I am from Kuwait, a Sunni Muslim and I support Israel ❤️🇮🇱❤️ من مسلم سني من الكويت، اقول لكم انتم شعب الله المختار، لان جميع العالم ظلمكم وإستباح دمائكم في الماضي والحاضر، وعلى الرغم من كره الكثيرين لكم الآن، انتم في النهاية من سوف يخلصهم وينقذهم من الوقوع في ظلمات الارهاب. لان ما حدث وما يحدث لكم الآن هو اختبار من الله تعالى لشعبه المختار ليرى قوتهم وذكائهم وإصرارهم على البقاء والازدهار. انتم في النهاية من سينقذ الشرق الأوسط من الارهاب والتخلف العقلي الاسلامي المتطرف ان كان شيعيا او غيره، انتم مختارين من الله لتحررونا من ظلمات الماضي ووحوش الحاضر والمستقبل ايضا! اتمنى لكم النصر وسوف ادعي لكم كل يوم! الله يحميكم ويسدد رميكم، آمين! 🤲🇮🇱🤲 And I want to add that I feel ashamed of my country and the gulf Arab countries for siding against Israel yesterday at the UN meeting 😞
@doomslayer9513. I am not of the Abrahamic faith, but your truthful & sincere comment brought me tears. Believing in Allah or a creator God of Judaism is not a problem. The problem is with Sunnahs of discrimination & hatred of Jews & Non Muslims. You do not have to apologize for your country as they were already part of the Abraham Peace Accord with Israel until it was stalled by the mullah regime in Iran. Sensible people know that the UN is a puppet to political correctness on the world stage. Have faith in the leadership of Crown Prince MBS. May you & family be well, happy & peaceful. 🙏
No you don’t feel ashamed for what a corrupt government does. You are not the government nor are they you. Stand strong brother, advocate for peace but be capable of reminding the governments why the don’t want, Muslims, Christians, and Jews to stand together. We are to strong together for them to control. We are slaves to no men.
A crash course on history : 1. Before Israel, there was a British mandate, not a Palestinian state 2. Before the British Mandate, there was the Ottoman Empire, not a Palestinian state. 3. Before the Ottoman Empire, there was the Islamic state of the Mamluks of Egypt, not a Palestinian state. 4. Before the Islamic state of the Mamluks of Egypt, there was the Ayubid Arab-Kurdish Empire, not a Palestinian state. 5. Before the Ayubid Empire, there was the Frankish and Christian Kingdom of Jerusalem, not a Palestinian state. 6. Before the Kingdom of Jerusalem, there was the Umayyad and Fatimid empires, not a Palestinian state. 7. Before the Umayyad and Fatimid empires, there was the Byzantine empire, not a Palestinian state. 8. Before the Byzantine Empire, there were the Sassanids, not a Palestinian state. 9. Before the Sassanid Empire, there was the Byzantine Empire, not a Palestinian state. 10. Before the Byzantine Empire, there was the Roman Empire, not a Palestinian state. 11. Before the Roman Empire, there was the Hasmonean state, not a Palestinian state. 12. Before the Hasmonean state, there was the Seleucid, not a Palestinian state. 13. Before the Seleucid empire, there was the empire of Alexander the Great, not a Palestinian state. 14. Before the empire of Alexander the Great, there was the Persian empire, not a Palestinian state. 15. Before the Persian Empire, there was the Babylonian Empire, not a Palestinian state. 16. Before the Babylonian Empire, there were the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah, not a Palestinian state. 17. Before the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah, there was the Kingdom of Israel, not a Palestinian state. 18. Before the kingdom of Israel, there was the theocracy of the twelve tribes of Israel, not a Palestinian state. 19. Before the theocracy of the twelve tribes of Israel, there was an agglomeration of independent Canaanite city-kingdoms, not a Palestinian state. 20. Actually, in this piece of land there has been everything, EXCEPT A PALESTINIAN STATE.
So Spain never was mentioned in the Bible or Koran therefore itnever existed? Nobody lived there for hunderts of years because you regard them as nobodies? This ignorance never will lead to peace.
Sounds like you're a bit obsessive. The REGION has been known as Palestine since ancient times. Just who is this "expert"? The prophet Jesus was effectively executed by the corrupt hierarchy of the temple in Jerusalem. It was they who wanted him dead. Not the Jewish people and not the disinterested Roman administrators. Jesus had been viciously tortured by the temple guards on the orders of the high priests and Sanhedrin. I don't understand the point of this "expert". The Jews or Judah if you like were vanquished 2000 years ago. The land doesn't belong to them. That warlord Abraham had no claim over Canaan either.
@@Toorek100 Ok then, China existed at that time, but is not mentioned, so China has no right to exist. It’s a dumb argument. There was never a country called Israel before 1948, there was a Roman Province called Judea, but never an independent country called Israel. The question is pointless because the idea of “country” as we use the word today didn’t exist in those times.
@garytaylor7291 They are jealous of the Jews who received God covenant through Abraham and Isaac while they claim it should go through Ishmael the son of Abraham born in sin to a slave. Mohammed tried to get the Jews on board so he could claim they acknowledge his made up nonsense as the true religion and when they refused he slaughtered them. It's simple jealousy.
This was a very disappointing video. Multiple studies of DNA have been done over the last two decades, including those done by Jewish researchers and all have reached the exact same conclusion. Israelis and Palestinians are the same indigenous people to the area. You don't have to believe me, because you can find the studies yourself online from highly respected institutions.
Thanks for making this video. I am not a Jew, but the facts you have presented here are fundamental historical facts that most professors, for whatever reason, choose not to teach their students. Thank you again.
The universities have been corrupted for over half a century now. Any professor that would teach such a course would need 24/7 security for them and their family.
These professors suffer restricted thinking. Restricted by extremely narrow political positions. It leads them head first into a rabbit hole of nonsense which they don’t see till they hit the bottom. At University in the 1970’s we were never taught to ignore facts. Postmodernism has taught them facts are conditional and can be ignored if they don’t suit you. I miss Modernism. Sigh
Israel did not exist ... the Middle East mess is a construct of a befuddled British administration greedy for oil while trying to wash its hands of its colonial past ...
@@AccordQS you think he reads this? This is Zionist propaganda for a Greater Israel. Ask him where the borders are lol. But you don’t care. If you haven’t seen the settlers actions by now you’re blind or giving the ammunition. Shame on you.
This Amazing Canadian Made an Incredible series of films called The Naked Archaeologist. Probably the most comprehensive study of the archaeological history, from a Biblical point of view on Israel ever made. Thank You Simcha, Its great to see you again !☺
@au303 he also said "we Jews" He also neglects to mention that Israel hasn't exsisted for 2,769 years. Nor the fact that the Kingdom of Israel only lasted just over 500yrs and Judea 600 odd yrs. Very short lived kingdoms. DNA wise most peope who say they are Israelis now only have around 3% Semitic DNA, where as the people who call themselves Palestinians have 98% Semitic DNA. So who is more native? To top it off there is no such race as a Jew. Judaism is a religion. I could convert to Judaism then call myself a Jew .
Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy. 1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917) Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice. Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference. 2. Social and Religious Coexistence Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty. Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions. 3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire. Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism. 4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state. Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority. 5. The Shift with Modern Zionism The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state. Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian). 6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life. The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I. Summary Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century.
Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy. 1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917) Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice. Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference. 2. Social and Religious Coexistence Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty. Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions. 3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire. Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism. 4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state. Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority. 5. The Shift with Modern Zionism The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state. Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian). 6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life. The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I. Summary Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century.
Dear Simcha, it's always good to hear from you, you've done a lot of journalistic history, receiving awards for your investigative journalistic work, for us you're a champion. Shana bless you and always be happy. Like your name.
Then you would agree that dual citizenship with Israel should force all Jews and Christians to be drafted and sent to Israel. We'll pay for your ticket to fight for Israel. Your on a Nazi level since the Christians committed Genocide for Hitler. The Catholic church sponsored the Nazi regime to commit the Auswitch crimes during Hitlers rein
It's SHOCKING though, to see how many people online you honestly can't talk to them, b/c they are SO convinced of what they know. I have come to believe it's NOT worth trying to argue w/ them.
@@tammyboon6259 … why are they “shocking” and can’t talk to them ? because they post their opinion ? You’re too, offer your opinion, as others offer theirs …why to argue ?? The internet is a vast “universe” as we know it, of course there’s so many people on it, and how do you say “they so convinced of what they know” …we’re all have our individual opinions and we all offering them … Same way you have …aren’t you convinced of yours ?? you’ve clearly stated it … We do not contest against each others opinions, and we don’t expect others to contest against ours … We’re to accept and respect others as they must respect us, and never argue with anyone, there’s no point, because we’re all, as you say, “convinced of what we know” after all !!!
@@RobertYoung-lt5ls that’s a very good question. Every case may be unique unto itself. I don’t condone the taking of an life. However there are some instances where that choice should be made by the person who will carry child to term. Killing others in blatant attacks don’t have much justification.
Chatgpt Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy. 1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917) Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice. Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference. 2. Social and Religious Coexistence Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty. Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions. 3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire. Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism. 4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state. Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority. 5. The Shift with Modern Zionism The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state. Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian). 6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life. The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I. Summary Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century. Zionism is the core problem not Judaism
Thank you for making this video. Just the facts, no politics and no sides. I wish that there were content creators who were more like Simcha Jacobovici, real journalists that care about telling the truth.
Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy. 1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917) Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice. Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference. 2. Social and Religious Coexistence Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty. Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions. 3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire. Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism. 4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state. Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority. 5. The Shift with Modern Zionism The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state. Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian). 6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life. The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I. Summary Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century.
@@EndofDays-7777 A talking snake is also mentioned in the Bible, and a man who lived for a few days inside a whale, and a boat that held every species of animal on Earth. The Bible is a ridiculous fairy tale.
