Israel Palestine Essay

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    Conflict between Israel and Palestine has led to wars, injuries, and massacres. These two countries have argued and fought for decades, ever since 1917. Both countries have been through many tough moments and bombings. The major disagreement is the fact that both countries fight over land. Each side of argument has a "right and wrong" effect. In recent events, the number of stabbings have been increased by the month, and has been seen, as an organized terror attack. The most ancient conflict in

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    Since the UN partition of Israel and Palestine in 1947, Israel has been placed in many instances of conflict between the Jewish migrants to the region and the Palestinian natives. Several conflicts resulted in open, declared war, such as the First Arab-Israeli War of 1948-1949, and the Yom Kippur War of 1973. In addition, Israel has been involved in the occupation of the West Bank and the blockade of the Gaza Strip. After the last open war, Israel’s occupation of the West Bank has been marked by

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    Peace is a basic human right for the people of Israel and Palestine. Given the tenuous nature of amity between Israel and Palestine, this is a difficult subject at best. However, there are women out there that believe in, and engage in, peacebuilding efforts between these two territories. Women’s participation in the peace building process of these two countries is vital to the construction of an unbiased, proactive reconciliation to occur. Because women comprise a large percentage of the population

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    The conflict between Israel and Palestine is not easily understood, nor easily resolved. There are a vast number of ways through which this conflict has been interpreted, however I believe that exploring the Israeli-Palestinian struggles of and for nationalism through a Butlerian lens may lead to valuable insights into the use of nationalism by both Israel and Palestine. I specifically draw from Judith Butler’s Frames of War, to explore how both Israel and Palestine construct their struggles for

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    For thousands of years, Israel and Palestine have fought over the land. Many wars have taken place and several peace treaties have failed. At the root of the Israeli-Palestinian rivalry is a debate over boundaries and territories. Israel should have sheer control of this land because they arrived here first. Israel should own the land, including Jerusalem, because they occupied the region first. In the beginning, God chose Abraham to protect the Hebrew people. Abraham made an agreement with God.

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    Conflict has existed between Israelis and Palestinians for nearly a century, without any substantial sign of ending soon. Different paradigms of international relation attempt to explain why Israel and Palestine have yet to reach a compromise following numerous wars and hundreds of attacks. John J. Mearsheimer presents the perspective of realism to international politics, which says that a state’s main interest is acquiring power at the expense of other states. Alexander Wendt criticizes Mearsheimer

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    British colonization in the late 19th century, when during World War I they promised the land to 3 separate bodies of people. The first being the Jews in a document known as the Balfour Declaration, promising the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine. The second group was the Arabs with Sharif Hussein who they also promised an Arab state in the same area. Lastly, was themselves, but they would later leave the area, leaving it to the Jews and the Arabs. Once the war was over and the British

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    The conflict between Israel and Palestine has tight roots in history, stretching thousands of years back to when the Israelites first forged their way into the land, then known as Canaan. It came to its peak in 1948, the year Israel declared its independence (Beinin). Ever since then, the volatile area of Palestine has become a battle ground for war, terrorism, and politics. The two nations have attempted to make agreements, but so far, none of them have succeeded in creating long-lasting peace

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    Assembly (UNGA) Resolution 181, consequence that Israel was established in 1948 and settlement policy is enforced in Palestinian territory by Israel. For the UNGA Resolution 181, Israeli occupied more territory than Palestinians. In 1947, two-state solution was passed in UNGA, Palestine was divided into two states, one for Jewish and one for Arab (El-Hasan 2010: 55). However, Arabs occupied 43-45.5% of land in Palestine even the population of Arabs in Palestine was 2/3 (Soderblom 2003). This was unfair

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    Israel and Palestine The conflict between the Palestinians and the Israelis is largely a religious conflict. Even though religion, ethnicity, territory, and politics are inextricably interwoven, the conflict is largely fueled and driven on by the religious rift between Judaism and Islam. Without the religious component of a Jewish state and the religious identity of the Palestinians clashing against one another, perhaps the conflict would still have emerged out of territorial or nationalistic disputes

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