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History of Palestine
During the 1880s, a group
of Jewish intellectuals in Eastern Europe launched a political
movement called “Zionism”. It called for the establishment in
Palestine of a Jewish state to provide a haven for World Jews
from the threats of minority status, assimilation and religious
persecution. Theodor Herzl, a Hungarian Jew, published Der Juden
Staat, a treatise that outlined the prevailing Zionist ideas
regarding Jewish settlement in Palestine; and in 1897, he
convened the First Zionist Congress in Basel, Switzerland, and
the World Zionist Organization was created.
However, the number of
Palestinian Jews in Palestine was negligible. When the Turks
opened their empire to the thousands of Jewish refugees fleeing
persecution during the Spanish Inquisition, the vast majority
had obviously not chosen Palestine, as in 1587 they numbered
only 980 in Jerusalem. In the 1880s the Jews in Palestine
numbered some 25,000, compared with 600,000 Christian and Muslim
Palestinians.
The first Zionist colony
in Palestine was established in 1878, and in 1914 some thirty
colonies had been founded, despite repeated Ottoman legislation
to restrict them.
Relations between all
three religions in Palestine was always peaceful and stable,
mellowed by thousands of years of coexistence and shared
adversities. As the number of Zionist settlements increased,
however, the Palestinians began feeling uneasy.
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