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Palestine
Adaptation of a Greek word meaning Land of Philistines.
A historic region on the east coast of the Mediterranean
Sea.
8000
BC
Permanent agricultural settlements appeared in Jericho.
1000
BC
Palestine divides into the regions of Judea and Samaria.
721
BC
Samaria destroyed by Assyria.
587
BC
Judea destroyed by Babylonia.
70
AD
Romans shatter Hebrew Statehood.
641
The Muslim conquest brings Palestine under the sway
of the Islamic Caliphate.
1099
Roman Crusaders overtake Jerusalem.
1291
Mamelukes of Egypt take back Jerusalem.
1516-1918
Palestine occupied by the Turkish Ottoman Empire.
1895
The total population of Palestine was 500,000 of whom
47,000 were Jews who owned 0.5% of the land.
1896
Following the appearance of anti-Semitism in Europe,
Theodore Herzl, the founder of Zionism tried to find
a political solution for the problem in his book, "The
Jewish State". He advocated the creation of a Jewish
state in Argentina or Palestine.
1897
First Zionist Congress (Basle, Switzerland) declared
Palestine the Jewish Homeland. Participants developed
a structure of government which could be transferred
to Palestine at some future time, including the World
Zionist Organization to link all Jews together, the
Jewish National Fund to acquire land, a committee to
manage finances, a political committee to govern the
land.
1900
Keren Keyemeth (Jewish National Fund) founded as land-acquisition
organ of WZO with the function of acquiring land in
Palestine to be inalienably Jewish with exclusively
Jewish labour employed on it.
1904
Publication of "Le Reveil de la Nation Arabe",
by Najib Azoury, warning of Zionist political aims in
Palestine.
Fourth Zionist Congress decided to establish a national
home for Jews in Argentina.
1906
The Zionist congress decided the Jewish homeland should
be Palestine.
1908
Palestinian journal "Al-Karmil" founded in
Haifa for the purpose of opposing Zionist colonization.
1910
Arabic newspapers in Beirut, Damascus and Haifa express
opposition to Zionist land acquisition in Palestine.
1911
Jan : Palestinian journalist Najib Nassar publishes
first book in Arabic on Zionism, entitled "Zionism:
Its History, Objectives and Importance".
Feb: Palestinian newspaper "Filastin" begins
addressing its readers as "Palestinians" and
it warns them about consequences of Zionist colonization.
1913
First Arab Nationalist Congress meets in Paris.
1914
With the outbreak of World War I, Britain promised the
independence of Arab lands under Ottoman rule, including
Palestine, in return for Arab support against Turkey
which had entered the war on the side of Germany.
1915
July 14: Correspondence begins between Sherif
Hussein of Mecca and Sir Henry McMahon, British High
Commissioner in Egypt.
Aug. 21: Jamal Pasha, Ottoman military governor,
has the first group of martyrs of the Arab nationalist
movement executed in Beirut. - Herbert Samuel, future
High Commissioner of Palestine, in a memorandum entitled
`The Future of Palestine', proposes "... the British
annexation of Palestine [where] we might plant 3 or
4 million European Jews.".
1916
Jan 30: Hussein-McMahon correspondence concluded
with Arabs understanding it as ensuring postwar independence
and the unity of Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire,
include. Palestine.
May: Jamal Pasha has 21 Arab leaders and intellectuals,
incl. 2 Palestinians, hanged in Beirut and Damascus.
May 16: The British and French Governments sign
secret Sykes-Picot Agreement dividing Arab provinces
of Ottoman Empire into French and British administered
areas.
June 10: Sherif Hussein proclaims Arab independence
from Ottoman rule on the basis of his correspondence
with McMahon. Arab revolt against Constantinople begins.
Oct 2: Sherif Hussein is proclaimed as "King
of the Arab Countries" and performs the ceremony
of the bai'a, the traditional Arab custom in which the
investiture is accompanied by a formal declaration of
allegiance.
November
2, 1917
British government issues Balfour
Declaration . Promising the Jewish people an independent
Jewish state in Palestine. At that time the population
of Palestine was 700,000 of which 574,000 were Muslims,
74,000 were Christian, and 56,000 were Jews.
December 1917
British troops invade Palestine capturing Jerusalem.
Surrender of Ottoman forces in Jerusalem to Allied forces
under General Sir Edmund Allenby.
1919
The Palestinians convened their first National Conference
and expressed their opposition to the Balfour
Declaration .
1920
The San Remo Conference granted Britain a mandate over
Palestine and two years later Palestine was effectively
under British administration, and Sir Herbert Samuel,
a declared Zionist, was sent as Britain's first High
Commissioner to Palestine.
