Sunday, November 16, 2014

Judea and Samaria (the West Bank) belong to Israel. These areas are Jewish areas of the State of Israel.

Judea and Samaria (the West Bank) belong to Israel. These areas are Jewish
areas of the State of Israel.
The San
Remo Resolution of 1920 “recognized the exclusive national Jewish rights to the
Land of Israel under international law, on the strength of the
historical connection of the Jewish people to the territory previously known as
Palestine. The outcome of this declaration
gave birth to the ‘Mandate for Palestine,’ an historical League of Nations document that laid down the
Jewish legal right to settle anywhere in western Palestine, between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea.” (This document clearly
establishes that Israeli settlements are completely legal.)
The world
must understand that our people are called Jews because we come from Judea. The fact remains that these
territories are an integral part of the State of Israel, and have always been
connected to the Jewish people.
"It
should be remembered that in 1918, with the fall of the Ottoman Empire,
Britain and France were handed more than 5,000,000 square miles to divvy up
and 99% was given to the Arabs to create countries that did not exist
previously. Less than 1% was given as a Mandate for the re-establishment of a
state for the Jews on both banks of the Jordan
River. In 1921, to appease the Arabs once again, another
three quarters of that less than 1% was given to a fictitious state called
Trans-Jordan." (Jack Berger, May 31, 2004.)
The total for all the 22
Arab League countries is 6,145,389 square miles (SM). By comparison, all 50
states of the United States have a total of 3,787,318 SM. Israel has 8,463 SM,
about one-sixth of that of the State of Michigan. Iran, Turkey, Pakistan and Afghanistan are Muslim but not Arab and are not included.
World Arab population: 300 million; World Jewish
population: 13.6 million; Israel's Jewish population: 5.4 million. (Dr.
Wilbert Simkovitz, http://dehai.org/archives/deha...
"... during the late
1940s, more than 40 million refuges around the world were resettled, except
for one people. They [Palestinian arabs] remain defined as refugees,
wallowing 60 years later in 59 UNRWA refugee camps, financed by $400 million
contributed annually by nations of the world to nurture the promise of the
"right of return" to Arab neighborhoods and Arab villages from 1948
that no longer exist." (Noam Bedein, Jerusalem Post, January 6, 2009.)
Some 900,000 Jews left
behind $300 billion in assets when they were forced to flee for their lives
from the Arab countries in the 1940s. They hold deeds for five times Israel's size. (Independent Media Centre, Winnipeg)
Re Israel's irrevocable
ownership of Israel, Golan, Samaria, Judea and Gaza: "Nothing that Israel's legal system says can
change the facts that: (1) the legal binding document is the Mandate of the
League of Nations and (2) the obligations of the Mandate are valid in
perpetuity." (Professor Julius Stone)
"By 1920 the Ottoman Empire had exercised undisputed sovereignty over Palestine for 400 years. In Article 95 of the treaty of
Sevres, that sovereignty was transferred to England in trust for a national homeland for the jews. The
local Arabs had never exercised sovereignty over Palestine and so they lost nothing. Their rights were fully
protected by a provisio in the grant: '...it being clearly understood
that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights
of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine...' The proviso has
been fully observed by the Israelis. Since 1950 the Arabs have built some 261
new settlements in Judea and Samaria — more than twice as many as the Jews, but you
never hear of them. They fill them with Arabs from Lebanon, Egypt and Jordan and by the grace of God they become Palestinians.
Allahu Akbar! The Arabs call Judea "the West Bank' because
they would look silly claiming that Jews are illegally living in Judea." (Comment by Wallace Brand on Martin Peretz
"Narrative Dissonance" The New Republic, July 1, 2009)

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