Originally posted by GePap
Did the inhabitants of Palestine have ANY say in their own fate back in 1919?
This is the attitude I find most vexing, most obnoxious, most troubling. If one believes in the principle of national self-determination, then what right at all did a bunch of Brits have to decide the fate of the Arabs and Jews living in Palestine?
And if national self-determination is not paramount, if some other international customs take precedent, how can one then argue against say the Palestinians being afforded the rights they were promised as human beings, of being able to determine their own lot?
Did the inhabitants of Palestine have ANY say in their own fate back in 1919?
This is the attitude I find most vexing, most obnoxious, most troubling. If one believes in the principle of national self-determination, then what right at all did a bunch of Brits have to decide the fate of the Arabs and Jews living in Palestine?
And if national self-determination is not paramount, if some other international customs take precedent, how can one then argue against say the Palestinians being afforded the rights they were promised as human beings, of being able to determine their own lot?
The political structure was almost non existant, based on non organized people and primitive clan-like strucutre. It was more developed in the city where there were older respected clans with political authority. That however did not, to my knowledge spread beyond local influence - and there was only basic understanding among said clans of the national political idea. Much less any kind of popular support of cohesion to give it foundation.
As such - the palestinian inhabitants had very little to say about their own fate mostly because they had no organized structure to do so, nor did most of them see anything else than a continuation of their either nomadic or feudal like structure.
The higher arab committies were formed with the active help of the british in hopes to answer the need for representation of the arab inhabitants.
Sadly reality hit home, and as far as I understand, they spent most of the time bickering over authority between rivaling clans, and had very little connection to the majority of arab falah peasants. Nomadic tribes had no representation at all.
The brits ruled the area out of international authority by the league of nation. You can call it wrong in retrospect - but it was perfectly justified then. Most of the political ideas that drive you to criticise it now, simply did not exist in 1919.
The palestinians' basic rights as human being were never in question, neither by the british authorities nor by jewish activists who legally bought lands and usually compensated the previous inhabitants or even hired them. Infact, all early zionist works talk about different ideas of a bi-national state, or a two state federation. You're
3. in 1946 most Zionists were amenable to a partition, which would have meant the Palestinians would have had their own state for their millions, and the Jews their state for their millions.
Except that back in 1946 the population in Palestine was still overwhelmingly Arab. So who were the Zionists to be making decisions about the fate of lands inhabitted by non-Jews?
The decision about the fate of lands inhabited by non jews was left to the higher arab council, and the mediation attempts between the sides were held by the US and the british.
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So the Arabs in palestine were to bear the European's shame? nice. [/QUOTE]
Which rights did they lose exactly?
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