1922
The Council of the League of Nations issued a Mandate
for Palestine. The Mandate was in favor of the establishment
for the Jewish people a homeland in Palestine.
June 3: The British government issues White Paper
on Palestine excl. Transjordan from scope of Balfour
Declaration.
June 30: US Congress endorses Balfour Declaration.
July 24: League of Nations Council approves Mandate
for Palestine without consent of Palestinians.
Aug 20: Fifth Palestinian National Congress,
meeting in Nablus, agrees to economic boycott of Zionists.
Oct: First British census of Palestine shows
total population of 757,182 (11% Jewish).
1923
Feb 16: Sixth Palestinian National Congress,
held in Yaffa
Sept 29: British Mandate for Palestine comes
officially into force.
1935
March 27: Official establishment of the Palestine
Arab Party (al-Hizb al-Arabi al-Filastini) in Jerusalem;
Jamal al-Husseini elected as president.
May 10: Second meeting of the Congress Executive
of Nationalist Arab Youth held in Haifa.
June 23: Announcement of The Reform Party (al-Hizb
al-Islah) in Jenin; run by three secretaries: Hussein
al-Khalidi, Mahmoud Abu Khadra, and Shibli al-Jamal.
Oct 5: Announcement of formation of The National
Bloc (al-Kutlah al-Wataniyah) in Nablus; led by elected
Abdul Latif Salah.
Oct: Irgun Zvai Leumi (National Military Organisation)
founded by dissident members of Haganah; Jabotinsky
named Commander-in-Chief.
Nov: Sheikh Izz al-Din al-Qassam, leading first
Palestinian guerrilla group, dies in action against
British security forces.
1936
The Palestinians held a six-month General Strike to
protest against the confiscation of land and Jewish
immigration.
1939
London Round Table Conference produces the White Paper
of the Year which promises Arabs to establish an independent
Arab Palestine in Palestine 10 years from the date,
and eliminate the Jewish migration to Palestine to 1,400
per year until 1944, after which Jewish migration will
cease.
1942
Jan: Dr. Chaim Weizmann writes in "Foreign
Affairs", urging the creation of a Jewish state
in Palestine after the war.
May: Zionist Biltmore Conference, held at Biltmore
Hotel in New York, formulates new policy of creating
"Jewish Commonwealth" in Palestine and organizing
Jewish army.
1944-47
Jewish-British War. Jewish groups in Palestine try to
expel Britain. Mainstream Jewish fighters under David
Ben Gurion are called Hagana. They later become the
Israeli army. Two separate military groups (Irgun Zvai
Leumi led by Menachem Begin and Lehi or the Stern Gang
led by Yitzhak Shamir) resort to assassination and bombings.
Many British soldiers and Arab civilians are killed.
1947
Britain decides it cannot bring peace to Palestine and
turns the matter over to the United Nations. In Resolution
181 the UN votes to partition Palestine into Jewish
and Palestinian states with an international enclave
around Jerusalem and Bethlehem. Arab leaders reject
the plan and insist on a united Palestine with a secular
government. Fighting begins between Jews and Palestinians.
Many Palestinians become refugees.
1948
Approximate population of Palestine: 1,650,000 Palestinians
and 750,000 Jews.
April 8: Abd al-Qadir Husseini killed in counter-attack
at Qastel, western suburb of Jerusalem, without any
military reason or provocation of any kind.
April 9: Irgun and Stern Gangs lead by Menahem
Begin and Yitzhaq Shamir massacre 245 Palestinians in
the village of Deir Yassin, western suburb of Jerusalem.
April 11: Haganah destroy village of Kalonia
near Qastel and occupy Deir Yassin.
April 30: All Palestinian quarters in West Jerusalem
occupied by Haganah and Palestinians were driven out.
May 2: The Jewish Agency completes mobilisation
of Jewish manpower.
May 13: UN appoints Count Folke Bernadotte as
mediator to resolve conflict in Palestine.
May 14: State of Israel proclaimed in Tel-Aviv
at 4:00 p.m.
May 15: British Mandate ends.
- The Arab States dispatch around 25,000 of their armed
forces to Palestine.
- The Haganah, made up of 60,000 to 70,000 trained members
become the backbone of the Israeli Army.
May 15-17: USA and USSR recognise Israel.
June 28: Bernadotte's first peace plan: Jerusalem
to be Arab.
July 5: Ben-Gurion, replying to Moshe Sharett,
with regard to allowing the return of Arabs to Jaffa:
"The Prime Minister opposes the return of Arab
residents to their localities so long as the fighting
continues and the enemy is at our gates. The PM is of
the opinion that only the cabinet as a whole can decide
to alter this policy."