@@EndofDays-7777 Joel 3:4 “Now what have you against me, Tyre and Sidon and all you regions of Philistia.... Palestine 🤷♂️🤷♂️???? Kingdom of Philistia cities *Gaza *Ashkelon *Ashdod
Genealogical tracking services are illegal in Israel because they evidence the fact that ninety-five percent of the self-styled "Jews" in Israel are neither descendants of ancient Hebrews, or of any indigenous population in the Middle East. The genetic, historical and linguistic evidence is clear--Their ancestral homeland is in fact a region north of the Black Sea and Caspian Sea called Khazaria, whose inhabitants adopted Judaism in the 9th century A.D.
Who blesses Israel will be blessed!! Who curses Israel will be cursed !! We know how this goes down at the end !!The KING of KINGS will come and fight the battle of battles and VICTORY will take place
@@PatriciaSaunders-w5c He who blesses the modern state of Israelll is complicit in gennocide. He who calls this hypocrisy out is a so called “antisemitee” Bless those that speak the truth for truths sake.
I am from Kuwait, a Sunni Muslim and I support Israel ❤️🇮🇱❤️ من مسلم سني من الكويت، اقول لكم انتم شعب الله المختار، لان جميع العالم ظلمكم وإستباح دمائكم في الماضي والحاضر، وعلى الرغم من كره الكثيرين لكم الآن، انتم في النهاية من سوف يخلصهم وينقذهم من الوقوع في ظلمات الارهاب. لان ما حدث وما يحدث لكم الآن هو اختبار من الله تعالى لشعبه المختار ليرى قوتهم وذكائهم وإصرارهم على البقاء والازدهار. انتم في النهاية من سينقذ الشرق الأوسط من الارهاب والتخلف العقلي الاسلامي المتطرف ان كان شيعيا او غيره، انتم مختارين من الله لتحررونا من ظلمات الماضي ووحوش الحاضر والمستقبل ايضا! اتمنى لكم النصر وسوف ادعي لكم كل يوم! الله يحميكم ويسدد رميكم، آمين! 🤲🇮🇱🤲 And I want to add that I feel ashamed of my country and the gulf Arab countries for siding against Israel yesterday at the UN meeting 😞
Also, the so called Palestinians may have been the sea people spoken about by the ancient Egyptians. That kind of confirms your suggestion they came from the Aegean area.
@@geraldgrieve4106well those Sea People were wiped out by Sanchereb....two millenium before Islam....those" uncircumcised pig eaters " disappeared long before any arabs ever came through that land ...though.
@@yperkin1016 The process of Arabs appropriating the title palestinains was initiated in 1966, that is 2570 years after the philistines were obliterated.
Zuheir Mohsen, a senior PLO leader, in 1977: “The Palestinian people do not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle against the state of Israel for our Arab unity… Only for political and tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that we posit the existence of a distinct ‘Palestinian people’ to oppose Zionism. Yes, the existence of a separate Palestinian identity exists only for tactical reasons.”
@@philip54073exactly, but the “woke” will not accept that. AND, it was invented by Arafat, who was not a “Palestinian” at all, he was born in Cairo…was and always will be, Egyptian.
Thank you Simcha, I am a "Pious Gentile", Hashem is my G-d, (B'H), and I thank you for all the great Films, History and Documentaries that you make. You are my mentor, though I am nothing. keep up the great work. sincerely Irvin M Ferguson, Arizona.
And why are Christians so supportive of Israel? It's because in the Christian Bible it states that Israel will be rebuilt just before the second coming of Christ. He will then bring the believers in Jesus Christ with him into Heaven and destroy Israel. It's really a strange sentiment for a Christian to be, "Always, always praying for Israel."
@@davidsnyder3799 Many Christians have been deceived into supporting their own "eternal" demise. The anti-christ will rule from Jerusalem until the Messiah casts him out. Even with all the warnings they've been given, a lot of Christian folks are still being deceived.
@@999.9finegold id argue some people dont have a right but I guess you are more forgiving then I am And still think my statement is correct you two have just added on to my correct statement in a very “internetish” and semantic way.
@@999.9finegold The Arab/Muslims do NOT believe in Israel's right to exist and they are trying very hard to eliminate the Jewish population from the face of the earth. You should read the following Arab published document. Hamas Covenant 1988 The Covenant of the Islamic Resistance Movement 18 August 1988 In The Name Of The Most Merciful Allah Israel will exist and will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it, just as it obliterated others before it" (The Martyr, Imam Hassan al-Banna, of blessed memory).That was just a line from that document.
rusted on Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy. 1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917) Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice. Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference. 2. Social and Religious Coexistence Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty. Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions. 3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire. Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism. 4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state. Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority. 5. The Shift with Modern Zionism The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state. Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian). 6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life. The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I. Summary Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century. Zionism is the core problem not Judaism
You do know Jews hate Jesus right?.., Sarah Silverman once said that she is glad the Jews killed Jesus and if she could she would kill him again.., honestly Linda you really take stooopid to another level.
I’m a Jew and American and I feel robbed of my ancestral identity and self knowledge and self esteem because I’ve been brainwashed to deny my indigenous truth, The truth is I am middle eastern and my people come from Judaea. One silver lining in this era of widespread and propagated hate of Jewish people today, is myself and lots of Jewish Americans are experiencing a soul retrieval, self esteem healing and knowledge expansion. I finally understand why I’ve been walking this earth feeling pieces of me are missing. What’s been missing is acknowledgment, community support, a connection to my ancestors, an understanding of my indigenous spirit and the gd truth that I am a person of significance and truth and I am a part of a people,people who are the most loving of tribes. The world has become more hateful but at least I now know I have a tribe of people who have my back when I feel weak, confused and lost in the misinformation being propagated in this hateful world. Thank you for your video and to all the Jews and truth tellers who have helped deprogram my mind from the antisemitic propaganda that got me feeling I was alone, wrong, different, and outsider and unlikable. It’s a struggle being brave and speaking out when I feel like the world is here to give me a mental and emotional breakdown so I really want to thank everyone who’s able to speak up for Jews and stand for truth and goodness because I am feeling very scared and very weak
TO any Jewish person afraid scared any who feel they must hide their identity mu heart and love go out to you all and know this THE TRUE CHRISTIAN CHURCH LOVES YOU ALL KEEPS YOU ALL IN PRAYER SPEAKS GODS PROMISES OVER YOU FOR YOU AND CLAIMS HIS WORD ON YOUR BEHALF LEARN TO PRAY TO YESHUA TRUST IN HIM HIS WORD FOR HE IS FOR YOU AND NOT AGAINST YOU BELIEVE IN HIM HIS PROMISES AND ALSO HIS WARNINGS DO AS HE SAYS TRUST AND OBEY AND YOU SHALL SEE THE GLORY OF THE LORD IN YOUR LAND IN YOUR LIFE AND IN ALL ISRAELIS LIVES GOD SEES HRPE SEES THE INJUSTICES THE HATRED THE PAIN THE TEARS NOTHING IS WASTED IGNORED UNSEEN BY HIS EYE ISRAEL IS THE APPLE OF HIS EYE AND VENGENGE IS MINE SAYS THE LORD I WILL REPAY LEAN ON HIM AND NOT ON YOUR OWN UNDERSTANDING IN ALL YOUR WAYS ACKNOWLEDGE HIM AND HE WILL DIRECT YOUR PATHS TURN YOUR EYES UPON JESUS CALL UNTO HIM TRUST AND OBEY PRAY LISTEN TO HOLY SPIRIT HE WILL NEVER LET YOU GO HE HAS BOUGHT YOU THIS FAR BY HIS GRACE AND HE WILLBRING YOU TO ZION HIS PRAISES TO SING OH BLESSED BE GOD AMEN 🙏🏻 ❤️ 🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱
Shalom our Jewish brother - In your weakness your Elohim is strong- He is for you and not against you. He says “Fear not, for I Am with you”. There are millions of non-Jews around the world standing with Israel and therefore standing with you. You are not alone. The Elohim of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob is The G-d of Israel and all the Earth. He is your Creator and mine. He is waiting for His people Israel to make teshuva and return you Him so He may “forgive their sin and heal their land” 2 Chronicles 7: 14…..Read His Torah and know He loves you and He is your deliverer. Yeshua means salvation. Who is Yeshua? If you seek and search for Him you will find Him. 🙏 for you and all of Israel. Am Yisrael Chai!
And my obligatory, secular message of support to contrast the religiously sourced one from the other guy who replied - As a fellow Jew, (and Israeli) I'm sending you lots of warm support and wish you all the best.
Simcha, as a non-Jew, non-Arab I have researched the Israel-Palestine conflict since October 7th and have to agree with everything you said in this video. With regards to the "from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free" taken from the HAMAS charter, I would recommend that people who believe this should read the rest of the HAMAS charter which includes the destruction of Israel and the killing of all the Jews in Israel. Hardly a peaceful or accomodating ideology. Another problem is that in the islamic religion they do not believe that any land that once was occupied by muslims can ever be anything else. Also the moslem brotherhood has the slogan "Muslim should dominate not be dominated". So when Egypt ruled GAZA there was no problem with the local arab "Palestinians". Once it came under Israeli control all hell broke loose even though they were treated better by the Israelis.
It may sound strange but the reason that Israelis thought all would be well if the Arabs were treated the same as Jews, is because Jews were not taught to hate others from an early age. Today Israelis may have learned that they cannot “blindly believe” that Arabs don’t hate Jews and just want a chance to live in peace, because,sadly, it’s just not true. I wish someone somewhere could find a way to undo the harm done to Pale stinian children and free them from hating those they don’t even know. Their lives would improve 100% and Israeli lives would also improve. They wouldn’t have to keep running to bomb shelters, waste money on defensive weapons - they could use that money to build better lives for everyone in that area. Challenge to the wealthy: Please offer a substantial reward for anyone coming up with a workable solution to undo years of taught hatred. Both you and the person finding a solution would be heroes, better than Batman, smarter than Superman, more wonderful than Wonder Woman.
