Monday, August 31, 2015

Why Was a Nazi Flag Flying from a Jerusalem Hotel FAST in the 1930s? - Jerusalem Pearl Hotel - Draiman


Why Was a Nazi Flag Flying from a Jerusalem Hotel FAST in the 1930s? - Jerusalem Pearl Hotel - Draiman



It was replaced by The Jerusalem Pearl Hotel in 1995 by the Draiman family. See picture at the bottom.
Posted: 30 Aug 2015 11:11 AM PDT
We recently published pictures from the British Library's Endangered Archives Programincluding this incredible picture of Jaffa Gate of Jerusalem's Old City which we have dated to the mid-1890s. Only in 1898 was the wall near Jaffa Gate breached so that carriages could drive into the city.

Jaffa Gate and A(braham) Fast's restaurant.  (Debbas Collection, British Library)
































We wanted to know more about the store on the left with the sign "A Fast. Restauranteur."  Was this a tourist establishment of Abraham Fast, who in 1907 took over a large hotel several hundred meters to the west of the building pictured above and renamed it "Hotel Fast?"

German troops marching in Jerusalem on Good Friday, 



April 6, 1917. The 
building on the left is 
the Fast Hotel. (Imperial War Museum, UK)

It was a leading hotel with 100 rooms, built around a court yard with Ionic, Corinthian and Doric columns.

Hotel Fast and its kosher restaurantwas a well-known establishment in Jerusalem for decades, and was probably considered by many to be a Jewish-owned establishment because of its Jewish clientele.
Nothing could be further from the truth.  The Fasts were German Templers.


The German consulate in the Fast Hotel, 1933.
(Wikimedia, Tamar Hayardeni)







They lived in Jerusalem's German Colony and were exiled by the British after World War I and during World War II because of their support for Germany.


We recently uncovered pictures of German troops marching in Jerusalem streets on Good Friday 1917. Readers were able to identify the building on the left as the Fast Hotel.

Our biggest surprise was finding this picture of the German consulate in the Hotel Fast with the German Swastika flag flying from the building. 


During World War II, the hotel was taken over by the British army command and turned into the Australian army club. 




The Hotel Fast housed
 Australian soldiers in World War II. 
 Here they are greeting the Australian 
Prime Minister Robert Menzies and the commander of the Australian troops in Australia, 
Lt. Gen. Thomas Blamey in February 1941. The Matson Photo Service, shown on the ground floor, was run by Eric Matson, originally from the American Colony Photographic Department. 
 Matson left Palestine in 1946 for the United States.  His collection of photos were bequeathed to the Library of Congress where many of the pictures in this 
website were found.  (Library of Congress



The Hotel Fast building was abandoned in 1967 and torn down in 1976 to make way for the Dan Pearl Hotel - Built by the Draiman family.


Friday, August 28, 2015

Israeli Peace Gestures Not Only Don't Work. They Make Things Worse. - YJD


Israeli Peace Gestures Not Only Don't Work. They Make Things Worse.



By Jonathan Tobin

Published April 1, 2015
image: http://www.jewishworldreview.com/op-art/obama_stands_with_israel.jpeg?ref=relatedBox%22
 Israeli Peace Gestures Not Only Don't Work. They Make Things Worse.
For those Americans who care about Israel, this is a time of crisis.
The Obama administration's reckless pursuit of détente with Iran and its anger over the reelection of Prime Minister Netanyahu has brought us to a critical moment in which it is now possible to imagine the United States abandoning Israel at the United Nations and taking steps to further distance itself from the Jewish state.
Many in this country place most of the blame for the problem on Netanyahu because of his willingness to directly challenge the president on Iran and his statements about the two-state solution and the Arab vote prior to his victory that have undermined his reputation among non-Israelis.
In response some well-meaning thinkers are proposing that the answer to the problem lies in gestures that Netanyahu could undertake that would both improve Israel's image and lower tensions with the United States.
But Netanyahu is right to not think the effort worth the bother.
The recent history of the conflict illustrates that Israeli concessions intended to prove their devotion to peace don't impress either the Arabs or foreign critics. In fact, they may make things worse.
While President Obama has been spoiling for fights with Israel's government since he took office in 2009, his temper tantrum about Netanyahu's victory now threatens to make his previous tilt toward the Palestinians seem trivial. So it is hardly surprising that veteran peace processors would think the time is right for Netanyahu to do something to appease the president's wrath.
That's the conceit of a Politico Magazine article jointly credited to former State Department official Dennis Ross and think tank figures David Makovsky and Ghaith Al-Omari that lays out a series of suggestions intended to calm things down and get Israel out of the presidential dog house as well as to calm the waters with both Europe and the Palestinians.
Ross, Makovsky, and Al-Omari are smart enough to realize that the time isn't right to revive a peace process that is dead in the water. The Palestinians have repeatedly rejected peace offers and show no sign that they are any more willing to accept the legitimacy of a Jewish state alongside one of their own no matter where its borders are drawn.
But they think it would be wise for Netanyahu to freeze building in settlements beyond the blocs that most concede would remain inside Israel in the event of a peace agreement.
Allowing the Palestinians the right to build more in parts of the West Bank that would, at least in theory, be part of their state would calm the waters as would less confrontational rhetoric from Netanyahu.
This would, they say, counter the campaign to delegitimize the prime minister and his nation and might prompt similar gestures from the Palestinians, such as a promise to avoid bringing their complaints to the United Nations instead of negotiating as they are committed to do under the Oslo Accords.
It all sounds very smart. Fair or not, Netanyahu is perceived as politically radioactive in Europe and, despite Israel's popularity in the United States, President Obama's efforts to turn both Iran and Israel into political footballs has undermined the bipartisan nature of the pro-Israel coalition. Gestures aimed at restoring Israel's good name seem the only answer to a crisis of these dimensions.
But as logical as that sounds, such a course of action not only wouldn't improve Israel's image, they would probably further damage it.
How can that be?

