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The colourful Twitter history of Palestine (Stealing Jewish-Palestine history 1920s-1930s as if it was "arab")
David Collier ^ | Aug 1, 2023

Posted on 08/01/2023 6:04:08 PM PDT by Freeleesy

Twitter history lesson map

anti-Zionism, antisemitism, BDS, Conflict history, Media Bias, The I/P conflict

The colourful Twitter history of Palestine

Social media sites such as Twitter portray a wonderful history of a state called Palestine – but first let us quickly remember the truth.

The historical facts:

For the Islamic world, the area of 19th century Southern Syria was a sparsely populated forgotten backwater with rival clans and nomadic tribes presenting a hazardous obstacle for every trip. The weakening of the occupying power (the Ottoman Empire) and growing global trade – resurrected European interest. It was Christian travellers recognising this area as their ‘Holy Land’ that put an anglicised version of the name given to it by occupying Roman forces – ‘Palestine’ – firmly back on the map.

European Christian and Zionist investment increased opportunity, and immigrants (mostly Muslims from the collapsing Ottoman Empire) began to flood into the forgotten backwater. This time period culminated in ‘Palestine’ being used as the name for the British Mandate, awarded to Britain by the League of Nations to resurrect the Jewish homeland.

‘Palestine’ was never anything but a name of European imperial colonial conquest (Greek, Roman, Crusader and then British). Even the root derives from the ‘Philistines’ – European Invaders from the Aegean. This is why when Arabs bringing Islam had invaded and colonised the area they didn’t adopt it, and even local usage soon fell out of favour. ‘Palestine’ was not native to the land and had no meaning at all to Muslims. It remained just Christian terminology for the Holy Land – the Jewish ‘Land of Israel’.

The anti-Zionist problem

This may all sound cold and heartless on the notion of a ‘Palestinian identity’ but it remains the historical truth.

None of this helps the anti-Israel crowd that is desperate to argue that Jews came and took over a prosperous land full of indigenous Palestinian people who had lived there as a nation for millennia. As Zionism rose – Muslim interest in the area simply rose to oppose it. They had no interest until the Jews sought to reclaim the land. The Christian world divided – with supersessionists seeing the rebirth of Israel as a direct threat to their own theology – while most Christians saw natural support for Zionism in their bibles. What had been a forgotten backwater was suddenly the most important thing in everyone’s heart.

Even the precious Dome of the Rock and Al Aqsa (‘Haram al-Sharif’) built on the Jewish Temple Mount had been left to waste away. Don’t take it from me. This is from the Jordanian Royal website which explains that it was the Zionist ‘threat’ that made them wake up – and led to the 1922 restoration of these holy sites that turned them from decaying relics into the iconic images we all know so well today:

But the anti-Jewish movement still needed a banner to gather around and in time, Arab – Soviet anti-Zionist mythology created the ‘Palestinian’ in order to do battle with Israel. They then set about rewriting history, both by belittling Jewish ties to the Land of Israel and embedding a narrative of the indigenous Palestinian hero/victim.

The Twitter history of the Palestinians

When your truth is rooted in historicity, the rest is easy. You have nothing to fear, and your role is to educate those around you. With the anti-Zionists- the opposite is true. Education is the enemy – and so they rely on distortions, outliers, misinformation, fake news, and ignorance to help spread their ‘word’. The result is that an army of anti-Israel activists base their ‘truth’ on a mountain of nothing but lies.

This is easily shown by turning to social media. Here are some examples of how ignorant anti-Zionist history is. As each of these examples have been used 1000s of times (with many of them receiving millions of views) I thought I would present them here – along with the truth behind the image:

Palestine Airways

These tweets hold up the ‘Palestine Airways’ plane as evidence of Palestinian life ‘before the Zionists arrived’:

Palestine Airways - twitter history

That plane actually has ‘the Land of Israel airlines’ written across it in Hebrew. Palestine Airways was a company founded by a Zionist Jew Pinhas Rutenberg, and in conjunction with both the Histadrut and the Jewish Agency in the British Mandate of Palestine. It was a ‘Jewish aviation company’ that had trouble maintaining its service due to Arab violence against Jews.

Qalandia / Jerusalem / Atarot airport.