@@moonshinesa8234 Only God can and will make right everything in the Middle East and the rest of the world. Biblical scripture says that things will get a lot worse before they get better. It's all part of God's plan.
The charter doesn't just "include" the destruction of Israel. It's literally the FIRST article: "Israel will exist until islam will wipe it off the map". And every other article there is soaked with the same anti Semitism.
@@Rick-ih7wp Judea! …..think it was Emperor Hadrian that tried to rename it and flooded the area with people from modern day Jordan, in an attempt to disengage the Jewish people from they’re land after centuries of bloody Jewish revolts!
Well thats up for discussion. Kingdom of Judea with Jerusalem is fact. Depending the source , there was a kingdom of Israël. Either way people of Israël seems clear, right? Why being in denial ? Even the mosque build on the Jewish temple. Jews are from Judea. Its even in the name of their ethnocity. Jehudi , right? Thats how arab calls them, right? @@gweilospur5877
@@gweilospur5877 Israel is a state name from whence Judaea (used by English speakers) is its origin. Yehudah was a son of Jacob, who was later given the name "Israel" and whose sons collectively headed the Twelve Tribes of Israel. This goes back to the Roman and Greek provinces, hence his explanation starting about 5:20.
An archaeologist basing his theories on a fictitious book! Not very good is it, thin at best. Don’t worry the world is full of actually educated people who know what Israel is up to.
I am a Ghanaian Christian and will forever stand with Israel and any Israeli. Israel is the only lawmaker in the entire world. I bless the nation of Israel today and forever remain blessed.
Chatgpt Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy. 1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917) Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice. Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference. 2. Social and Religious Coexistence Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty. Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions. 3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire. Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism. 4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state. Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority. 5. The Shift with Modern Zionism The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state. Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian). 6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life. The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I. Summary Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century. Zionism is the core problem not Judaism
It’s more than a metaphor. Joel 3:4 P@lesheth pel-eh'-sheth Parts of Speech Noun P@lesheth Definition NAS Word Usage - Total: 8 Philistia = "land of sojourners" the general territory on the west coast of Canaan or the entire country of Palestine
@@OrangeMonkey2112 that is talking about the Philistines from ancient times, not the the region of palestine as some address it today. palestine was give that name after the hebrews were dispersed by the romans in 70AD. the romans later called the region palestine, but this was not a correct name to address the region. watch the video it completely explains it.
@@Home-n9b I was trying to make the point it was a region and not a people. The original word used in Joel 3:4 explains it is a region. Someone mentioned it was a people and that’s what I was trying to dismiss. Thanks
My Jewish Bubbe was born in what she called palestine in 1905. Her family can trace their roots back at least 1,000 years on the same land. She only called it Palestine because the British called it the Palestine territories . In 1925 she married and moved to the USA. In 1949 she was given a free trip to Israel. She said she cried with joy to able to call the country she was born in, Israel.
Joel 3:4 P@lesheth pel-eh'-sheth Parts of Speech Noun P@lesheth Definition NAS Word Usage - Total: 8 Philistia = "land of sojourners" the general territory on the west coast of Canaan or the entire country of Palestine
@@OrangeMonkey2112Peleset were a sea people that invaded coastal villages, also invaded Egypt and more. They were not from the Levant. Do you use the same ideology you just used for Arabs from Arabia? So should all the Arabs go back to Arabia? Try again….
@@mollyfriedman2013 But those who are anti Israel will wriggle and squirm away the lack of “P” in the language of those who call themselves “Alestinians”, “Falestinians” trying to get to Pale stinians with a silent P.
This is the best explanation I've heard. I'm a Pastor and I enjoy your documentaries and the series naked archeology. You sir are a wealth of knowledge for Jews and Christians alike.
Yes, Simcha! We know! It’s difficult to convince others who fall for the propaganda! Thank you for doing this! Many, many people listen to you! Love your work! I am so happy you’re back to posting on UA-cam! God fights for Israel! I am so excited about the archaeology going on in Jerusalem!
Chatgpt doesn't do bs Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy. 1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917) Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice. Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference. 2. Social and Religious Coexistence Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty. Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions. 3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire. Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism. 4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state. Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority. 5. The Shift with Modern Zionism The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state. Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian). 6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life. The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I. Summary Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century. Zionism is the core problem not Judaism
Chatgpt Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy. 1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917) Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice. Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference. 2. Social and Religious Coexistence Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty. Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions. 3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire. Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism. 4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state. Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority. 5. The Shift with Modern Zionism The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state. Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian). 6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life. The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I. Summary Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century. Zionism is the core problem not Judaism
Well, in actuality, they're not even Palestinian, they're just Arab peoples. Palestinians are in reference to the Philistines, the Philistines were Aegean.
In addition Jordan is on biblical Israel. Jordan use to be called Transjordan. Transjordan is a quick simple translation of the Hebrew term that’s mentioned in the Torah numerous times Bee-aver- Ha - yarden. Snake charmers are so deceitful. See when the Arabs got Transjordan they took out the Trans and left the name Jordan. If they were to completely change the name it would be easier to figure out so they just left Jordan- Jordan river Jordan land named after someone named Jordan ah no . To name a land “ the other side of the Jordan had to be people living in that land the other side ie the Jews.
So good to see you speaking out on this enormous issue Simcha! I’ve been waiting for you to speak out about October 7th and the history of “Palestine.” Please do more videos like this one Simcha. The fact that Jordan 🇯🇴 is “Palestine” is overlooked too often and for too long!! Miss seeing you together with Professor James Tabor and Shimon Gibson!
Here are some questions I have for the local protestors who side with Hamas: Palestine or Israel? 1. When was the country of Palestine founded & by whom? 2. What were its borders? 3. What was its capital? 4. What were its major cities? 5. Name at least one Palestinian leader before Yaser Arafat. 6. What was the official/dominate language of the country/nation of Palestine? 7. What was the prevalent religion of the ancient country of Palestine? 8. What was the name of its currency? 9. Choose any date in history & show what was the approximate exchange rate of the Palestinian monetary unit against the U.S. Dollar, German Mark, British Pound, Japanese Yen, or Chinese Yuan on that date? 10. Since there is no such country of Palestine today, what caused its demise & when did it occur? 11. Why did Palestinians never try to become independent until after the devastating defeat of invading Arab states in the 1967 Six Day War? 12. Why are there 1.5 million supposed Palestinians in UN Relief Camps now, since they first opened those camps in 1948, located in multiple nations like Jordan, Lebanon, & the Syrian Arab Republic? 13. Describe the meaning of the different colors, layout, & meanings of the Palestinian flag. When was it designed & who came up with it?
All this to say you support extermination of 200k innocent civilians of the land in question. Maybe Hitler asked these same questions prior to his killing spree
@@twinsprings24 November 14/2023 survey shows that only 13% do not support October 7th. March 2024 survey shows similar numbers. June 2024 survey shows Hamas would win elections.
I’m sure you and your previous work will be scrutinized for this by many now but I appreciate the history lesson as the world tries to bury it. It’s knowledge and you know that in itself is POWER. Thank you again sir ❤
No, you have 2.7 billion Christians in total. Out of those, there's millions of different interpretations, thousands of Denominations or sects, many of which are staunchly anti-Jewish.
@@rockysandman5489No true Bible reading Christian will hate Israel or translate the scriptures It is true the Romans Catholic had in the past through their heads who are erroneously thinking that Christians has replaced the Jews in the everlasting covenant Yahweh had with Israelites but that is false, salvation belong to the Jews, we are only engrafted into the Commonwealth of Israel Only ignorant Christians will not stand with Israel because this war is already foretold and we know how it will end If you don't know then you are not a Christian
We luv Simcha b/c he tells the truth no matter where it is. Great Jewish history lesson. Israel has been Jewish country, land, and home since Joshua conquered Caanan 3400 yrs ago. A massive amount of time that most people not Jewish simply can’t appreciate. Our attachment to our land of Israel is imbedded in every part of our being. From Mose and Joshua’s time, way back in the stone/copper age, until today 3400 yrs of the land of Judah and Israel.
I am not a historian but, as a youth, I went to church, I took history in school. I know the difference ! But you have the authority to set things straight. Most of the people in the protests are ignorant of history. Many journalists asked many questions and the protesters just got louder because they did not want to share their ignorance with the world. The rest , as you say, are Jew haters. Thanks for the history lesson. I doubt it will be heard by the stupid or the ignorant and it will be ignored by the leaders.
Thank You Simcha .. you share very good information for us. I’ve always loved watching your videos- mind blowing at times but it does make me think more about the ancient history. Please stay safe at all times you’re very much valuable to society.
As a Christian here in NZ with little understanding of the history in the area of Israel I thank you for putting the history in a way that's easier for me to understand, that's important to me because I do support Israel and pray for peace in their land 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🇭🇳🇭🇳🇭🇳🇭🇳❤❤
Kia ora! I'm a Christian but I'm appalled at Christendom's naive belief that Jews can do no wrong. God's chosen people? 'Not all those of Israel are Israel' -Romans 9:6. Also Matthew 23:37. Just type 'Nakba' in YT's search box, and learn of the beginning of what's been a slow strangulation -the world's longest apartheid of one people oppressing another. "Why should the [Palestinians] make peace? If I was an Arab leader I would never make terms with Israel, that is natural. We have taken their country. Sure, God promised it to us, but what does that matter to them? Our God is not theirs. We come from Israel, it's true, but two thousand years ago, and what is that to them? There's been anti-Semitism, the Nazis, Hitler, Auschwitz, but was that their fault? They only see one thing: we have come here and stolen their country. Why should they accept that?" -David Ben Gurion, (leading founder of Israel and it's first prime minister. Like many Zionists, he was an atheist.