July 7: Mount Scopus area in Jerusalem divided
into 3 sectors: a Jewish sector (incl. the Hadassah
Hospital and Hebrew University, which were completely
isolated from Israel); an Arab sector (the village of
Issawiya); and a third sector incl. the Arab Augusta
Victoria Hospital.
Sept 1: Palestinian National Conference in Gaza.
Formation of All-Palestine Government.
Sept 17: UN Mediator Count Folke Bernadotte assassinated
in Jerusalem.
Sept: Ben-Gurion notifies Moshe Sharett that
he was told by the commander of the central front that
it would be necessary to destroy portions of 14 Arab
villages lying east of Lod [Saffariyya, Haditha, Innaba,
Daniel, Jimzu, Kafr Onno, Yahudiyya, Barfiliyya, Birya,
Qubab, Beit Nabala, Deir Sherif, Tira, Qula], "because
of the shortage of manpower to hold the area and to
fortify it in depth it is urgently necessary to create
defence bases ...."
Oct 1: All-Palestine Government announces Palestinian
independence.
Oct 15: The recognition of the All-Palestine
Government by Egypt, Syria, Lebanon and Saudi Arabia.
Dec 1: Jericho conference composed of notables
and mayors indicates the West Bank's approval of unity
with Jordan.
Dec 11: UN Gen. Assembly Res. 194 (III): the
right of Palestinian refugees to return.
Dec 20: Sheikh Hussam Addin Jarallah appointed
Mufti of Jerusalem (replacing Haj Amin Husseini); Amin
Abdul-Hadi appointed head of the Supreme Muslim Council
in Jerusalem.
April-May
1948
Massacres of Palestinians by Zionist groups Haganah
and Irgun throughout Palestine.
1948-50
Britain withdraws from Palestine. The state of Israel
is established resulting in the 1948 War on May 14 th
between Israel and the Arab countries. 846,000 Palestinians
are driven out of their homeland or flee the fighting
that accompanied the creation of a Jewish state. Only
160,000 Palestinians remain in Israel itself.
Article 49 (6)
of the Geneva
Convention IV states: the occupying power (Israel)
shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian
population into the territory it occupies, it also rejects
and forbids the settlement of Jews in the West Bank
area.
The Israeli government
allows only a very few Palestinians to return after
the war is over. By 1950, over one million Palestinians
live in UN-supported refugee camps in Gaza, West Bank,
Lebanon, and Jordan.
1964
The establishment of the Palestinian Liberation Organization
(PLO) in Jerusalem.
1965
The Palestine "Revolution" began on January
1st.
1967
Approximate population of Israel and Occupied Territories:
1,660,000 Palestinians and 2,384,000 Jews.
The 1967 War begins
June 5 th with Israel occupying the West Bank, Gaza
Strip, and Jerusalem. UN issues Resolution 242 demanding
Israel to withdraw from the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Approximately 250,000 more Palestinian refugees flee,
or are forced into Jordan. After the 1967 Six Day War,
Yasser Arafat is announced the leader of the PLO.
1973
October or Ramadan or Yom Kippur War. Egypt and Syria
attempt to regain lost territories. They push Israel
back in the Sinai peninsula and initially in the Golan
province. A massive airlift of US arms to Israel tips
the balance.
1974
United Nations issues Resolution
338 reaffirming the rights of the Palestinians
to self-determination and national independence.
Yasser Arafat speaks
to the UN exclaiming, "I come to you with an olive
branch and a freedom fighter's gun; do not let the olive
branch fall from my hand."
The Arab Nations
issue the Rabat Resolution which proclaims the PLO as
the legitimate representative of the Palestinian people.
1977
Menechem Begin becomes Prime Minister of Israel. His
Likud Party traditionally advocates a "Greater
Israel" including the West Bank and Gaza and perhaps
Jordan with unlimited settlements of Jews in Arab-populated
areas under Israeli occupation. Anwar Sadat President
of Egypt goes to Jerusalem to open talks.
1978
Egypt and Israel sign the Camp David Accords. Israel
invades Lebanon and seizes a "security zone"
up to the Litani River.
1982
Israel invaded Lebanon with the aim of destroying the
PLO. Tens of thousands were killed and made homeless
in the wake of the invasion which culminated in the
massacres of Sabra and Shatilla.
1983
The United Nations called for the convening of a Peace
Conference with the participation of the PLO on an equal
footing with the other delegates as the legitimate representative
of the Palestinian people.
August
1985
Israel creates "Iron Fist Policy." Defense
Minister Yitzhak Rabin orders troops to break bones,
demolish homes, hold administrative detention, and deport
Palestinians.