This one is sinister. These tweets reference Zionist ‘theft’ and the ‘Nakba’ using an image of the Palestinian airport near Jerusalem:

In 1924 a military airstrip was built by the British Government on land owned by the local Jewish settlement ‘Atarot’, displacing part of the Jewish settlement in the process. In 1931 the British expropriated additional land from Atarot to expand the airport – demolishing homes and agricultural fields in the process. On top of this ‘Jewish’ land – the British built their airport. In 1948 the Jordanian Army looted and burned down the rest of the village – ethnically cleansing the residents. Only the Jews have been victims of war crimes and ‘theft’ here. Perversely this land is now considered ‘occupied Palestinian territory’.

Tourism and visiting Palestine

Sometimes, the appropriation of the Jewish story in ‘Palestine’ (the Arabs wanted little to do with it) by anti-Zionists brings about side-splitting moments. The ‘visit Palestine’ tourism posters provide such an opportunity. In the tweet on the left is a screenshot from a PRESSTV (Iranian mouthpiece) interview with Shahd Abusalama – a key figure in the UKs anti-Israel activist circle. Abusalama actually has the poster on her wall.

The image in the post was created in 1936 by a Jew named Franz Krausz and published by a Zionist Development Agency. Krausz, who fled Europe during Hitler’s rise, designed a variety of posters for Zionist groups encouraging Jewish tourism and immigration to the Land of Israel.

The British mandate government

The League of Nations Mandate to recreate the Jewish homeland was awarded to Great Britain who set about putting in place the trappings of government – and in 1927 the British decided to create a currency for the area.. This all provides material for people who set out to deceive. Probably the most well-known of these examples is the image of the coin with Palestine written on it. Displayed as proof that ‘Palestine existed’ – these images have been shared millions of times across social media platforms:

coins palestine - twitter history

The coin has ‘Palestina’ written in Hebrew, and more importantly contains in brackets the Hebrew letters ‘Aleph’ and ‘Yud’ – the abbreviation of ‘Eretz Yisrael’ (the Land of Israel) and part of the mandate’s official title when written in Hebrew.

The British also issued postage stamps:

The anti-Zionist lies do not come out of thin air. These lies are what these people are taught. In Palestinian schools, textbooks were found in which the Hebrew had been digitally removed from images of the stamps. What makes it even worse is that these were used inside UN schools funded by the west:

One of the funniest of these examples is this one. They even went for the manholes:

Manhole Cover - Zionist - Twitter history lesson

In the image, which reads ‘Government of Palestine P.W.D Haifa District’ are two giveaways. The first is the Hebrew writing in the top right which spells out ‘Kremener’. The second is the logo underneath.. Alexander Kremener was a German Jew who had fled Hitler in 1933. These were made by a company owned and run by Zionist Jews.

British documents

Some even try to use an image of official British documents to prove that ‘Palestine’ existed. These literally have the words ‘British’ plastered throughout. First there is this British Passport:

And then the British driving licence:

The Palestine Football team

Another much used (and funny) example is the idea that the imaginary state of Palestine had a football team:

The team sent to Australia in 1939 was the Maccabi Tel Aviv side – with a few players taken from other local Jewish teams to legitimise the use of ‘Palestine’:

This from the Daily Telegraph, 3 June 1939:

The emblems of the modern identity

Far too many just do not understand the history. 4400+ retweets and half a million views just for posting an image of this flag with the words ‘Palestine will be free’:

The history of this flag only goes back 59 years. It was adopted by the Palestine Liberation Organisation in 1964 as a symbol for the liberation of Palestine at a time when all of Judea, Samaria (the West Bank of the River Jordan) and Gaza was in Arab hands. Which means this 1964 flag was born as a symbol for the total destruction of Israel.

The absence of real history does lead to absurdity. In 2021 the Palestinians ‘lowered‘ the flag as an act of mourning for the Balfour Declaration – that took place 47 years before the flag had even been invented.

Twitter history – ‘Free Palestine’

And finally, there is the outline of the ‘state’ itself. With half a million views and almost 5000 retweets, this one sure is popular. It is a map of the ‘Palestine’ that anti-Israel activists want to be ‘free’:

Twitter history - map of Palestine

This map did not exist until the 20th century when colonial powers drew it. It is a map created to facilitate the rebirth of the ancient Jewish homeland. The only thing that differentiates an Arab in Akko from an Arab in Southern Lebanon, or Syria or Jordan, is a colonial pen.