....'Most Zionists don't believe God exists, but they do believe he promised them Palestine!' -IIan Pappe, Jewish, Professor of History, University of Exeter. His many books include *'The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine'* and Gaza in Crisis (with Prof. Noam Chomsky -Jewish historian). “Let us not ignore the truth among ourselves … politically we are the aggressors and they defend themselves… The *country* is theirs, because they inhabit it, whereas we want to come here and settle down, and in their view we want to take away from them their *country.”* -David Ben Gurion I think the world naively presumed Jews, after suffering unspeakable abuse in WW2, would in turn never become abusers. “The Nazis made me afraid to be a Jew, Israelis made me ashamed to be a Jew.” -Dr Israel Shahak. Not all those of Israel are Israel
My dear New Zealand Christian please read your Bible, the book of Act's chapter 2 you will see the holy spirit was poured on the Arabs in Jerusalem.That is just about a few years after our Lord Jesus Christ crucifixion before the destruction of the second temple.As a New Zealander you should be aware if Simcha used the same debate for the Maoris there would be no Europeans in new Zealand.Remeber also that there was no name for New Zealand but in the Maori tongue..The Arabs were in Palestine when our Lord walked that area.
My dear New Zealander Christian read your Bible the book of Act's chapter 2 and you will see Arabs are mentioned when the Holy spirit was poured out to the people in jerusalem.this was just a few years after our Lord Jesus Christ was crucified before the destruction of the second temple in 70 AD.As a new Zealander I wonder would happen if the Maoris wanted their land back from the Europeans and the native Americans theirs from the USA and the aborigines from the European Australians.Whether we call it Palestine or Israel the majority of people that was living there were Arabs proven by census of the Ottomans and the British and were attacked and are still attacked by the Zionists settlers
@@FairDingo..How many children were blownapart in Manchester?...and by what religion?...don't talk about innocents until you speak of all innocents....or is it only Palestinian children who matter to you?.....hypocrisy is not an admirable personality trait
They do know it. They just dislike it because it is inconvenient for them, and because of funding from anti Israel countries and organizations. I myself saw how profesors (especially Jews) who are anti Israel get promoted. You will never see a pro Israel professor make it in the supposedly "free" academia.
Thank you for this history lesson . Everyone should know these facts. It is embarrassing, heartbreaking, and scary, too, see support for terrorist. Support for terrorist words I never dreamed would come out of an American mouth. God willing, I can only hope this short video changes minds and save innocent lives.
Thank you!!! I am so glad to see a respected historian (and one of my favorites) having the balls to make the truth very clear! Shalom 🙏
He is altering history to justify the genocide that has been going on since 1948.
@@tracy3350 The Israeli propaganda “truth”.
That couldn't have been explained any better Simcha. Prayers for Israel's success and safety.
the archaeological historical artifacts evidence are enough to prove Israel belongs to the Jews.
That could have been said better..🤫🤔
I wouldn’t pay for Israel as god doesn’t listen to people who commit genocide.
@@marshabaker6153 It was said very well as Israeli propaganda.
Perhaps palestinian is a name the locals adopt to differentiate themselves from ashkenazi@margyeoman3564
I am from Kuwait, a Sunni Muslim and I support Israel ❤️🇮🇱❤️
من مسلم سني من الكويت، اقول لكم انتم شعب الله المختار، لان جميع العالم ظلمكم وإستباح دمائكم في الماضي والحاضر، وعلى الرغم من كره الكثيرين لكم الآن، انتم في النهاية من سوف يخلصهم وينقذهم من الوقوع في ظلمات الارهاب. لان ما حدث وما يحدث لكم الآن هو اختبار من الله تعالى لشعبه المختار ليرى قوتهم وذكائهم وإصرارهم على البقاء والازدهار. انتم في النهاية من سينقذ الشرق الأوسط من الارهاب والتخلف العقلي الاسلامي المتطرف ان كان شيعيا او غيره، انتم مختارين من الله لتحررونا من ظلمات الماضي ووحوش الحاضر والمستقبل ايضا! اتمنى لكم النصر وسوف ادعي لكم كل يوم! الله يحميكم ويسدد رميكم، آمين! 🤲🇮🇱🤲
And I want to add that I feel ashamed of my country and the gulf Arab countries for siding against Israel yesterday at the UN meeting 😞
@doomslayer9513. I am not of the Abrahamic faith, but your truthful & sincere comment brought me tears. Believing in Allah or a creator God of Judaism is not a problem. The problem is with Sunnahs of discrimination & hatred of Jews & Non Muslims. You do not have to apologize for your country as they were already part of the Abraham Peace Accord with Israel until it was stalled by the mullah regime in Iran. Sensible people know that the UN is a puppet to political correctness on the world stage. Have faith in the leadership of Crown Prince MBS. May you & family be well, happy & peaceful. 🙏
No you don’t feel ashamed for what a corrupt government does. You are not the government nor are they you.
Stand strong brother, advocate for peace but be capable of reminding the governments why the don’t want, Muslims, Christians, and Jews to stand together. We are to strong together for them to control. We are slaves to no men.
I’m a Christian and I don’t support Israel’s genocide.
What a stupid bot 😂😂😂
Thank you❤
Excellent historical summary, thank you, Mr. Jacobovici!
I am an American Christian. I’ve always enjoyed your videos Simcha. I’ll always love and support the Jewish people.
@@Tom-bz6fg and probably trump as well
Why?.
Btw.....I'm Inupiaq NorthSlope Alyeska. You should love Natives mainland USA. You're on their land.
Thank you ❤God bless you 🙌
So you are NOT indigineous to America , your an invader
@@יוליהטלקר what do you think of Nelson Mandela
A crash course on history :
1. Before Israel, there was a British mandate, not a Palestinian state
2. Before the British Mandate, there was the Ottoman Empire, not a Palestinian state.
3. Before the Ottoman Empire, there was the Islamic state of the Mamluks of Egypt, not a Palestinian state.
4. Before the Islamic state of the Mamluks of Egypt, there was the Ayubid Arab-Kurdish Empire, not a Palestinian state.
5. Before the Ayubid Empire, there was the Frankish and Christian Kingdom of Jerusalem, not a Palestinian state.
6. Before the Kingdom of Jerusalem, there was the Umayyad and Fatimid empires, not a Palestinian state.
7. Before the Umayyad and Fatimid empires, there was the Byzantine empire, not a Palestinian state.
8. Before the Byzantine Empire, there were the Sassanids, not a Palestinian state.
9. Before the Sassanid Empire, there was the Byzantine Empire, not a Palestinian state.
10. Before the Byzantine Empire, there was the Roman Empire, not a Palestinian state.
11. Before the Roman Empire, there was the Hasmonean state, not a Palestinian state.
12. Before the Hasmonean state, there was the Seleucid, not a Palestinian state.
13. Before the Seleucid empire, there was the empire of Alexander the Great, not a Palestinian state.
14. Before the empire of Alexander the Great, there was the Persian empire, not a Palestinian state.
15. Before the Persian Empire, there was the Babylonian Empire, not a Palestinian state.
16. Before the Babylonian Empire, there were the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah, not a Palestinian state.
17. Before the Kingdoms of Israel and Judah, there was the Kingdom of Israel, not a Palestinian state.
18. Before the kingdom of Israel, there was the theocracy of the twelve tribes of Israel, not a Palestinian state.
19. Before the theocracy of the twelve tribes of Israel, there was an agglomeration of independent Canaanite city-kingdoms, not a Palestinian state.
20. Actually, in this piece of land there has been everything, EXCEPT A PALESTINIAN STATE.
So Spain never was mentioned in the Bible or Koran therefore itnever existed? Nobody lived there for hunderts of years because you regard them as nobodies? This ignorance never will lead to peace.
Wow! Thanx. Could you explain this to Justin Trudeau and Herr Starmer?
Sounds like you're a bit obsessive. The REGION has been known as Palestine since ancient times.
Just who is this "expert"?
The prophet Jesus was effectively executed by the corrupt hierarchy of the temple in Jerusalem. It was they who wanted him dead. Not the Jewish people and not the disinterested Roman administrators.
Jesus had been viciously tortured by the temple guards on the orders of the high priests and Sanhedrin.
I don't understand the point of this "expert". The Jews or Judah if you like were vanquished 2000 years ago. The land doesn't belong to them. That warlord Abraham had no claim over Canaan either.
@@johncater7861
🫵👌💯🐂💩
& Abraham was not a war lord....................
@@motog4-75 he was a warlord. He wasn't just some shepherd with a couple of sheep and goats. He led a large retinue including many slaves.
Israel is mentioned 40 times in the Quran. Palestine not once.
The USA isn’t mentioned either, so I guess they have no right to exist.
Doesn’t mean people weren’t living there anyway
@@ramprat9292 Why is that even relevant? The US isn’t mentioned either, does that mean they have no right to exist?
@@gweilospur5877 USA start to exist way after quran was writen, so quran is not a source to determine USA right to exist.
@@Toorek100 Ok then, China existed at that time, but is not mentioned, so China has no right to exist. It’s a dumb argument. There was never a country called Israel before 1948, there was a Roman Province called Judea, but never an independent country called Israel. The question is pointless because the idea of “country” as we use the word today didn’t exist in those times.
Simcha is my favorite historian/Archeologist. Good to see ya!
Islam just can't get along with others. Never has. Never wants to
They can't even get along with each OTHER
@@davie8906beat me to it👍
@garytaylor7291
They are jealous of the Jews who received God covenant through Abraham and Isaac while they claim it should go through Ishmael the son of Abraham born in sin to a slave.
Mohammed tried to get the Jews on board so he could claim they acknowledge his made up nonsense as the true religion and when they refused he slaughtered them.
It's simple jealousy.
This was a very disappointing video. Multiple studies of DNA have been done over the last two decades, including those done by Jewish researchers and all have reached the exact same conclusion. Israelis and Palestinians are the same indigenous people to the area. You don't have to believe me, because you can find the studies yourself online from highly respected institutions.