Because the recent history of the conflict teaches us that gestures even more far reaching than those suggested for Netanyahu have the opposite effect on both the Palestinians and their foreign cheerleaders.
Back in 2000, Prime Minister Ehud Barak offered Yasir Arafat an independent state in almost all of the West Bank, Gaza, and a share of Jerusalem.
Arafat turned him down flat and then launched a terrorist war of attrition known as the Second Intifada. After it began, I heard then Foreign Minister Shlomo Ben-Ami, an ardent peace processor, take some consolation from this depressing turn of events by saying that at least after this, no one in the world could fairly accuse Israel again of being the one responsible for the breakdown of the peace process.
But, contrary to his predictions, Israel's willingness to give so much and Palestinian terrorism only increased the level of vituperation against the Jewish state both in the Arab and Muslim worlds and in Europe. One doesn't know whether to laugh or to cry about Ben-Ami's naïveté.
The same thing happened after Ariel Sharon withdrew every last Israeli soldier, settler, and settlement from Gaza in 2005. Instead of proving for the whole world that Israel was ready to once again trade land for peace, that grand gesture did nothing to improve the country's image. Nothing, not the destruction of the green houses left behind by the Israelis for the Palestinians nor the conversion of Gaza into a terrorist base and then a Hamas-run independent state-in-all-but-name altered the conviction of a hostile world that the trouble was all the fault of the Israelis.
Indeed, it should be understood that the same dynamic was in place even before Barak and Sharon's gestures since the Oslo Accords themselves in which Israel brought Arafat back into the country, empowered him, and led to withdrawals that gave the Palestinians functional autonomy did little to improve Israel's image. As Evelyn Gordon wrote in a prescient COMMENTARY article published in January 2010, by signaling its willingness to withdraw from some territory, the Israelis did not convince anyone of their good intentions.
To the contrary, such concessions reinforced the conviction that Israel was a thief in possession of stolen property. The reaction from the Palestinians and hostile Europeans was not gratitude for the generosity of the Israelis in giving up land to which they too had a claim but a demand that it be forced to give up even more. Land for peace schemes and a belief in two states on the part of Israelis has always led most Palestinians to believe that their goal of forcing the Jews out of the entire country was more realistic, not less so.
The same dynamic applies to Netanyahu's gestures. It was he who endorsed a two-state solution and then backed up his statement with a settlement freeze in the West Bank for ten months. But Netanyahu got no credit for this or any concessions in return from the Palestinians. Netanyahu would do well to lower the tone of his rhetoric. A cautious leader, he has been rightly accused of carrying a small stick while speaking very loudly. But the expectation that settlement freezes or similar gestures will ease tensions with President Obama is a pipe dream. Even worse, along with Obama's hostility, these moves may only encourage Hamas to see it, as they have always viewed such gestures, as weakness and an invitation to another round of violence such as the one that led to thousands of rockets being launched from Gaza at Israeli cities.
The diplomatic isolation of Israel that Obama is contemplating is a serious problem. But Israelis have had enough of futile unilateral gestures and rightly so. They have accomplished nothing in the past.
Nor will they ameliorate the animosity for Israel in the Muslim and Arab worlds as well as Europe that is rooted more in anti-Semitism than in complaints about the location of the borders of the Jewish state. Until a sea change occurs in Palestinian political culture, Israel's leaders would be wise to make no more concessions that will only whet the appetite of the terrorists for more Jewish blood.
Nor should Netanyahu be under the illusion that President Obama will react with any more generosity toward Israel in the next two years than he has in the previous six. Far from staving off destruction as Ross and his friends think, their advice will likely lead to more diplomatic problems as well as more violence.
Just as doctors are advised by their Hippocratic oaths to do no harm, so, too, should Israel's prime minister be wise enough to eschew a repetition of the mistakes that he and his predecessors have made in the not-so-distant past.

Read more at http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0415/tobin040115.php3#QtOICDVKisoeIbSi.99

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Arab-Palestinians Stealing Jewish History About Jerusalem


Arab-Palestinians Stealing Jewish History About Jerusalem

Nadene Goldfoot                                                                  

Such Chutzpah! audacity. Saying that Jerusalem is the eternal city of Islam.  Hamas killers are now declaring that Jerusalem is the "Eternal Capital" of the Islamic world.  
                                                   

David, King of Israel,  ruled from 1010 BCE to 970 BCE, capturing the city in 1010 BCE.    Mohammad died in 632 CE, 1,600 years later.  Jerusalem is in the Judean Mountains, part of the land of the tribe of Judah which was part of the land of Israel and then the land of Judah.  David made Jerusalem the religious center of Israel by transferring the Ark of the Covenant there.  His empire reached from the Red Sea to the Euphrates.  Religious activities centered in Jerusalem.  

Jews have been saying that Jerusalem is the eternal capital of Israel!  It was King David who built it and used it for his capital.  It is Jerusalem that Jews have prayed for 2,000 years to return to in Psalm 137 when they were in Babylon by saying: "O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget its skill.  Let my tongue adhere to my palate if I fail to recall you, if I fail to elevate Jerusalem above my foremost joy."  Babylon's Nebuchadnezzar had captured Israelites and took them to Babylon in 597 BCE and again in 586 BCE.  The Persian, King Cyrus, allowed them to return after 50 years. 

                                                                            
Jerusalem 70 CE being burned by the Romans

Romans invaded and their rule was unbearable, causing the Jews to revolt in 66 CE. In 70 Jews saw Jerusalem burned by the invaders and many fled.   General Bar Kochba fought the Romans for 3 years from 132 to 135 and Jerusalem was liberated until he was killed in 135.  Then it was turned into a Roman colony and Jews were told they could not enter upon pain of death.  