December
1987
Palestinian Intifada (Uprising) begins. Palestinians
commit themselves to goals which include; Palestinians
have the same rights as all other people including,
the right to determine their own future and to live
in security and freedom.
1988
Abu Jihad (PLO's number 2 leader) is assassinated on
April 14th by an Israeli hit team. The PLO recognizes
Israel, proclaims a Palestinian state, renounces terrorism,
and calls for negotiations; as a result of the Israeli
election. Yitzhak Shamir returns as Prime Minister.
Following the United States government refusing President
Arafat a visa to enter the US, the UN General Assembly
held a special session on the question of Palestine
in Geneva.
June
28, 1989
EEC Madrid
Conference issued a new declaration calling for
the PLO to be involved in any peace negotiations.
May
20, 1990
Seven Palestinian workers from Gaza were massacred by
the Israeli gunman near Tel Aviv. Yasser Arafat addressed
the UN Security Council in Geneva after the massacre
in which he called for the deployment of a UN emergency
force to provide international protection for the Palestinian
people to safeguard their lives, properties and holy
places. The US vetoed a motion which called for the
Security Council to send a fact finding mission to the
area. At the end of their hunger strike, Palestinian
leaders in the Occupied Territories decided to boycott
the US.
June
26, 1990
The EEC in Dublin issued a new declaration on the Middle
East which condemned Israeli human rights violations
and the settlement of Soviet Jews in the Occupied Territories.
It also doubled its economic aid program to the Occupied
Territories.
1991
October 30: Madrid Peace Conference is held.
December 3: The bi-lateral talks between Israel
and the Palestinians, Syrians, Jordanians, and Lebanese
started in Washington.
1992
Yitzhak Rabin becomes Prime Minister of Israel.
1993
On September 13 th Palestine and Israel sign Declaration
of Principles in Washington, DC.
May
4, 1994
Gaza strip and Jericho Agreement in Cario.
August
29, 1994
Transfer of the power Agreement.
September
28, 1995
Palestinian Israeli Interim Agreement signed in Washington.
November
4, 1995
Israeli extremist Yagil Amir assassinates Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
January
1996
Palestinians hold first Democratic Election. Yasser
Arafat is elected President of Palestine.
May
28, 1996
Israel elects Benjamin Netanyahu Prime Minister, who
since has refused to implement previous peace agreement.
September
1996
Israeli government opens tunnel in Jerusalem going against
previous peace agreement which states the Jerusalem
must not be altered in any way by either side until
the final status of the peace agreement has been reached.
January
1997
Agreement of the redeployment from Hebron.
March
1997
The construction of the new Israeli settlement of Jabal
Abu Ghneim (Har Homa) started. Cease of the peace talks
because of the continuous of the settlements policy
of the Netanyahu Government.
July
7, 1998
The General Assembly adopts resolution 52/250, entitled
“Participation of Palestine in the work of the United
Nations,” voting overwhelmingly to upgrade Palestine's
representation at the United Nations to a unique and
unprecedented level, somewhere in between the other
observers on the one hand and Member States on the other.
The resolution conferred upon Palestine additional rights
and privileges of participation that had traditionally
been exclusive to Member States.
September 1998
In September, the latest Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics
census indicates that Israel's population has reached
approximately 5.9 million. Of that number, 4.7 million
are Jews, approximately 230,000 of whom live in settlements
in the occupied territories, and nearly 1.0 million
are Israeli Arabs. It also indicates that the population
of settlers in the West Bank and Gaza rose by 3%.
December 1998
U.S. President Bill Clinton visits Gaza and Bethlehem
on 14-16 December 1998, becoming the first American
president ever to visit any Palestinian territory and
to deal directly with Palestinian leaders and institutions
on their land. During the visit, the President makes
many important statements, coming very close to recognizing
the Palestinian right to self-determination. The president
is accompanied by his family and by a large official
delegation which includes the Secretary of State and
the National Security Advisor. President Clinton addresses
a meeting in Gaza which is attended by the Chairman
Arafat, the speaker of the PNC, the speaker of the Palestinian
Council, members of the PNC, the Central Council and
the Palestinian Legislative Council, as well as by Palestinian
heads of Ministries and other personalities .
October 1998
Wye
River Memorandum signed by Israel and Palestine.
The Memorandum dictates that Israel must withdraw from
an additional 13% of and stop building settlements in
the Occupied Territory. Palestine must fight terrorism
and change the PLO Charter to acknowledge Israel as
a state. Palestine complies…Israel does not.
May
17, 1999
Ehud Barak defeated Benjamin Netanyahu in the Israeli
election.
September
29, 2000
Palestinian Intifada (Uprising) of Al-Aqsa begins.
February
6, 2001
Ariel Sharon defeated Ehud Barak in the Israeli election.
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