@@garytaylor7291 And how about Christianity? What atrocities have been committed in the past by Christians against others and against each other?
Thanks for making this video. I am not a Jew, but the facts you have presented here are fundamental historical facts that most professors, for whatever reason, choose not to teach their students. Thank you again.
The universities have been corrupted for over half a century now. Any professor that would teach such a course would need 24/7 security for them and their family.
IF YOU ARE WHITE YOU ARE HEBREW
These professors suffer restricted thinking. Restricted by extremely narrow political positions. It leads them head first into a rabbit hole of nonsense which they don’t see till they hit the bottom.
At University in the 1970’s we were never taught to ignore facts. Postmodernism has taught them facts are conditional and can be ignored if they don’t suit you.
I miss Modernism. Sigh
@@zetatheta964 "Postmodernism has taught them facts are conditional and can be ignored if they don’t suit you."
That is _precisely_ the big problem.
This needs to be played at protested campuses on large outdoor screens.
The U.N. should have to watch this twice.
They can't, because it would be considered hate speech on any college campus.
Oh they know
They just deny it.
@@michaeld2716 F the UN
It wouldn’t matter. Those idiots wouldn’t believe it and no amount of proof would matter.
Thank you Simcha. We stand with Israel.
Israel did not exist ... the Middle East mess is a construct of a befuddled British administration greedy for oil while trying to wash its hands of its colonial past ...
This is one smart dude. Do yourself a favour and listen carefully.
Shalom.
Joel 3:4
@@EndofDays-7777 If you stand with Israel or the Palestinians you know nothing of their war. Everything that either side does is wrong.
@@AccordQS you think he reads this? This is Zionist propaganda for a Greater Israel. Ask him where the borders are lol. But you don’t care. If you haven’t seen the settlers actions by now you’re blind or giving the ammunition. Shame on you.
This Amazing Canadian Made an Incredible series of films called The Naked Archaeologist. Probably the most comprehensive study of the archaeological history, from a Biblical point of view on Israel ever made. Thank You Simcha, Its great to see you again !☺
key point, "from a biblical point of view". He started and ended with bias.
@au303 he also said "we Jews" He also neglects to mention that Israel hasn't exsisted for 2,769 years. Nor the fact that the Kingdom of Israel only lasted just over 500yrs and Judea 600 odd yrs. Very short lived kingdoms.
DNA wise most peope who say they are Israelis now only have around 3% Semitic DNA, where as the people who call themselves Palestinians have 98% Semitic DNA. So who is more native?
To top it off there is no such race as a Jew. Judaism is a religion. I could convert to Judaism then call myself a Jew .
Great to be back!
@@meggraham7564lmfao please provide sources for your facts!!!
This is exactly the truth! Thank you, Simcha! God bless you and Israel. 🇮🇱❤️🇺🇸
God won’t bless people who commit genocide in fairness.
ua-cam.com/video/sQk41nLuhGA/v-deo.html
Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy.
1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917)
Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice.
Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference.
2. Social and Religious Coexistence
Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty.
Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions.
3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies
While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire.
Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism.
4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism
Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state.
Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority.
5. The Shift with Modern Zionism
The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state.
Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian).
6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions
By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life.
The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I.
Summary
Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century.
Thank you Simcha lovely to see you again.
Blessings to you.
He's a renowned fraud
@glenng You're the fraudulent one, ahmed
@@glenng… can you prove it then !! Nobody believes “mud throwing” without solid proof…
Shameful…
@@glenng Hi Abdool. How are the goats going? 🙂🙂🙂
From a Canadian supporter of the state of Israel. Very enlightening information. Thank you for what you do!👍
Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy.
1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917)
Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice.
Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference.
2. Social and Religious Coexistence
Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty.
Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions.
3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies
While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire.
Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism.
4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism
Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state.
Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority.
5. The Shift with Modern Zionism
The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state.
Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian).
6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions
By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life.
The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I.
Summary
Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century.
Dear Simcha, it's always good to hear from you, you've done a lot of journalistic history, receiving awards for your investigative journalistic work, for us you're a champion. Shana bless you and always be happy. Like your name.
I’m an English Christian and I stand with Isreal and always will. 🇮🇱🇮🇱✡️🏴🏴✝️
Then you would agree that dual citizenship with Israel should force all Jews and Christians to be drafted and sent to Israel.
We'll pay for your ticket to fight for Israel. Your on a Nazi level since the Christians committed Genocide for Hitler.
The Catholic church sponsored the Nazi regime to commit the Auswitch crimes during Hitlers rein
Same as you brother 👍👏
So you are standing with a religious apartheid state that for 76 years has worked to make its original inhabitants 'disappear' ...
God bless you brother
Then I hope you'll switch to the right side sooner or later.
Thank you for the truth. History is badly needed. The ignorant will believe anything.
They simply follow others like sheep ….
It's SHOCKING though, to see how many people online you honestly can't talk to them, b/c they are SO convinced of what they know. I have come to believe it's NOT worth trying to argue w/ them.
@@tammyboon6259 … why are they “shocking” and can’t talk to them ? because they post their opinion ?
You’re too, offer your opinion, as others offer theirs …why to argue ??
The internet is a vast “universe” as we know it, of course there’s so many people on it, and
how do you say “they so convinced of what they know” …we’re all have our individual opinions
and we all offering them … Same way you have …aren’t you convinced of yours ?? you’ve clearly stated it …
We do not contest against each others opinions, and we don’t expect others to contest against ours …
We’re to accept and respect others as they must respect us, and never argue with anyone,
there’s no point, because we’re all, as you say, “convinced of what we know” after all !!!
@@NeVs-cb1ocwhen it comes to historical facts, there is only truth.
If you wish to believe in something does not necessarily make it truth.
@@NeVs-cb1ocopinions vs facts
Hi Simcha! So happy to have found your channel! I've seen many many many shows over the years and enjoyed it all! Thank You!👍👍💙💙
Inshaalah, may the anti Jewish, pro Palestinian & Islamist community cleanse their mind with the Truth & learn to co-exist peacefully!🙏
That is my biggest hope. The pro islamist mindset is a big key to the current problem.
@@C.E.Thomas1952 A mindset corrupted by a psychotic 7th century warlord.
@@C.E.Thomas1952.. Along with the far left..
Hopefully people will stop being tribal and realize there are no good guys in this conflict.
@@IronChin100 😂 that you can watch this video and still believe that? Well, have a nice day in your dreams.
Truely love your work.
None are so blind as those who refuse to see!
@@RobertYoung-lt5ls Living is easy with eyes closed, misunderstanding all you see.
Paul M/John L.
@@RobertYoung-lt5ls I would say those murdering children are beyond blind.
Refuse to believe
@@donramon9723 Does that go for unborn children, or are you going to put conditions on that, like others claim with, well that`s different?
@@RobertYoung-lt5ls that’s a very good question. Every case may be unique unto itself. I don’t condone the taking of an life. However there are some instances where that choice should be made by the person who will carry child to term. Killing others in blatant attacks don’t have much justification.
Thank you for the historical perspective. Glad to see you are back in a public forum
Chatgpt
Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy.
1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917)
Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice.
Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference.
2. Social and Religious Coexistence
Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty.
Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions.
3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies
While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire.
Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism.
4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism
Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state.
Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority.
5. The Shift with Modern Zionism
The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state.
Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian).
6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions
By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life.
The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I.
Summary
Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century.
Zionism is the core problem not Judaism
Thank you for making this video. Just the facts, no politics and no sides. I wish that there were content creators who were more like Simcha Jacobovici, real journalists that care about telling the truth.
Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy.
1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917)
Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice.
Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference.
2. Social and Religious Coexistence
Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty.
Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions.
3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies
While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire.
Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism.
4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism
Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state.
Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority.
5. The Shift with Modern Zionism
The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state.
Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian).
6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions
By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life.
The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I.
Summary
Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century.
@@timmo8909y you spent a lot of time to not address the realistic issues. But thanks for the additional info I guess.
Thank you for continuing to educate us; it's not easy to find truth on this topic
@TinnyDee he's an Emmy winning documentarian.. and a badly needed voice of truth
KJV Joel 3:4 . Palestine .
Sacha is a liar.
Simcha, “the Naked Archeologist” has a way of making complex or muddled history understandable! Thank you Simcha.
Archaeologist.
And twisting it .
Palestine is mentioned in the Bible .
Joel 3;4 .
@@EndofDays-7777 A talking snake is also mentioned in the Bible, and a man who lived for a few days inside a whale, and a boat that held every species of animal on Earth. The Bible is a ridiculous fairy tale.
@@EndofDays-7777
Joel 3:4
“Now what have you against me, Tyre and Sidon and all you regions of Philistia....
Palestine 🤷♂️🤷♂️????
Kingdom of Philistia cities
*Gaza
*Ashkelon
*Ashdod
Well said.. thankyou for the education ❤ from Australia 🇦🇺
That’s so true, there was never a Palestine. I love this man he is such a historical truths❤
There was never an America. It was created by Europeans who called it after an Italian.
How is that for a historical truth?
I have been following your work for many years and I don't think anyone could have said it any better - Thank you!
Thank you ... we need your voice right now.
Bless you, Simcha. 🙏🏼
Genealogical tracking services are illegal in Israel because they evidence the fact that ninety-five percent of the self-styled "Jews" in Israel are neither descendants
of ancient Hebrews, or of any indigenous population in the Middle East. The genetic, historical and linguistic evidence is clear--Their ancestral homeland is in fact
a region north of the Black Sea and Caspian Sea called Khazaria, whose inhabitants adopted Judaism in the 9th century A.D.
Don't. He's lying. Blatantly.
Joel 3:4 Kjv .
Palestine.
This was absolutely fascinating- thanks for posting. Keep up the good work. Love from Ireland❤
Always appreciated your series on History Channel. Great to see you again! And again as always your content is insightful & well presented. Thank you.