When the Muslims last had control (this from 1899) this is what the map looked like – with the entire area split into Ottoman administrative areas:

Twitter lesson map

It was the colonial powers that drew the new lines. Adding space (the deserts) south of their Holy Land in order to give the Jewish homeland some ‘depth’. In the end the British chopped it up anyway – and gave away some of the Holy Land to create Trans-Jordan (now Jordan).

When they hold up the ‘free Palestine’ map they are worshipping a colonial construct.

There is nothing authentic about their argument at all.



TOPICS: History; Politics
KEYWORDS: 1924; 1927; 1931; 1936; 1964; abureida; alautul; arabimmigrants; arabs; bigdeal; britishmandate; byzantineempire; eretzisrael; eretzyisrael; flag; gaza; godsgravesglyphs; holocaust; holyland; invaders; israel; jerusalem; jews; jihadsquad; jordan; jordanispalestine; landofisrael; maccabi; middleages; middleeast; muslims; palestine; philistines; romanempire; southernsyria; theholocaust; thesquad; transjordan; twitter; whitepaper; yisrael
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To: Freeleesy
Are you denying Jewish history in Israel before Arabs’ invasion?

Not at all. Nor am I denying the right of the Jewish population to remain and leave in peace. But history did not stop prior to the destruction of the Temple. Arabs, whether we like it or not, have been the majority for 900 years and are currently half the population in the territory controlled by Israel. This, too, cannot be denied. We cannot reset the clock to some golden age in the past.

21 posted on 08/02/2023 5:56:07 AM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Freeleesy

Nor did he say why there is a need for a 23rd Arab state.

This whole idea of separate state vs the Southern Syria is only a few decades old, not “900” years of coming and going Arabs who are not connected to today’s group so called “Palestinians”


22 posted on 08/02/2023 6:57:09 AM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Conservat1
Nor did he say why there is a need for a 23rd Arab state.

Because half the population there is Arab. But you will notice that I did not give a preference for the 2-state solution. Israel could also annex the whole area and give full citizenship to the Arabs, set up a confederation a la Swiss with the Arabs, or cede the Arab areas to Jordan. They could also be other solutions that I have not thought of, but they must start with the premise that both the Jewish and Arab populations have an equal right to be there.

23 posted on 08/02/2023 7:06:24 AM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Petrosius

What “right” - and how are the previous Arab immigrants and the recent ECONOMIC ones [1914-1948] have to do with each other?

Unlike never stopped Jewish immigration as a cohesive group yearn to its historic place?


24 posted on 08/02/2023 7:15:35 AM PDT by Conservat1
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PS

I never advocate⁩ for Arabs to leave, etc.


25 posted on 08/02/2023 7:23:56 AM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Conservat1
What “right” - and how are the previous Arab immigrants and the recent ECONOMIC ones [1914-1948] have to do with each other?

Their descendants are current residents. And since Arab immigration halted in Israel proper in 1948 and in the territories in 1967, unlike Jewish immigration which continues to this day, its population has actually been there longer than the Jewish immigrant population.

Unlike never stopped Jewish immigration as a cohesive group yearn to its historic place?

Unfortunately for the Jews, they were immigrating into a land with a majority Arab population. Their yearning for the restoration of their historical homeland that they lost 2000 years ago does not negate the rights of those who were already there.

26 posted on 08/02/2023 7:40:36 AM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Conservat1
I never advocate⁩ for Arabs to leave, etc.

Then what is your solution for the rights of the Arab population?

27 posted on 08/02/2023 7:41:36 AM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Petrosius

“Their descendants are current residents”

___

That is where you’re wrong. They are not. Mostly.


28 posted on 08/02/2023 5:02:35 PM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Conservat1
That is where you’re wrong. They are not. Mostly.

Are you saying the the current Arab residents are not descendants of previous Arab immigration?

29 posted on 08/02/2023 5:21:32 PM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Petrosius
Had it been just that, it would probably be giving them full citizenship like Israeli Arabs with their affirmative action (though often Jews are discriminated against, in favor of Arabs, an example, Honenu not to mention regarding land, which is why Regavim was established). But the problem is: hate incitement: in mosques which are controlled by the official PA. See PalWatch and hate textbooks inckuding under UNRWA: UNwatch.org/ Wake up Hitler, there are still people to burn,' in Palestinian textbooks (July 16, 2023).
30 posted on 08/02/2023 5:31:52 PM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Petrosius

“Are you saying the the current Arab residents are not descendants of previous Arab immigration”

__

Exactly, most are grandchildren from recent Arab immigration.