It then became a Christian city under Constantine.  

Mohammad died in 632 and by 638 the city fell to the Caliph Omar. No one really loved or cared for the city which was the center of Judaism.  In our Jewish Bible (Old Testament) Jerusalem is mentioned 669 times, Zion, which refers to Jerusalem and Land of Israel are mentioned 154 times and this adds up to 823 times.  In the Christian Bible, Jerusalem is mentioned 154 times and Zion 7 times.  

                                                                         
Tower of David
Israelis have said that Jerusalem shall always be undivided.  Palestinians notice what works for Jews and then copies it.  Too bad they haven't done this in trying to build a more secure state for themselves by making peace with Israel and become workers and not killers.  

It's like the situation that King Solomon faced when two ladies brought forth one baby and each lady claimed it belonged to her.  King Solomon threatened to kill the baby by cutting it in half and giving half to each lady.  The real mother, the one who cared, said to give it to the other person.  So it was with the Jews and Eretz Israel.  When the UN planned to give the Arabs land and decided to cut it into 80% and 20% with the largest piece going to the Arab King Abdullah I, the Jews went along with it to save the land and save their own people.  Not so Fatah and Hamas terrorists.  They are fighting in every imaginable way to take all the land from the Jews including such lies.  Palestine was just a backwash piece of unwanted, weedy, mosquito infested swamp and desert that nobody wanted until the Jews rose up on their high horse and started to develop it when exiled Jews started returning in the 1880s.  

What were the Arabs doing then?  They weren't doing so well and had no ideas about "returning to the land" like the Jews.  The land had been under the Ottoman Empire for the past 600 years and this Turkish rule was harsh.  The Palestinian peasants' life was already deteriorating because of taxes.  Those that owned a bit of land  would be forced to borrow money to pay taxes, causing these farmers to put themselves under protection of the very rich bigger landowners or of the Muslim religious endowment fund (Waqf.  They were eventually compelled to give up their title to the land.  

In 1858 there was the Turkish Land Registry Law but until then there were no official deeds giving these fellahs title to land.  Their own Muslim culture consisted of blood-feuds between families, clans and entire villages including  incursions by Bedouin tribes.  So we see with the Muslim that the rich took advantage of the poor and drove them away.  By the 1880s when Jews were arriving because they were leaving anti-Semitic lands that were impossible to live in anymore, they bought land from large landowners who were anxious to leave as well and go to real cities such as Paris and Beirut.  The amazing thing is that the homes of some of the Arabs had Jewish symbols on them, showing past residents were Jews who had lived there. 
1967 meant being able to again stand at the Wall in Jerusalem
                                                                     
Outside the Knesset in Jerusalem-The Menorah
This anti-Semitic world has not yet recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, though it has been since 1967 when the Six Day War took place and Israel won against immeasurable odds.   Then we have the Palestinians who refuse to recognize Israel as a state let alone Israel as its capital.  They are getting away with it because the rest of the world is not ready to accept the fact that Jerusalem is the capital and always has remained so.  Face it.  It's importance has only been to the Jews.  Jesus recognized it as the capital, though, and held his Last Supper there.  This is the reason Christians are interested in it; for their own religious connection to the city.  Muslims have the saga of Muhammad flying there on his horse which they have deemed as the farthest mosque.  The religious places of Christians and Muslims are safely guarded by the Israeli government.  This has not proved true under their administrations for the Jews.  

It was c1320 BCE when Joshua entered Canaan.  Jerusalem was a watering hole then from the Old Stone Age period (Paleolithic).  Foundations date back to 3500-2000 BCE.  Old.  Yes.  Israel sits on ancient land.  However, Jews have never left the land nor had they left Jerusalem.  

"In ancient days, Judaism revolved around the Temple in Jerusalem. The Sanhedrin, which governed the nation, was located in the Temple precincts. The Temple service was at the heart of the Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur  holiday
                                                                                
The Temple was central to the Three pilgrim festivals, namely PassoverShavuot and Sukkot, when all Jews were incumbent to gather in Jerusalem. Every seven years all Jews were required to assemble at the Temple for the Hakhel reading. The forty-nine day Counting of the Omer recalls the Omer offering which was offered at the Temple every day between Passover and Shavuot. The eight-day festival of Hanukkah celebrates the rededication of the Second Temple after its desecration by Antiochus IV. A number of fast days including the Ninth of Av, theTenth of Tevet and the Seventeenth of Tammuz, all recall the destruction of the Temple." 

Tell me:  Would the Parisians allow Paris to be in foreign hands and have a name change? Jews lived here in Roman times.  
Would the Romans allow Rome to come another's rule? Jewish community here was the oldest in Europe and one of the oldest in the world dating from 139 BCE
Would Americans allow Washington DC to fall into China's hands?  1776 is its birthday.  

Resource:  http://www.jewishpress.com/news/breaking-news/hamas-declares-jerusalem-as-eternal-capital-of-islamic-world/2015/05/25/
http://www.wordfromjerusalem.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/the-case-for-israel-appendix2.pdf
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerusalem_in_Judaism

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Jerusalem Fell: Where Were Jews Allowed to Live? THE PALE OF SETTLEMENT

 Nadene Goldfoot                                                                        
Israel since 1967


Pale of Settlement 1835-1917
                                                                                           
Today we have about 14 million Jews in the world or about 0.02% of the population. 6 million live in Israel, 6 million in the USA, and about 2 million are scattered elsewhere, such as in France,  England, Germany and South Africa.  

In 1791, we had about 12 million Jews.  That was  224 years ago.  Since then we have gone through the Holocaust of WWII and have lost 6 million from Europe within about 6 years from 1939 to 1945.