Who blesses Israel will be blessed!! Who curses Israel will be cursed !! We know how this goes down at the end !!The KING of KINGS will come and fight the battle of battles and VICTORY will take place
@@PatriciaSaunders-w5c He who blesses the modern state of Israelll is complicit in gennocide. He who calls this hypocrisy out is a so called “antisemitee”
Bless those that speak the truth for truths sake.
They hate jesus. Grow up. Modern israel is not the biblical israel.
Thank you Simca. I have missed you.
I've also missed him :(
Ditto!!
@@Kim-yl4bz Tripple Ditto ....with a cherry on Top!!!!
Me too
me three
Thank you for speaking up Simcha. Shalom.
You do realise that this guy has been exposed as a total fraud, don't you?
@@glenngYou're the fraudulent one, ahmed
I am from Kuwait, a Sunni Muslim and I support Israel ❤️🇮🇱❤️
من مسلم سني من الكويت، اقول لكم انتم شعب الله المختار، لان جميع العالم ظلمكم وإستباح دمائكم في الماضي والحاضر، وعلى الرغم من كره الكثيرين لكم الآن، انتم في النهاية من سوف يخلصهم وينقذهم من الوقوع في ظلمات الارهاب. لان ما حدث وما يحدث لكم الآن هو اختبار من الله تعالى لشعبه المختار ليرى قوتهم وذكائهم وإصرارهم على البقاء والازدهار. انتم في النهاية من سينقذ الشرق الأوسط من الارهاب والتخلف العقلي الاسلامي المتطرف ان كان شيعيا او غيره، انتم مختارين من الله لتحررونا من ظلمات الماضي ووحوش الحاضر والمستقبل ايضا! اتمنى لكم النصر وسوف ادعي لكم كل يوم! الله يحميكم ويسدد رميكم، آمين! 🤲🇮🇱🤲
And I want to add that I feel ashamed of my country and the gulf Arab countries for siding against Israel yesterday at the UN meeting 😞
@@glenngI am from Kuwait, a Sunni Muslim and I support Israel ❤️🇮🇱❤️
@@doomslayer9513بارك الله فيك يا عزيزي الإنسان ❤
I am an Iranian, and I stand with Israel ❤️🇮🇱❤️
Many Arab historians and scholars agree with that.
Also, the so called Palestinians may have been the sea people spoken about by the ancient Egyptians. That kind of confirms your suggestion they came from the Aegean area.
@@geraldgrieve4106well those Sea People were wiped out by Sanchereb....two millenium before Islam....those" uncircumcised pig eaters " disappeared long before any arabs ever came through that land ...though.
@@yperkin1016 The process of Arabs appropriating the title palestinains was initiated in 1966, that is 2570 years after the philistines were obliterated.
Zuheir Mohsen, a senior PLO leader, in 1977:
“The Palestinian people do not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle against the state of Israel for our Arab unity… Only for political and tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that we posit the existence of a distinct ‘Palestinian people’ to oppose Zionism. Yes, the existence of a separate Palestinian identity exists only for tactical reasons.”
@@philip54073exactly, but the “woke” will not accept that. AND, it was invented by Arafat, who was not a “Palestinian” at all, he was born in Cairo…was and always will be, Egyptian.
May Gd bless Israel and may Gd bless and protect you and your family! 🙏🇮🇱❤️🇮🇱
Thank you Simcha, I am a "Pious Gentile", Hashem is my G-d, (B'H), and I thank you for all the great Films, History and Documentaries that you make. You are my mentor, though I am nothing. keep up the great work. sincerely Irvin M Ferguson, Arizona.
❤
What do you expect, we live in a world that hates the Truth.
Thank you Simcha.
Australian Christian here. Always, always praying for Israel.
And why are Christians so supportive of Israel? It's because in the Christian Bible it states that Israel will be rebuilt just before the second coming of Christ. He will then bring the believers in Jesus Christ with him into Heaven and destroy Israel.
It's really a strange sentiment for a Christian to be, "Always, always praying for Israel."
@@davidsnyder3799 Many Christians have been deceived into supporting their own "eternal" demise. The anti-christ will rule from Jerusalem until the Messiah casts him out. Even with all the warnings they've been given, a lot of Christian folks are still being deceived.
@@dgime7087 We live in a world where extremists claim they know the truth and others don’t.
Warning: Ziobots posting fake country locations are everywhere. It's a pathetic attempt at Zionist propaganda.
The veil of Ignorance is heavy on humanity.
All by design.
Especially Israelis!
@@BIBIWCICC grow up
@@cindysunley5992 Can’t all be enlightened like you, eh?
Well said Simca !!
Israel has a right to exist!!
Not only a right, but a duty.
Every person has the right to exist. Israel has a duty to exist, so that the right to life will be for every person.
@@999.9finegold
id argue some people dont have a right but I guess you are more forgiving then I am
And still think my statement is correct you two have just added on to my correct statement in a very “internetish” and semantic way.
@@999.9finegold The Arab/Muslims do NOT believe in Israel's right to exist and they are trying very hard to eliminate the Jewish population from the face of the earth. You should read the following Arab published document.
Hamas Covenant 1988
The Covenant
of the
Islamic Resistance Movement
18 August 1988
In The Name Of The Most Merciful Allah
Israel will exist and will continue to exist until Islam will obliterate it, just as it obliterated others before it" (The Martyr, Imam Hassan al-Banna, of blessed memory).That was just a line from that document.
Apparently Palestinians don't have a right to exist.
I am an American Christian and I will always stand with Israel.
rusted on
Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy.
1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917)
Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice.
Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference.
2. Social and Religious Coexistence
Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty.
Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions.
3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies
While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire.
Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism.
4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism
Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state.
Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority.
5. The Shift with Modern Zionism
The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state.
Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian).
6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions
By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life.
The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I.
Summary
Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century.
Zionism is the core problem not Judaism
Joel 3:4 mentions Palestine by name . Sacha is a liar.
I guess one can stand with Israel without standing with its current government, and maintain peace with Jesus. I pray for Israel's deliverance
With respect, Jesus helped the downtrodden. The Palestinians are the downtrodden.
Warning: Ziobots posting fake country locations are everywhere. It's a pathetic attempt at Zionist propaganda.
Glad to have your channel and to hear you address this.
Hey Patricia Grace gtsy. Wish we could share this video to AFTV
@@deanr1963 this video! I am so sorry I could not recall this earlier!
@@patriciagrace18 that’s ok my friend
No Palestine in the Bible
That's what he said.
Nor in the Quran
@@global.explorer that what the Bible. God is not a man who should. Go and read the Bible and see for yourself
Ex Canaanite God Baal = Allah the moon god
What? It's The Philistines. After Rome defeated the naughty jews they renamed the area Palestine to mock them
Thank you Simcha, I have watched your show for as long as I can remember. Thank you for telling truth. God bless you in the name of Jesus! 🇨🇦❤🇦🇷
You do know Jews hate Jesus right?.., Sarah Silverman once said that she is glad the Jews killed Jesus and if she could she would kill him again.., honestly Linda you really take stooopid to another level.
Accurate. Good to hear a sane voice - I was wondering everyone had lost their mind already
I’m a Jew and American and I feel robbed of my ancestral identity and self knowledge and self esteem because I’ve been brainwashed to deny my indigenous truth,
The truth is I am middle eastern and my people come from Judaea.
One silver lining in this era of widespread and propagated hate of Jewish people today, is myself and lots of Jewish Americans are experiencing a soul retrieval, self esteem healing and knowledge expansion. I finally understand why I’ve been walking this earth feeling pieces of me are missing. What’s been missing is acknowledgment, community support, a connection to my ancestors, an understanding of my indigenous spirit and the gd truth that I am a person of significance and truth and I am a part of a people,people who are the most loving of tribes. The world has become more hateful but at least I now know I have a tribe of people who have my back when I feel weak, confused and lost in the misinformation being propagated in this hateful world. Thank you for your video and to all the Jews and truth tellers who have helped deprogram my mind from the antisemitic propaganda that got me feeling I was alone, wrong, different, and outsider and unlikable.
It’s a struggle being brave and speaking out when I feel like the world is here to give me a mental and emotional breakdown so I really want to thank everyone who’s able to speak up for Jews and stand for truth and goodness because I am feeling very scared and very weak
TO any Jewish person afraid scared any who feel they must hide their identity mu heart and love go out to you all and know this THE TRUE CHRISTIAN CHURCH LOVES YOU ALL KEEPS YOU ALL IN PRAYER SPEAKS GODS PROMISES OVER YOU FOR YOU AND CLAIMS HIS WORD ON YOUR BEHALF LEARN TO PRAY TO YESHUA TRUST IN HIM HIS WORD FOR HE IS FOR YOU AND NOT AGAINST YOU BELIEVE IN HIM HIS PROMISES AND ALSO HIS WARNINGS DO AS HE SAYS TRUST AND OBEY AND YOU SHALL SEE THE GLORY OF THE LORD IN YOUR LAND IN YOUR LIFE AND IN ALL ISRAELIS LIVES GOD SEES HRPE SEES THE INJUSTICES THE HATRED THE PAIN THE TEARS NOTHING IS WASTED IGNORED UNSEEN BY HIS EYE ISRAEL IS THE APPLE OF HIS EYE AND VENGENGE IS MINE SAYS THE LORD I WILL REPAY LEAN ON HIM AND NOT ON YOUR OWN UNDERSTANDING IN ALL YOUR WAYS ACKNOWLEDGE HIM AND HE WILL DIRECT YOUR PATHS TURN YOUR EYES UPON JESUS CALL UNTO HIM TRUST AND OBEY PRAY LISTEN TO HOLY SPIRIT HE WILL NEVER LET YOU GO HE HAS BOUGHT YOU THIS FAR BY HIS GRACE AND HE WILLBRING YOU TO ZION HIS PRAISES TO SING OH BLESSED BE GOD AMEN 🙏🏻 ❤️ 🇮🇱🇮🇱🇮🇱
Shalom our Jewish brother - In your weakness your Elohim is strong- He is for you and not against you. He says “Fear not, for I Am with you”. There are millions of non-Jews around the world standing with Israel and therefore standing with you. You are not alone. The Elohim of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob is The G-d of Israel and all the Earth. He is your Creator and mine. He is waiting for His people Israel to make teshuva and return you Him so He may “forgive their sin and heal their land” 2 Chronicles 7: 14…..Read His Torah and know He loves you and He is your deliverer. Yeshua means salvation. Who is Yeshua? If you seek and search for Him you will find Him. 🙏 for you and all of Israel. Am Yisrael Chai!
