dispossession of their populace. Because of these two oppositions, the conflict continues.
Palestine became an Arab and Islamic state by the end of the seventh century. Its boundaries and characteristics became known almost immediately. The occupants of the land at the time believed that they lived in a land known as Palestine. However, after the establishment of Israel in 1948, everything changed. The land, which the inhabitants of Palestine referred to as Palestine, part of it, was now Israel. Palestine and the Israelis oppose each other regarding the land. Each group seeks to fight for the land, which they believe is theirs. This opposition increases daily and deepens as the two groups engage in a fight and kill one another’s group. The fight could have been halted a long time ago if there existed no opposition to the land.
For a very long time, the ancient Arabs who have been existing on the land were the majority as the Zionists came to purchase land and establish their community. In this case, when the Arabs discovered the intentions of the Zionists of forcing out of the Arab community, the Arabs gained opposition to the move since they wanted to retain their ancestral land and at the same time, the Arabs were the majority. There was no way; the Arabs could have allowed a minor community to force them out of their inherited soil. On the other hand, the Zionists could not give up gaining ownership of the land for their benefit. As the two sides oppose each other, conflict continues to exist between the two communities (Tessler 73).
According to the founder of Zionism, the Zionists aimed to split the penniless population, who were the Arabs, across the border by procuring employment in transit countries. The process of expropriating and removing the poor was to be carried out circumspectly and discreetly. However, at different locations in Palestine, Arab farmers refused to move from the land that the Jewish Fund had purchased from the Turkish authorities. The Turkish authorities evicted the farmers upon the Jewish Fund’s request. The indigenous Jews of Palestine also opposed the Zionism move. They did not see any reason for the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine. In addition, they did not desire to worsen relations with the Arabs.
The Zionist intentions were to completely dispossess the current non-Jewish residents of Palestine. However, the biggest percentage of the non-Jewish population was against the program of the Zionists. The British officers believed that the intentions of the Zionists could only become possible if there was a force of arms to support the Zionists. The officers thought that to initialize the program, Zionists required thousands of soldiers (Frank 89).
In conclusion, the existence of opposition between the two sides of the conflict is evident. There have been international influences on the issue of opposition mobilization. The international community has sought to support the two opposing sides, but this has only led to the worsening of the conflict that has seen itself through a timeline of over sixty years. If there were no opposition mobilization, the conflict could not have existed this long.