Our lives were always dependent on the good graces of other countries that we found ourselves living in since the year 70 when the Romans had been occupying Judah and had managed to burn down Jerusalem, our biggest population center.  We've wandered from country to country for 2,000 years, chased out as the Christian religious heads decided we either had to convert or leave, often leaving us with no choice as we were targets for slaughter.
                                                                           
RASHI, 1040-1105
Germany was nice when Jews entered around the year 321.  In the 9th century or 1,000, Jews were living in several towns, and by the 10th century they were in Worms, a major center in the Rhineland including Mainz and Speyer, Cologne, etc, that became a center of intellectual life.  .
                                                                           
 Then the Crusades started and killed many, causing Jews to leave and enter countries of eastern Europe, always going north.  Many found themselves living in Poland.  By 1791, there were 5 million Jews in and around Russia.   Catherine the Great was the ruler of the Russian Empire, and she decided to force all Jews to live within the Pale of Settlement, countries designated where Jews were allowed to live.  This would solve her Jewish problem. Now the pale came from the Latin word, palus, which was a stake.  It was inferring an area enclosed by a fence or boundary.  That was it.  Jews couldn't go outside the Pale upon fear of death.  Jews were not allowed to enter the Russian Empire since the early 1500s.  Why?  The Russian Orthodox Church was afraid that Jews would enter and try to convert Christians to Judaism.  Jews hadn't tried to convert anyone for a thousand years.  Thus, the Pale of Settlement.  People are always eager to blame social problems on economics, which plays a part, but basically it always boils down to religious persecution.  Religion has caused much hatred when it is designed to be peaceful.
                                                                               
Not only Jews, but the native population also lived there in the Pale of Settlement.  The native population was not forced out.  The Jews just had to find their own space in there, and so they created little villages or shtetls.    Think of the play and movie, Fiddler on the Roof.   This amounted to 25 provinces of Czarist Russia and included Poland, Lithuania, White Russia (Belorussia-Belarus), Ukraine, Bessarabia (formerly Romanian, now in the Moldavian and Ukrainian republics),  the Crimea, and Latvia.

The native population of the Pale was mainly Catholic while in Russia they were Russian Orthodox.  The Pale's land made up about 20% of Russia's holdings when the Russian Empire  fell in 1917.  "During World War I, the Pale lost its rigid hold on the Jewish population when large numbers of Jews fled into the Russian interior to escape the invading German army. The Pale was finally abolished on March 20/April 2, 1917.   A large portion of the Pale, together with its Jewish population,then became part of Poland.
                                                                             
Nathan Goldfoot b: 1870


Charles, 1st son b: 1906

My grandmother was from Lazdijai, Suwalki, Lithuaniawhich was to become part of Poland, but she always told everyone she was a LITVAK!  She was proud of that as many academics came from Lithuania including the famous Vilna Gaon who was from Vilna, Lithuania. She immigrated to Idaho in about 1904.  The Gaon of Vilna was the Rabbi Eliyahu who was an expert on the Torah.  Her husband, whom she met in Council, Idaho, was from Telsiai, Lithuania,  which never became part of Poland, being in a different section.  He was a Litvak, also.  In 1495, 10,000 Jews were living in Vilna, Grodno and Kovno, Lithuania. Some had entered as early as 1321 and in 1398 those there were mostly Karaites in Troki. 

Today we can trace where our ancestors came from through DNA testing.  My grandmother's female ancestor came from a branch ( mt- haplogroup W) from the Ural mountains where Khazaria lay but before Khazaria was created. My grandmother was W 16145A, 16223T, 16265G, 16519C. Jewish W made up 3.1% in a test in Poland and 2.7% in Russia and Ukraine.  http://www.thecid.com/where.htm

My grandfather's Y-haplogroup Q1b1a or Q-L245) came from  an ancestor 1,000 years ago  and is also found in Arab populations, in Anatolia, modern Iran, and the ancient city of Ur down to Saudi Arabia and Oman..  That covers places where ancient Israel, Judah and Samaria were. On my testing, I show 3% of my DNA coming from the Middle East. it even shows my dna from Italy from a famous Jewish italian family .  Chances are that's how we found we are  from Germany.  Our ancestor left Jerusalem for Rome, then was forced out of Germany and the family eventually landed in Lithuania.  

Latvia's Courland saw Jews living there from the 16th century and 2,000 lived there in 1795 when it was annexed to Russia.  However, in 1835, Courland and Livland were excluded from the Pale of Settlement.  

Poland's Jews came in the 9th century probably from Germany and Bohemia or even from Ukraine's Kiev and the Byzantine Empire.  Those from Khazaria also moved there. This state was powerful from the 8th to 10th centuries.    In 786 to 809  the King Bulan of Khazaria and 4,000 of his nobles converted to Judaism and was assisted in this by Jews living there from other lands who were escaping pogroms and Prince Obadiah.   Supposedly the first charter for Christian- German traders was in 905 who came with Jewish traders.  Then the Tartars invaded in 1240 and 1241 and devastated Poland.  That's when the kings wanted German Jews to enter.  The Christian-German traders were anti-Semitic to the Jews as this was competition in their business.  Then the Christian clergy complained about the growing Jewish population and this led to blood libels in Posen in 1399.  Poland unified with Lithuania in 1569 and Ukraine came under Polish control.  Polish nobles needed someone to manage their large estates and do other administrative jobs, so Jews were invited to live there for this job.  The noble would not be living in the area but headed for more exciting places.  Often the Jewish manager would receive exclusive rights to distill and sell alcohol.  They worked as artisans and merchants. This is when shtetls developed.  