31 posted on 08/02/2023 5:32:45 PM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Petrosius; All
Hamas: Half of the Palestinians Are Egyptians and the Other Half Are Saudis - MEMRI
23 mar 2012 — Hamas Minister of the Interior and of National Security Fathi Hammad Slams Egypt over Fuel Shortage in Gaza Strip, and Says: "Half of the Palestinians Are Egyptians and the Other Half Are Saudis"



Another large set of Palestinians who proudly trace their ancestry from elsewhere

This video segment from VOA News describes how many Gazans trace their roots to Kurdistan.


Of course, we knew this. There are plenty of Palestinians with the last name "el-Kurd" or "el-Kurdi," and many prominent Palestinian families proudly trace their roots to Arabia or Syria or Morocco or Turkey and everywhere else.



Here is my latest list of Palestinian surnames and where they appear to have originated:

Abbas

Iraq

Abdil-Masih  (Beit Sahour)

Turkey

Abid

Sudan

Abu Aita (Beit Sahour)

Turkey

Abu Ghosh

Europe/11th century

Abu Sitta

Egypt

Abu-Kishk

Egypt

Adwan

Arabia

Afghani 

 Afghanistan

Ajami 

Iran

Al Hafi

Iraq

Alami

Morocco

Alami 

Morocco

Alawi 

 Syria

Al-Hayik (Beit Sahour)

Turkey

Arafat

Syria

Araj

Morocco

Aramsha

Egypt

Arashi

Egypt

Ashrawi

Yemen

Awwad

Egypt

Azd, Azad

 Yemen

Badra

Egypt

Baghdadi 

Iraq

Banna

Egypt

Bannoura

Egypt

Bardawil 

Egypt

Barghouti

Yemen (may be Jewish)

Bushnak 

Bosnia

Chehayber

Turkey

Dajani

Arabia via Spain

Darjani

Arabia

Djazair 

Algeria

Doghmush

Turkey

Erekat

Jordan

Fakiki

Morocco

Faranji

France

Faruqi

Iraq

Fayumi

Egypt

Filali

Morocco

Gharub

Egypt

Ghassan

Lebanon

Haddadin

Yemen

Halabi 

 Syria

Hamis

Bahrain

Hammouda

Transjordan

Hannouneh (Beit Sahour)

Turkey

Hashlamun

Kurdistan

Hijazi 

 Arabia

Hindi 

India

Hourani 

 Syria

Husseini

Arabia

Ibrahim (Beit Sahour)

Turkey

Iraki 

Iraq

Issa

Arrived in 1820s to Haifa, not sure from where

Jabari

Iraq

Jazir

Algiers

Kafisha

Kurdistan

Kanaan

Syria

Khair

Egypt

Khairi

Morocco

Khalil

Arabia

Khamadan

Yemen

Khamati

Syria

Khamis 

 Bahrain

Khazen

Lebanon

Khoury (Beit Sahour)

Turkey

Kukali

Syria

Kurdi 

Kurdistan

Lubnani 

Lebanon

Mahdi

Morocco

Makhamra

Jewish

Marashda

Egypt

Masa'ad

Egypt

Masarwa

Egypt

Maslouhi

Morocco

Masri 

Egypt

Matar

Kuwait

Mattar

 Yemen

Metzarwah

Egypt

Mughrabi, Moghrabi 

Morocco

Murad

Albania/Yemen

Muwaqat

Morocco

Muzaffar

Morocco

Nablusi

Named after Nablus - but that was named in the 7th century

Nammari

Spain

Nashashibi

Kurdish/Turkoman/Syria

Nusseibeh

Arrived 7th Century

Omaya

Arabia

Othman 

 Turkey

Qudwa

Syria

Qurashi

Arabia

Qutob

Morocco

Ridwan

Ottoman

Rishmawi (Beit Sahour)

Turkey

Sa'ad

Egypt

Salibas

Greece

Samahadna

Sudan (maybe)

Saud / Saudi 

Arabia

Shaalan

Egypt

Shakirat

Egypt

Shami 

 Syria

Shamis

Syria

Shashani

Chechnya

Shawish

Arabia

Sidawi

Lebanon

Sous (Beit Sahour)

