EFTA01883589
EFTA01883590 DataSet-10
EFTA01883591

EFTA01883590.pdf

DataSet-10 1 page 311 words document
V11 P17 V16 V12 D6
Open PDF directly ↗ View extracted text
👁 1 💬 0
📄 Extracted Text (311 words)
To: From: e "rey ps em Sent: Sun 5/20/2012 10:37:31 PM Palestine was never an exclusively Arab country, although Arabic gradually became the language of most the population after the Muslim invasions of the seventh century. No independent Arab or Palestinian state ever existed in Palestine. When the distinguished Arab-American historian, Princeton University Prof. Philip Hitti, testified against partition before the Anglo-American Committee in 1946, he said: "There is no such thing as 'Palestine' in history, absolutely not." Prior to partition, Palestinian Arabs did not view themselves as having a separate identity. When the First Congress of Muslim-Christian Associations met in Jerusalem in February 1919 to choose Palestinian representatives for the Paris Peace Conference, the following resolution was adopted: We consider Palestine as part of Arab Syria, as it has never been separated from it at any time. We are connected with it by national, religious, linguistic, natural, economic and geographical bonds.6 In 1937, a local Arab leader, Auni Bey Abdul-Hadi, told the Peel Commission, which ultimately suggested the partition of Palestine: "There is no such country [as Palestine]! 'Palestine' is a term the Zionists invented! There is no Palestine in the Bible. Our country was for centuries part of Syria." The representative of the Arab Higher Committee to the United Nations submitted a statement to the General Assembly in May 1947 that said "Palestine was part of the Province of Syria" and that, "politically, the Arabs of Palestine were not independent in the sense of forming a separate political entity." A few years later, Ahmed Shuqeiri, later the chairman of the PLO, told the Security Council: "It is common knowledge that Palestine is nothing but southern Syria." Palestinian Arab nationalism is largely a post-World War I phenomenon that did not become a significant political movement until after the 1967 Six-Day War and Israel's capture of the West Bank. EFTA_R1_00297867 EFTA01883590
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
55befd21f4c9a85df17277d96d0eb2b2ab53f470020abc7bf2923befe929148e
Bates Number
EFTA01883590
Dataset
DataSet-10
Document Type
document
Pages
1

Comments 0

Loading comments…
Link copied!