Crimea  It is thought that descendants of the Jewish Khazars probably survived among the Crimea Karaites, the Krimchaks and other Jews of eastern European origin.  It is probably that only the king of Khazaria with a good proportion of the nobility and some of his people became converted.  the Jewish element in Khazaria always constituted a minority.  There was evidence of Jewish settlement here on this peninsula in the Black Sea from the 1st century BCE from several Jewish inscriptions found from succeeding centuries.  From the 7th century to 1117, eastern Crimea was controlled by the Khazars.  They also had a large Karaite population from the 12th century.  Many Jews became Moslems under Tatar rule from the end of the 13th century since Mohammad died in 632.  Jewish captives from Ukraine were sent to Crimea after 1648.  Russia conquered Crimea in 1783 and many Ashkenazi Jews settled here.  

Ukraine:  Jews immigrated to this state in waves from Khazaria, the Caliphate and Byzantium between the 9th and 12th centuries;  from Central Europe in the 14th and 15 centuries; and from Poland in the 16th to 17th centuries. Ukrainian peasants began to resent the taxes they had to pay to their absentee landlords, and it was the Jews who were the collectors for them.  In 1648, horrible massacres of Jews took place during the Chmielnicki and Haidamak uprisings of the 17th and 18th centuries.  The Frankist and Hasidic movements originated here in the 18th century.. During the revolt that lasted for 2 years, about 300 kehillos were destroyed and 100,000Jews were massacred, mostly in very cruel manners.  Jews who survived fled westward with nothing but what they were wearing.  Why is it that people return to places of tragedy?  They did in hopes of a long-term peace and quiet, only to find that this would not happen, even in 2015.  

 Zionism also developed here in Ukraine.  By the 19th century, Jews from Galicia and Belarus  moved here.  Ukraine has always been an anti-Semitic center. Pogroms took place in 1905 and as late as 1918 to 1920 after WWI  Yet, the Soviet government promoted Jewish settlement in the Ukraine in the 1920s using funds from the American Joint Distribution committee in Kalinindorf, Zlatopol and Stalindorf.  By 1930 there were 90,000 Jewish agriculturists there, waiting to be slaughtered in the coming Nazi takeover and war against the Jews. About half of Soviet Russia's 3 million Jews lived in Ukraine before WWII.    During WWII, the native population were about as bad in their acts against the Jews as the Nazis were.  From 1941 and 1942, the Jews were wiped out by the Germans and Ukrainians. Some 900,000 were murdered.   Somehow, the Jewish population bounced back by 1970 and 777,126 were living there.  by 1989 it had dropped to 484,129.  Russia and Ukraine are at it again which began last year.  Some of Ukraine's present 100,000 Jews seriously consider leaving.  Since they've gone through so much in the past 1,000 years, one wonders if they will be leaving for Israel soon.  226 Jews left from Kiev  for Israel already.  " They joined more than 5,000 Ukrainian Jews who have moved to Israel last year, about 1,300 of them from eastern areas claimed by separatists." Many came from the eastern city of  Luhansk.
                                                                           
Jerusalem, unified city and capital of Israel where all religions are allowed to worship
Now Israeli Jews live on  8,000 square miles, and when they build on land that their legal experts swear is theirs after winning the 1967 Six Day War from attacking neighboring countries which allows them to build in Judea and Samaria, their original land as ordained by G-d, and where they were living in 70 CE when the Romans came and occupied their land and then burned down Jerusalem, the world shudders at those "terrible Jews".  Perhaps they are also shuddering at the modernity and beauty of what Jews are creating in Israel, which had lain in waste for 2,000 years in the hands of previous empires yearning for the return of the Jews who loved it.  

Reference:  http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/History/pale.html
The New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia
The Jewish Press, May 8, 2015, feature section insert, Beyond the Pale.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pale_of_Settlement
http://jewishfactsfromportland.blogspot.com/2010/01/jewish-genes-what-haplogroup-could-they.html
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/fleeing-their-countrys-civil-war-ukrainian-jews-head-for-israel/2014/12/24/f79fb866-8619-11e4-b9b7-b8632ae73d25_story.html  December 25, 2014

Aboriginal Rights of the Jewish People to the Land of Israel


Aboriginal Rights of the Jewish People

Aboriginal Rights of the Jewish People

For more than two millennia the Jewish People has kept links to its ancestral homeland.