And my obligatory, secular message of support to contrast the religiously sourced one from the other guy who replied - As a fellow Jew, (and Israeli) I'm sending you lots of warm support and wish you all the best.
I am English and what is happening in Britain has such a bad feel about it. I empathise.
@@rockysandman5489 💕
I am from Ireland and I stand with Israel, the Israeli people and the brave IDF. God bless and protect you.
Why does it seem many in Ireland are against Israel and Jews?
I am Irish and I stand with Israel and my Jewish friends! There are many Irish people who support Israel! Thank you
f ireland m f
f ire
p o sh
THIS needs/MUST be taught in schools!!!
Needs to be taught everywhere, school, college, university, all these pro hamas (not palestine, say it as it is) protestors need educating.
I think it is already used to brainwash the next generation of genocidal Israeli kids!
I am happy I took the time to watch this video. Thank you Mr. Jacobovici for explaining everything so clearly.
Simcha, as a non-Jew, non-Arab I have researched the Israel-Palestine conflict since October 7th and have to agree with everything you said in this video. With regards to the "from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free" taken from the HAMAS charter, I would recommend that people who believe this should read the rest of the HAMAS charter which includes the destruction of Israel and the killing of all the Jews in Israel. Hardly a peaceful or accomodating ideology. Another problem is that in the islamic religion they do not believe that any land that once was occupied by muslims can ever be anything else. Also the moslem brotherhood has the slogan "Muslim should dominate not be dominated". So when Egypt ruled GAZA there was no problem with the local arab "Palestinians". Once it came under Israeli control all hell broke loose even though they were treated better by the Israelis.
It may sound strange but the reason that Israelis thought all would be well if the Arabs were treated the same as Jews, is because Jews were not taught to hate others from an early age. Today Israelis may have learned that they cannot “blindly believe” that Arabs don’t hate Jews and just want a chance to live in peace, because,sadly, it’s just not true.
I wish someone somewhere could find a way to undo the harm done to Pale stinian children and free them from hating those they don’t even know. Their lives would improve 100% and Israeli lives would also improve. They wouldn’t have to keep running to bomb shelters, waste money on defensive weapons - they could use that money to build better lives for everyone in that area.
Challenge to the wealthy: Please offer a substantial reward for anyone coming up with a workable solution to undo years of taught hatred. Both you and the person finding a solution would be heroes, better than Batman, smarter than Superman, more wonderful than Wonder Woman.
Do you know the ruling Likud party's motto?
@@moonshinesa8234 Only God can and will make right everything in the Middle East and the rest of the world. Biblical scripture says that things will get a lot worse before they get better. It's all part of God's plan.
The charter doesn't just "include" the destruction of Israel. It's literally the FIRST article: "Israel will exist until islam will wipe it off the map". And every other article there is soaked with the same anti Semitism.
Sick lojec
Very good,we need more from you.The clarity you bring along with your credentials will help fight those who rewrite history.
I am a Jewish grandma from the Bronx and I always and always will stand for Israel
תבואי לבקר בארץ הקודש כשהמצב יירגע קצת.
palestine? …..never heard of it! 🧐🤔🤨
You would have to ask an ancient Roman. They re-named a place. It's, let me think, um.........................ISRAEL!
@@Rick-ih7wp Israel only became the name of a country in 1948.
@@Rick-ih7wp Judea! …..think it was Emperor Hadrian that tried to rename it and flooded the area with people from modern day Jordan, in an attempt to disengage the Jewish people from they’re land after centuries of bloody Jewish revolts!
Well thats up for discussion. Kingdom of Judea with Jerusalem is fact. Depending the source , there was a kingdom of Israël. Either way people of Israël seems clear, right? Why being in denial ? Even the mosque build on the Jewish temple. Jews are from Judea. Its even in the name of their ethnocity. Jehudi , right? Thats how arab calls them, right? @@gweilospur5877
@@gweilospur5877 Israel is a state name from whence Judaea (used by English speakers) is its origin. Yehudah was a son of Jacob, who was later given the name "Israel" and whose sons collectively headed the Twelve Tribes of Israel. This goes back to the Roman and Greek provinces, hence his explanation starting about 5:20.
Thank you for Truth. . I have missed you. . My favorite archaeologist.
An archaeologist basing his theories on a fictitious book! Not very good is it, thin at best. Don’t worry the world is full of actually educated people who know what Israel is up to.
Thanks for this. Hope we see you more!
So much info crammed into 8:35. Thank you.
Thank you so much. Nice to see you're doing well, sir. I've learned so much from you over the years.
I am a Ghanaian Christian and will forever stand with Israel and any Israeli. Israel is the only lawmaker in the entire world. I bless the nation of Israel today and forever remain blessed.
Chatgpt
Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy.
1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917)
Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice.
Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference.
2. Social and Religious Coexistence
Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty.
Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions.
3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies
While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire.
Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism.
4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism
Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state.
Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority.
5. The Shift with Modern Zionism
The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state.
Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian).
6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions
By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life.
The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I.
Summary
Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century.
Zionism is the core problem not Judaism
Warning: Ziobots posting fake country locations are everywhere. It's a pathetic attempt at Zionist propaganda.
correct, palestine is a perceptional metaphor. so many people simply don't know true history
Someone tell that to all protesters please !!!
They follow radicals, like sheep 🐑
It’s more than a metaphor. Joel 3:4
P@lesheth
pel-eh'-sheth
Parts of Speech
Noun
P@lesheth Definition
NAS Word Usage - Total: 8
Philistia = "land of sojourners"
the general territory on the west coast of Canaan or the entire country of Palestine
@@OrangeMonkey2112 that is talking about the Philistines from ancient times, not the the region of palestine as some address it today. palestine was give that name after the hebrews were dispersed by the romans in 70AD. the romans later called the region palestine, but this was not a correct name to address the region. watch the video it completely explains it.
@@Home-n9b I was trying to make the point it was a region and not a people. The original word used in Joel 3:4 explains it is a region. Someone mentioned it was a people and that’s what I was trying to dismiss.
Thanks
@@Home-n9b sorry your wrong.
I am glad I found you here. I love seeing your work. This was so good to see. Thank you for sharing your historical insight.
My Jewish Bubbe was born in what she called palestine in 1905. Her family can trace their roots back at least 1,000 years on the same land. She only called it Palestine because the British called it the Palestine territories . In 1925 she married and moved to the USA. In 1949 she was given a free trip to Israel. She said she cried with joy to able to call the country she was born in, Israel.
Joel 3:4
P@lesheth
pel-eh'-sheth
Parts of Speech
Noun
P@lesheth Definition
NAS Word Usage - Total: 8
Philistia = "land of sojourners"
the general territory on the west coast of Canaan or the entire country of Palestine
@@OrangeMonkey2112Peleset were a sea people that invaded coastal villages, also invaded Egypt and more. They were not from the Levant. Do you use the same ideology you just used for Arabs from Arabia? So should all the Arabs go back to Arabia? Try again….
Good idea...except most arab countries, including Egypt, won't have the'Palestinians'.
@@heatherhinde6544 including Arabia herself
That's a sweet story
and there's no P in arabic.
Not for Palestinian
Not for Peace 😂
In Arabic it's pronounced Filisteen.
Philishtim literally means “invaders “ in Hebrew and Arabic.
@@mollyfriedman2013 But those who are anti Israel will wriggle and squirm away the lack of “P” in the language of those who call themselves “Alestinians”, “Falestinians” trying to get to Pale stinians with a silent P.
What came first filastin or palestina (latin)? You identify as a latin word and yes there is no p in arabic lol
1 mistake; the quran isnt holy
So True...
The devils book of deception the queeran
good point
Nor are any other "holy books".
They are all written by men. Not god.
The Quran is just the worst and most ridiculous one.
To the muslims it is
The Bible isn't such a pure teaching either
Am Yisrael Chai! Thank you Mr. Jocobovici for this little lesson of history. I am Romanian and I support Israel. Greetings from Romania!
You are an absolute legendary film maker, walla! Thanks for returning to the screen ahi!
This is the best explanation I've heard. I'm a Pastor and I enjoy your documentaries and the series naked archeology. You sir are a wealth of knowledge for Jews and Christians alike.
im not a Christian, im a Buddhist, but i really loved all your documentary, its like seeing a real life Indiana Jones. Glad to see you again !
Have you seen" the quest for the lost tribes ?"
@@lk80630 Yes, it was a good episode, but my favourite is the Exodus one and the Jesus Tomb one.
@@malaysianman5941 👍
Yes, Simcha! We know! It’s difficult to convince others who fall for the propaganda! Thank you for doing this! Many, many people listen to you! Love your work! I am so happy you’re back to posting on UA-cam! God fights for Israel! I am so excited about the archaeology going on in Jerusalem!
Chatgpt doesn't do bs
Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy.
1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917)
Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice.
Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference.
2. Social and Religious Coexistence
Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty.
Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions.
3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies
While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire.
Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism.
4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism
Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state.
Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority.
5. The Shift with Modern Zionism
The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state.
Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian).
6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions
By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life.
The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I.
Summary
Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century.
Zionism is the core problem not Judaism
Great video and very well said. Thank you Simcha!
