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Since the destruction of the Second Jewish Commonwealth(1) by the
Romans, the land referred to as "Palestine"(2) had been
ruled by a series of foreign occupiers. Each successive ruler subdivided
his conquest as he saw fit, though none, since the Romans, considered
"Palestine" as having a separate administrative or geographic
entity.
The Ottoman Turks, who ruled this area from the year 1516 to 1917,
regarded it as part of Southern Syria. The land later referred to
as "Palestine" was divided into three separate districts.
The area was underpopulated and remained economically stagnant until
the arrival of the first Zionist pioneers in the 1880's,(3) who
came to rebuild the Jewish land. The country had remained "The
Holy Land" in the religious and historic consciousness of mankind,
which associated it with the Bible and the history of the Jewish
People. Jewish development of the country also attracted large numbers
of other immigrants - both Jewish and Arab. |
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| 1. For the Second Temple period (332
BCE-70 CE), summary, see: Professor Menahem Stern, Israel Pocket
Book Library, in "History Until 1880" (Jerusalem: Keter Books, 1973),
pp.97-126.
2. The name "Palestine", from the Greek Palaistina, originally
from the Hebrew Pleshet (Land of the Philistines): a small coastal
strip north east of Egypt, also called Philistia. The Roman term
"Syria Palaestina" in the 2nd century BCE referred to the southern
third of the province of Syria, including the former Judea. The
name "Palestine" was revived as an official title when the British
were granted a mandate after World War I: Encyclopaedia Britannica
ill, Micropaedia, vol. Vll, "Palestine."
3. Among the many descriptions of Palestine's desolation prior
to the Zionist immigration: ". . . a desolate country whose soil
is rich enough, but is given over wholly to weeds - a silent mournful
expanse . . . A desolation is here that not even imagination can
grace with the pomp of life and action . . . We never saw a human
being on the whole route . . . There was hardly a tree or a shrub
anywhere. Even the olive and the cactus, those fast friends of a
worthless soil, had almost deserted the country:" Mark Twain,
The Innocents Abroad, or The New Pilgrim's Progress (1869).
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