by 
For over 60 years, there has been a bitter dispute over the unwillingness of most Muslims and Arabs to accept the legitimacy and permanence of Israel as "the” Jewish State, i.e. as the political expression of the self-determination of the Jewish People in a part of its ancestral homeland. Extending from the Mediterranean Sea to territory east of the Jordan River, the larger ancestral homeland of the Jewish People was for many centuries known to Jews as "the land of Israel," in Hebrew, Eretz Yisrael. To Christians, this same Eretz Yisrael was "the Holy Land" or "Palestine" − imagined on pre-20th-century maps as regularly including lands to the east of the Jordan River.
Yasser Arafat and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad have denied that the Jews are a “People,” within the context of the modern political and legal doctrines of aboriginal rights and the self-determination of Peoples. However, there is an enormous body of archaeological and other historical evidence demonstrating that the Jewish People, like the Greek People or the Han Chinese People, is among the oldest of the world's Peoples. In fact, the early modern European Peoples probably learned from the biblical example of the Jewish People what it means to be “a People in history.”
What is a People?
Opting to self-identify consistently as a specific People, a human population shares a variable range of relatively distinct civilizational features – e.g., name, ancestors, history, homeland, territory, language, religion, culture, economy and institutions. And, in addition to its subjective identity, a People also normally attracts objective identity in the eyes of its friends and enemies who frequently provide valuable historical evidence about its existence and characteristics.
This reference to historical evidence is critical, because the political and legal doctrines of aboriginal rights and the self-determination of Peoples cannot apply retroactively. This means that a People, without a continuous identity stretching back to the relevant historical time, cannot today make an aboriginal or other claim with respect to that earlier period before its ethnogenesis, i.e. when it did not yet self-identify as that same People. And to be sure, new Peoples are always emerging – while older Peoples may disappear, though genes and cultural characteristics may to some extent persist in populations of one or more other Peoples.
The Jewish People in the Holy Land
Ancient historical sources like the Jewish Bible, the Christian Gospels and the Muslim Koran all specifically testify both to the existence of the Jewish People and its connection to its ancestral homeland. The Jewish People has at least 2,600 years of continuous history, with a subjective-objective identity that since antiquity always kept some demographic and cultural links to the Holy Land.
From antiquity to the present, there were always Jews living in the Holy Land.
From antiquity to the present, each century provides an astonishing variety of historical sources about Jews who lived in the Holy Land. For example, there are 16th-century Ottoman tax registers which detail the names of the Jewish tax-payers. Including some rabbis famous throughout the Jewish world, there were always Jews living in the Holy Land, where the total population (also including the Muslims and Christians) had by the 19th century fallen to a level much lower than in Roman times or today.
Moreover, until the mid 20th century, the broader Middle East had always had a significant Jewish population. And, many of the descendants of those Middle Eastern Jews are today citizens of Israel, where they have been joined by Jews from other continents.
Aboriginal Rights of the Greek People
The modern Jewish People is aboriginal to its ancestral homeland in the same way that the Greek People is aboriginal to Greece. In the early 19th century, some prominent Europeans like the English poet Lord Byron enthusiastically championed the aboriginal rights of the Greek People. In 1821, when the Greeks began their revolt against Ottoman rule, they were a minority of the population in the territory that is now modern Greece. In the 19th and 20th centuries, modern Greek history has been partly about the hundreds of thousands of Diaspora Greeks who chose to return to their ancestral homeland.
After World War I (1914-1918), British Prime Minister David Lloyd George unsuccessfully backed the aboriginal rights of the Greek People to the Anatolian littoral, where large Greek communities had lived continuously from antiquity until 1922, when they were finally destroyed by the Turks who are not aboriginal to Anatolia.
Aboriginal Rights of the Jewish People
Like the Greek People, the Jewish People has for more than two millennia continuously affirmed its connection with its ancestral homeland, where Jews became less than half the population probably at some point in the late Byzantine period, i.e. the sixth century CE.
Of all extant Peoples, the Jewish People has the strongest claim to be aboriginal to the Holy Land, where Judaism, the Hebrew language, and the Jewish People were born (ethnogenesis) at least 2,600 years ago. Before then, the Holy Land was home, inter alia, to the immediate ancestors of the Jewish People, including historical personalities like Kings David and Solomon, famous from the Jewish Bible.
At that time and even earlier, the Holy Land was also home to other Peoples – like the Phoenicians, Ammonites, Moabites, Edomites and Philistines – which have long since vanished from the world, with nobody today entitled to suddenly appear to make new claims on their behalf, e.g., by reason of recently alleged genetic descent.
What then of that great dramatis persona of world history known as "the Arab People"? As such, the Arab People is aboriginal to Arabia, not the Holy Land. Judaism, the Hebrew language and the Jewish People were already established in the Holy Land for about a thousand years before the 6th-7th century CE ethnogenesis in Arabia of the great Arab People, the birth of which was approximately coeval with the emergence of Islam and the Classical Arabic language. Despite victimizing local Jews by periodic persecution and persistent discrimination, neither the Arab People from the 7th-century CE conquest, nor subsequent invaders succeeded in eradicating the Jewish population or ending the links between the Jewish People and the Holy Land.
Today, Jews are again the majority of the population between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea. This means that the Jewish People can now rely on the modern political and legal doctrine of the self-determination of Peoples which normally allocates territory according to the national character of the current local population. At the same time, the Jewish People also continues to affirm its aboriginal rights with specific reference to parts of its ancestral homeland. And to be sure, these aboriginal rights of the Jewish People still have political and legal significance in the ongoing dispute over the refusal of most Muslims and Arabs to recognize the legitimacy and permanence of Israel as the Jewish State.
Israel as the Jewish State
Most Jews round the world see Israel as the Jewish State, i.e. as the political expression of the self-determination of the Jewish People in its ancestral homeland. Like other Peoples, the Jewish People has a right to self-determination. Though the self-determination of the great Arab People is expressed via 21 Arab countries, Israel is the sole expression of the self-determination of the great Jewish People. Some Western thinkers are now uncomfortable with the idea of a nation-State as the homeland of a particular People, but that is no reason to fault Israel, because the overwhelming majority of modern countries are nation-States. For example, also nation-States are Japan, Italy, Greece and the countries of the Arab League.
