So, expulsion, confiscation of property and permanent imprisonment in refugee camps within sight of the land that used to be yours do not qualify as "subsequent actions"? |
LOL maybe you should venture outside your Benny Morris diet. |
Sadly, we'll never know the answer to the bolded. And that's kind of the point. The Palestinian and Arab leadership's failed effort to annihilate Israel in '47 and '48 was the spark that lit the fire that has led to generations of Palestinian suffering. One of the greatest misjudgments in history. |
"Whatever the history of that region is" says it all, don't you think? |
Actually, if you did any impartial reading, you'd know that the powers that be contemplated a mass transfer of Arabs out of the area proposed for the future Jewish state as far back as during the time of the Peel commission! It was never envisaged that there would be Arabs in the land of Israel. And the Zionist leaders knew that very well. Read their scholarship and you see the decision "we'll take what's given now and grab the rest later" loud and clear. |
Of course they do. Criticize away. I'm not here to defend all of Israel's subsequent conduct--it has been roundly and often rightfully criticized. |
I don't know why you think the people in the land should embrace with open arms the idea of the state in which they clearly do not belong in the concept of the state as originally defined. But nice job making expulsion and confiscation of land look, like, INEVITABLE. Like, look at these Arabs, what else can we do? OF COURSE we need to expel them and get their land. |
The Israeli resistance to the concept of Nakba is clear proof that there are different versions of history. |
I assume that the above is a different poster than the "whatever the history of that region is", or that someone got access to Wikipedia.
In any event, you're mostly right. Many members of the Jewish leadership, including Ben Gurion, objected to partition and wanted a single, unified state of Israel. Would the subsequent government of Israel have undertaken a war of aggression to achieve this goal if the Palestinian and Arab states had honored 181? We'll never know, so we're left to deal the facts. Only one side actually launched a war of annihilation, and it wasn't the Israelis. |
Different "versions" does not mean different facts. The facts are quite well-established. |
She is free to hold the event at her home. |
"A war of annihilation" isn't a fact. It's a talking point. |
Ok, what factual underpinning of Nakba is incorrect? |
I'd not arguing that anyone should embrace anything with open arms. I am arguing that Tlaib's narrative of the innocent Palestinians as victims of Israeli aggression in '47 and '48 is historically inaccurate. I'd also argue that such a narrative hurts rather than helps the Palestinian people. |
But you're not disputing the fact that there were mass expulsions of Palestinians and mass confiscation of their land and property. You simply think Palestinians should not be allowed to weep over it, and certainly not on a global scale. There is only one people who is allowed to feel pain and commemorate it multiple generations upward, and it ain't the Palestinians. |