Geophysical studies of Palestine

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Palestine – A Geo-physical Study

The world ‘Palestine’ has a curious meaning. Ethnologically, it means

the land of the Philistines’, a strip of territory along the Levant coast

from El Arish to Jaffa approximately.

The Romans and later the Byzantines gave the word definite and precise

administrative significations and extended the boundaries.

The Arabs, under the banner of Saladin, extinguished Frankish rule at

the decisive battle of Hattin in 1187, to become masters of the area. They

coined the word “Falestin” as their name for one of their provinces.

Since the 16th cent., this region was part of the Ottoman dominions.

For them this was not Palestine. For the Turks and the Arabs, the whole of

the region lying between the Taurus Mts. and the confines of Egypt, was

Syria, a term which had been in use from antiquity. After the ‘Treaty of

Berlin’ in 1870, which insured free access to the holy places to Jews and

Christians, their Jerusalem province came to be known as ‘Palestine’. The

area consisted of Jaffa to Jerusalem, and southwards, covering the entire

Negev Desert to the port of Aqaba (Jordan).

In Europe in the Middle Ages the word Palestine came to mean the Land

of Israel before the Diaspora (Dispersion) as mentioned in the Book of

Judges 20:1-2, “All the Israelites, the whole community from Dan to

Beersheba and out of Gilead also, left their homes as one man and

assembled before the Lord…”

The Sykes-Picot Agreement (1916 – the dismembering of the Ottoman

Empire), assigned to France Lebanon and Syria, and to England – Palestine

and Iraq. Between the two zones it was agreed to create an Arab state or

confederation of states; France with priority of rights in the north and

England in the south. (British rule in Palestine began on Dec. 11, 1917.)

The British determined the boundaries of present-day Palestine

mandatory government in 1924. Transjordan was created from the eastern

part (a gift to placate the Royal House of Hussien), extending from the

river Jordan to the eastern boundaries; and Palestine, Sist Jordan – its

borders were from the river Jordan to the Mediterranean Sea.

And now to modern history. The British government announced their

intentions to withdraw from Palestine on Aug, 1st, 1948, pushing it

foward to May of the same year. The United Nations in Nov. 1947 had

adopted a partition plan for both Arab and Jewish States based on part of

the Mandates’s geography of Palestine, Sist Jordan. This plan the Arabs

refused and though Israel won its War of Independence, the neighboring

Arab countries occupied the West Bank and Gaza. (And the resolution of a

Palestinian homeland was put aside.)

And so the essential nature of the Arab-Israel conflict has been the

background truth of the origins of the Land of Palestine that has eluded

the world. In its place an illusion has been formed, or rather, a delusion, which has contributed to the root cause of the failure of a settled and lasting peace in the area.



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