In theory and practice, the nation-State model does not have to conflict with fundamental civil and human rights for aliens or for citizens who do not ethnically self-identify as members of the majority People. Moreover, the nation-State can also accommodate collective rights for one or more minority Peoples. With regard to such individual and collective rights, Israel domestic law is comparable to what is provided by other legal systems, and superior to what is offered in other Middle Eastern States.
Israel Born from the Ottoman Empire
Until the end of World War I, the Holy Land was part of the Ottoman Empire. Thus, Israel and two dozen other modern countries are successor States of the Muslim Ottoman Empire, which for 400 years (1516-1920) was the principal Power in the Near and Middle East. Apart from the ruling Turks, the Ottoman population included Peoples like the Greeks, Armenians, Kurds, Arabs and Jews. For centuries, these Jews lived in large numbers in a variety of Ottoman venues including Constantinople, Salonika, Cairo, Alexandria, Damascus, Aleppo, Mosul, Baghdad, Basra, Tiberias, Hebron, Safed, Jaffa and Jerusalem.
In October 1914, the Ottoman Empire opted to enter World War I to fight against Great Britain and its Allies. As the fortunes of war began to favor the British Army, the British government addressed the question of what to do with the multi-national Ottoman lands – both in the light of current British interests and the 19th-century liberal doctrine of the self-determination of Peoples. In this regard, the father of modern political Zionism, Theodor Herzl, in his 1896 manifesto, The Jewish State, had already proclaimed that Jews, though living in many different places around the globe, constitute one People for the purpose of self-determination.
Why the Balfour Declaration?
In October 1917, the British Cabinet decided to favor the plan to create “a national home for the Jewish People.” The venue was said to be "Palestine," a then non-existent country of uncertain extent, that was ultimately defined by the League of Nations in 1922 as "the Palestine Mandate," that also included the Trans-Jordan Emirate first formed in 1921.
The British promise of “best endeavors” to create "a national home for the Jewish People" was motivated by a desire to help realize the Jewish People’s long-standing claim to self-determination in its ancestral homeland; to shore up Jewish support for the Allied war effort in revolutionary Russia and the U.S.; and to help better cover the eastern flank of the Suez Canal, which was then the crucial gateway to British India. The intention to create this "national home for the Jewish People" was announced in the November 1917 Balfour Declaration.
A Palestinian People in 1919?
As Great Britain worked to defeat the Ottoman Turks, the world also began to learn about the national claims of the great Arab People. Here recall the wartime exploits of Lawrence of Arabia and the Hashemite Prince Feisal ibn Hussein, both of whom were present at the 1919-1920 Paris Peace Conference. There, a powerful searchlight was trained on the political and legal doctrine of the self-determination of Peoples, including the claims of the great Arab People.
Local Arabs sought incorporation in Syria.
However, no one at the Paris Peace Conference had ever heard anything about a distinct "Palestinian" People. Had there then been such a distinct Palestinian People, Prince Feisal, U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, France’s Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau, British Prime Minister David Lloyd George and others would have known about it. This assessment is confirmed by extensive local testimony and petitions collected in 1919, by the U.S. King-Crane Commission. Its report to President Wilson indicated that, whether Muslim or Christian, the Arabs of the Holy Land specifically rejected any plan to create a new territory called "Palestine," which they perceived to be part of the detested Zionist project. To the contrary, local Arabs were said to be enthusiastically seeking incorporation in a then-proposed unitary Arab State, the borders of which would have matched the existing Ottoman Province of Syria. This Ottoman Syria had for centuries included the territory of what is now Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, the West Bank, Gaza and Israel.
For Muslims in the Holy Land, this broader focus of self-identification was natural because the Ottoman Empire had no province or sub-provincial unit called, or co-extensive with, "Palestine" no matter how conceived. Nor had Muslim history ever known a country or province called "Palestine." After the 7th-century CE Arab conquest, the Umayyad Caliphate kept the Roman toponym “Palaestina,” arabicized as "Filastin," for the name of one small district of the Province of Syria. This short-lived Filastin was a fraction the size of the Palestine that was known to the Byzantines; imagined by Christians on pre-20th-century maps; or finally realized in 1922 as "the Palestine Mandate" that included both Trans-Jordan and "a national home for the Jewish People," west of the Jordan River.
Global Self-Determination Exercise
The Paris Peace Conference was concerned with the task of accommodating the political interests of the victorious Allied and Associated Powers with the claims to self-determination of well-known Peoples with long histories of national self-affirmation and bitter suffering under foreign oppression. Thus, considered were difficult and entangled issues touching the self-determination of such famous Peoples as the Chinese, the Poles, the Germans, the Finns, the Letts, the Latvians, the Estonians, the Czechs, the Slovaks, the Slovenes, the Croats, the Serbs, the Italians, the Hungarians, the Romanians, the Bulgarians, the Greeks, the Turks, the Kurds, the Armenians, the Arabs, and the Jews. In this larger context, just one decision among many was creation of "a national home for the Jewish People." And, it is noteworthy that "national home for the Jewish People" was the exact phrase reiterated in a series of consistent declarations, resolutions and treaties from 1917 to 1922.
Why a National Home for the Jewish People?
The decision to realize the self-determination of the Jewish People in its ancestral homeland was the rationale for the 1922 creation of "a national home for the Jewish People," between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea. Under The Palestine Mandate of the League of Nations (July 24, 1922), the British government was entrusted with a new jurisdiction called “the Palestine Mandate” that included both Trans-Jordan and the national home for the Jewish People. In 1946, Trans-Jordan was severed from the Palestine Mandate to become the independent Arab State known as "the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan." In 1948, the national home for the Jewish People became the independent Jewish State called "Israel."
Decision-makers at the Paris Peace Conference knew that the Holy Land was significantly under-developed and under-populated. They also understood that the national home for the Jewish People would initially lack a Jewish majority population. However, the decision to create a national home for the Jewish People was made not so much on the basis of local demographics, but in recognition of the Jewish People’s long-affirmed aboriginal rights and its continuing links to the Holy Land.
Much weight was also given to broader considerations of demography, history, politics and social justice that were both global and Middle Eastern. Thus, there was a conscious choice to refer –not just to circa 85,000 Jews then living locally – but also to the past, present and future of 14 million Jews worldwide, including the one million Jews then living in the Near and Middle East.
Did Arabs Deserve All the Middle East?