Turkey

Sultan

Turkey

Surani

Lebanon

Taamari

Arabia

Tachriti

Iraq

Tamimi

Yemen/Egypt/Arabia

Tarabin

Mecca oe Egypt

Tarabulsi 

Lebanon

Tartir

Egypt

Tawil

Egypt

Tayib

Morocco

Tijani

Morocco

Tikriti 

Iraq

Touqan

Northern Arabia or Syria

Turki 

Turkey

Ubayyidi 

 Sudan

Uthman

Turkey

Yacoub (Beit Sahour)

Turkey

Yamani 

Yemen

Zabidat

Egypt

Zaghab

Morocco

Zarqawi

Jordan

Zeitawi

Morocco

Zoabi

Iraq

Zubeidi

Iraq



32 posted on 08/02/2023 5:56:03 PM PDT by Conservat1
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Prominent family, Abu Sarari in Jaffa, the head said, in his bio (published in 2000, p. 10), his grandfather’s father came from Saudi Arabia
https://books.google.com/books?id=qtAvAQAAIAAJ&q=%D7%90%D7%91%D7%95%20%D7%A1%D7%A8%D7%A8%D7%99

He also said that most Arabs in Israel (then Palestine) were for Hitler. As he remembers from his childhood.


33 posted on 08/02/2023 6:09:04 PM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Conservat1
Exactly, most are grandchildren from recent Arab immigration.

I was imprecise in my question. I had meant "previous" to mean all Arab immigration previous to the present day, not to distinguish more ancient immigration from more modern. It is irrelevant from which wave of immigration the present Arab population is descended, as if we could even distinguish such in what must be a highly mixed population. The point that I had wanted to make, in answering the question what these two groups have to do with each other, is that the descendants of both groups are now residences in the territory controlled by Israel.

The fact that some Arabs are descendants of a more recent immigration does not delegitimize their presence any more than the fact the the Jewish population is made up of descendant and actual members of a much more recent Jewish immigration. If you are going to discount the modern Arab immigration then you must do the same with the modern Jewish immigration. If anything, the Arab population pre-dates the bulk of the Jewish population.

It is useless for either side to seek to delegitimize the population of the other because of when they arrived. The land has a mixed Jewish and Arab population and neither is going anywhere. Both sides need to accept the population that is present on the ground today.

34 posted on 08/02/2023 6:23:13 PM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Petrosius

The recent Arab immigration (late 1800-1945) are not connected to the “900” years you kept mentioning.


35 posted on 08/02/2023 6:25:28 PM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Conservat1

So what? They were present before the establishment of the State of Israel. Additionally, the bulk of Israeli Jews are descendant from those who came from Europe and the Americas.


36 posted on 08/02/2023 6:27:31 PM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Conservat1
The recent Arab immigration (late 1800-1945) are not connected to the “900” years you kept mentioning.

I never said they were. What I have pointed out that there has been an Arab/Muslim majority for all that time. They had a tenure on the land that cannot be ignored because a Jewish population that has not been in the land for 2000 years wants to return. Palestine was not a land without a people for a people without a land. There were, and are, Arabs living there.

37 posted on 08/02/2023 6:34:08 PM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Petrosius
Part 2 of: Not "some," but most. Author
In Short, from about 250,000 around the end of the 19th century, many of them bedouins, the Arabic population grew to about 1,250,000 in 1948. The Palestinian claim that they are the ancient population of the so called Palestine has no ground.

Winston Churchil, said in May 22, 1939 that the Arab immigration to Palestine during the British Mandate was so large that their numbers grew in such proportion that even if all Jews immigrated to Palestine they could not reach that number.

Franklin D.Roosevelt, said in May 17, 1939 that the Arab immigration to Palestine since 1921 was much greater that Jewish immigration.

A significant part of the 1948 Palestinian refugees were first or second generation illegal immigrant workers.

Arab Immigration into the Coastal Plains of Israel (the Sharon) During the British Mandate.

38 posted on 08/02/2023 6:35:06 PM PDT by Conservat1
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To: Conservat1
Not "some," but most.

That conclusion is disputed but I will cede the point. It still makes no difference. The vast bulk of the Jewish population is also from recent immigration.

39 posted on 08/02/2023 6:38:46 PM PDT by Petrosius
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To: Petrosius

Why did you mention this: “Palestine was not a land without a people for a people without a land. There were...”

I never said that. But it’s true that years prior to Zionists coming late 1800s it was mostly vacant. But not 100% vacant.


40 posted on 08/02/2023 7:48:31 PM PDT by Conservat1
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