Failure to create a national home for the Jewish People would have meant denying the great Jewish People a share in the partition of the multi-national Ottoman Empire, where Jews had lived for centuries, including in the Holy Land. Failure to create a national home for the Jewish People would also have meant that the great Arab People would have received almost the whole of the Ottoman inheritance. That result would have been unacceptable to David Lloyd George, Woodrow Wilson and their peers, because they significantly understood that the claim to self-determination of the great Jewish People was as compelling as that of the great Arab People.
The Paris decision-makers strongly insisted that they had also done justice to the claims of the great Arab People which they believed they had freed from 400 years of Turkish rule and helped on the road to independence via creation or recognition of several new Arab States on lands that had formerly been subject to the Ottoman sultan. For example, 77% of the territory of the Palestine Mandate was Trans-Jordan, which finally became an independent Arab State in 1946.
The decision to create a national home for the Jewish People, between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea, did not result in the displacement of local Arabs. To the contrary, from 1922 until 1948, the Arab population of the national home for the Jewish People almost tripled, while the Jewish population there multiplied eight times. The later problem of Arab refugees (about 736,000) from the national home for the Jewish People, and Jewish refugees (about 850,000) from Arab countries only emerged from May 1948, when local Arabs allied with several neighboring Arab States to launch a war to destroy the newly independent Israel. Their declared intention was to exterminate the Jews living between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea (just as the Turks in 1922 had spectacularly succeeded in liquidating the aboriginal Greek communities of the Anatolian littoral).
Palestinians Among the World's Newest Peoples
The Jewish People has kept the same name and subjective-objective identity in each century since ancient times. By contrast, among local Muslim Arabs, the formation of a distinct, subjective-objective "Palestinian" identity did not generally occur before the second half of the 20th century. This is entirely understandable, because ethnogenesis takes time and only a half-century separated the Ottoman collapse from the Six Day War (1967). Moreover, relatively few Muslim Arabs there would have wanted to self-identify as "Palestinian" until three preconditions had been satisfied.
The first precondition was a political resurrection of the ancient toponym "Palestine" via the 1917 Balfour Declaration and the 1922 creation of the Palestine Mandate which consisted of Trans-Jordan and the national home for the Jewish People, between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea.
The 1937 Peel Commission wanted Arabs on both sides of the Jordan River to be united into one Arab State.
The second precondition was the 1946 separation from the Palestine Mandate of an independent Arab State called Jordan. This is significant because the new Palestinian identity was specifically focused on the territory of the national home for the Jewish People, i.e. the smaller Palestine from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea that existed for only two years from May 25, 1946 (birth of Jordan) until May 14, 1948 (birth of Israel). Before 1946, that precise territorial focus was largely lacking because as a border the Jordan River then had relatively little meaning for the self-identification of most of the Muslim Arabs living on either bank. This factor was implicitly recognized by the British Peel Commission, which in 1937 recommended creating a new Arab State consisting of both Trans-Jordan and the Arab-inhabited parts of the national home for the Jewish People.
The third precondition was the abrupt jettisoning in May 1948 of the appellation "Palestine" in favor of "Israel" as the name for the newly independent Jewish State. Before 1948, the adjective "Palestinian" had too often been used as synonym for "Jewish." And to be sure, the name "Palestine" and many other specific features of the 1922 Palestine Mandate were too closely associated with Jews and Zionism to offer much of a focus for self-identification by Muslim Arabs. Accordingly, before 1948, local Muslims generally did not identify as "Palestinian," but preferred identifications that were either more local or much broader than the Palestine Mandate.
The Palestinian People Born in the 1960s
Arab leaders themselves were slow to recognize the existence and right to self-determination of a distinct Palestinian People. For example, as principal Arab leader at the Paris Peace Conference, Prince Feisal had specifically accepted the plan to create Palestine as “a national home for the Jewish People.” His father, the Hashemite King of the Hedjaz (later part of Saudi Arabia) was party to the 1920 Sevres Treaty that explicitly stipulated that Palestine would be “a national home for the Jewish People.”
Around three decades later, the governments of Egypt and Jordan showed how little regard they had for the self-determination of a Palestinian People. First, they rejected the 1947 United Nations General Assembly resolution recommending the partition of the national home for the Jewish People into two new independent States, one Jewish and the other Arab. Second, no Palestinian State was created between 1949 and 1967, when Egypt held the Gaza Strip and Jordan had East Jerusalem and the West Bank.
The loss of those lands by Jordan and Egypt in the Six Day War strongly encouraged the tendency of local Arabs to see themselves as distinct from the Arabs of Jordan and Egypt. Now more clearly spearheading their own irredentist struggle, local Arabs had added incentive to self-identify as "Palestinian." All the more so, since the new identification effectively expressed their stubborn determination to eventually master all the territory that in 1922 had been recognized as national home for the Jewish People. Certainly, history knows other instances of new national identities forged in the fire of territorial dispute and ethno-religious hatred.
Peaceful Rights Reconciliation
This analysis neither denies the current existence of a distinct Palestinian People nor suggests that the new-born Palestinian People is today without rights, including claims to self-determination and territory. Rather, the conclusion is that there are now claims of right on all sides, and that there is an urgent moral and legal requirement for a peaceful process to respectfully reconcile the subsequent rights of the newly-emerged Palestinian People with the prior rights of the ancient Jewish People.
The aboriginal rights of the Jewish People certainly include "the right to life," i.e. the right of Jews to live safely in their ancestral homeland. This means that the newly-minted Palestinian People does not have a right to wage a war of national liberation against the Jewish People, which is legitimately sited between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea. There, the Jewish People lives “as of right and not on sufferance,” as said by Winston Churchill in 1922.
In any full-and-final peace settlement concluded today, implementing the political and legal doctrine of the self-determination of Peoples would probably require waiving Jewish aboriginal rights to land nowmostly inhabited by Arabs wishing to live in a new Palestinian State. Similarly, the self-determination principle would probably require inclusion within Israel of land now mostly inhabited by Jews. But equally important, the aboriginal rights of the Jewish People would urgently require the peace treaty to also specify effective safeguards for Jewish security, including unequivocal recognition of the legitimacy and permanence of Israel as the Jewish State, i.e. as the political expression of the Jewish People in its ancestral homeland.
Revised version of an article published in the Jerusalem Post

Published: December 25, 2010