Chatgpt
Yes, there was relative peace between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the region historically known as Palestine (modern-day Israel and the Palestinian territories) before the rise of modern Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This period of coexistence, especially under the Ottoman Empire (1517-1917), was characterized by a system where religious communities lived alongside each other, often in harmony, though with some degree of social and political hierarchy.
1. Ottoman Rule (1517-1917)
Under the Ottoman Empire, Palestine was part of a larger empire that governed many different religious and ethnic groups. The millet system allowed different religious communities (Muslims, Christians, Jews) to govern themselves in matters of personal law (marriage, divorce, inheritance) and religious practice.
Muslims were the majority, while Jews and Christians were dhimmi (non-Muslim protected people). While dhimmis had fewer political rights than Muslims and paid a special tax (jizya), they were generally allowed to practice their religion and manage their own communities without major interference.
2. Social and Religious Coexistence
Coexistence in Cities: In cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, and Safed, Muslims, Jews, and Christians lived in close proximity, each with their own religious sites and neighborhoods. There were established Jewish communities, known as the Old Yishuv, which had lived in Palestine for centuries, particularly for religious reasons, rather than for political sovereignty.
Economic Interdependence: Muslims, Christians, and Jews were often economically interdependent. They traded, engaged in agriculture, and shared social and cultural spaces. This practical interdependence fostered a kind of peaceful coexistence, although it did not necessarily indicate full equality or the absence of any local tensions.
3. Localized Tensions and Hierarchies
While there was relative peace, this period was not entirely without tension. Minor conflicts sometimes arose, often based on local issues like land disputes, economic competition, or grievances within the religious hierarchy. However, these conflicts were typically resolved through negotiation or the legal systems of the Ottoman Empire.
Importantly, these tensions were not driven by large-scale political or nationalistic ambitions, as would later be the case with the rise of Zionism and Arab nationalism.
4. Jewish Presence Before Zionism
Jewish Communities: Before modern Zionism, the Jewish community in Palestine was small, representing about 3-5% of the population in the mid-19th century. These communities were mostly religious Jews living in cities like Jerusalem, Hebron, Tiberias, and Safed. They were integrated into the broader fabric of Palestinian society without the goal of creating a political state.
Jews in Palestine during this time were not seen as a political threat, and their presence was generally accepted by the Muslim majority and the Christian minority.
5. The Shift with Modern Zionism
The situation changed with the rise of the Zionist movement in the late 19th century, which advocated for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine. Zionist leaders, such as Theodor Herzl, called for large-scale Jewish immigration and the development of a Jewish state.
Jewish Immigration and Land Purchases: Beginning in the 1880s, waves of Jewish immigrants (in what became known as the First Aliyah) arrived in Palestine. Zionist organizations bought large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian Arab tenant farmers who had lived on the land for generations. This began to create tensions between the Jewish immigrants and the local Arab population (both Muslim and Christian).
6. Rise of Nationalist Tensions
By the early 20th century, the previously peaceful coexistence started to break down as Jewish immigration increased and the Zionist project became more visible. The local Arab population, which had previously coexisted with smaller Jewish communities, began to perceive the Zionist movement as a threat to their land, political power, and way of life.
The growing Zionist presence coincided with the rise of Arab nationalism, and the idea of Palestinian national identity began to form in response to both Zionism and British colonial rule after World War I.
Summary
Before the arrival of modern Zionism in the late 19th century, there was relative peace and coexistence between Christians, Jews, and Muslims in Palestine, particularly under Ottoman rule. While there were social and political hierarchies, local tensions, and occasional conflicts, these were not based on the nationalistic and territorial struggles that emerged later with the rise of Zionism and large-scale Jewish immigration. The introduction of Zionism and the push for a Jewish homeland began to shift the dynamics in the region, leading to increasing tensions and conflict in the 20th century.
Zionism is the core problem not Judaism
Thank you, Simcha, for explaining this simply in a way I can easily understand.
Love you to pieces Simcha , where have you been !
There is already a palestinian state. It's called jordan. 60% are of "palestinian" descent. One state is more than enough. Go there
Rubish there never were Palestinian they were Palestinian Arabs....
They are arabs. There is no such think as palestinian arabs.
Well, in actuality, they're not even Palestinian, they're just Arab peoples.
Palestinians are in reference to the Philistines, the Philistines were Aegean.
Exactly 💯
In addition Jordan is on biblical Israel. Jordan use to be called Transjordan. Transjordan is a quick simple translation of the Hebrew term that’s mentioned in the Torah numerous times Bee-aver- Ha - yarden. Snake charmers are so deceitful. See when the Arabs got Transjordan they took out the Trans and left the name Jordan. If they were to completely change the name it would be easier to figure out so they just left Jordan- Jordan river Jordan land named after someone named Jordan ah no . To name a land “ the other side of the Jordan had to be people living in that land the other side ie the Jews.
Thank you for explaining it so well.
God bless Israel 🇮🇱❤️🇦🇺
So good to see you speaking out on this enormous issue Simcha! I’ve been waiting for you to speak out about October 7th and the history of “Palestine.”
Please do more videos like this one Simcha. The fact that Jordan 🇯🇴 is “Palestine” is overlooked too often and for too long!!
Miss seeing you together with Professor James Tabor and Shimon Gibson!
Makes sense to me! Good to see you again! Please be careful and stay safe!
Of course, anything that fits your narrative makes sense to you.
Here are some questions I have for the local protestors who side with Hamas:
Palestine or Israel?
1. When was the country of Palestine founded & by whom?
2. What were its borders?
3. What was its capital?
4. What were its major cities?
5. Name at least one Palestinian leader before Yaser Arafat.
6. What was the official/dominate language of the country/nation of Palestine?
7. What was the prevalent religion of the ancient country of Palestine?
8. What was the name of its currency?
9. Choose any date in history & show what was the approximate exchange rate of the Palestinian monetary unit against the U.S. Dollar, German Mark, British Pound, Japanese Yen, or Chinese Yuan on that date?
10. Since there is no such country of Palestine today, what caused its demise & when did it occur?
11. Why did Palestinians never try to become independent until after the devastating defeat of invading Arab states in the 1967 Six Day War?
12. Why are there 1.5 million supposed Palestinians in UN Relief Camps now, since they first opened those camps in 1948, located in multiple nations like Jordan, Lebanon, & the Syrian Arab Republic?
13. Describe the meaning of the different colors, layout, & meanings of the Palestinian flag. When was it designed & who came up with it?
All this to say you support extermination of 200k innocent civilians of the land in question. Maybe Hitler asked these same questions prior to his killing spree
@@abdurrahmanali24
If you would say 400,000 your comment will have a greater effect than saying 200,000.
I don't think they're siding with hammos, but rather the innocent people who reside there
@@twinsprings24
November 14/2023 survey shows that only 13% do not support October 7th.
March 2024 survey shows similar numbers.
June 2024 survey shows Hamas would win elections.
@@twinsprings24Innocent people don't hide hostages in their kids' bedrooms along with entrances to tunnels for terrorists.
I’m sure you and your previous work will be scrutinized for this by many now but I appreciate the history lesson as the world tries to bury it. It’s knowledge and you know that in itself is POWER. Thank you again sir ❤
Decent Irish people stand with Israel. God bless you.
Sellout lmao, let me guess you favor the Brits taking over your land right?🤣🤣
Warning: Ziobots posting fake country locations are everywhere. It's a pathetic attempt at Zionist propaganda.
Thank you Simcha for confirming my own research into the "Palestine" myth.
Great to "see" you again, Simcha! Loved your Naked Archaeologist and other documentaries.
Here's to many more in the future!
Wow..... That was AMAZING!!! THAT gave it some perspective and SO well said. Thanks!! (From Denmark)
Thank you!
Brother you got 2.7 billion Christians worldwide in The body of Christ that love Israel and we stand with you.
❤🙏💖🇮🇱
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
No, you have 2.7 billion Christians in total. Out of those, there's millions of different interpretations, thousands of Denominations or sects, many of which are staunchly anti-Jewish.
Please reconsider your ideas on the body of christ. Re-read Jesus's teachings to figure out where the rest of us stand
@@rockysandman5489No true Bible reading Christian will hate Israel or translate the scriptures
It is true the Romans Catholic had in the past through their heads who are erroneously thinking that Christians has replaced the Jews in the everlasting covenant Yahweh had with Israelites but that is false, salvation belong to the Jews, we are only engrafted into the Commonwealth of Israel
Only ignorant Christians will not stand with Israel because this war is already foretold and we know how it will end
If you don't know then you are not a Christian
Thank you sir for explaining the true.
Excellent, well said. Great history.
We luv Simcha b/c he tells the truth no matter where it is. Great Jewish history lesson. Israel has been Jewish country, land, and home since Joshua conquered Caanan 3400 yrs ago. A massive amount of time that most people not Jewish simply can’t appreciate. Our attachment to our land of Israel is imbedded in every part of our being. From Mose and Joshua’s time, way back in the stone/copper age, until today 3400 yrs of the land of Judah and Israel.
I am not a historian but, as a youth, I went to church, I took history in school. I know the difference ! But you have the authority to set things straight. Most of the people in the protests are ignorant of history. Many journalists asked many questions and the protesters just got louder because they did not want to share their ignorance with the world. The rest , as you say, are Jew haters. Thanks for the history lesson. I doubt it will be heard by the stupid or the ignorant and it will be ignored by the leaders.
The simple fact that the Jewish people didn't lose their language, customs or culture is proof God is miraculously.
🇮🇱 Genesis 12:3
Thank You Simcha .. you share very good information for us. I’ve always loved watching your videos- mind blowing at times but it does make me think more about the ancient history. Please stay safe at all times you’re very much valuable to society.
As a Christian here in NZ with little understanding of the history in the area of Israel I thank you for putting the history in a way that's easier for me to understand, that's important to me because I do support Israel and pray for peace in their land 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🇭🇳🇭🇳🇭🇳🇭🇳❤❤
Kia ora! I'm a Christian but I'm appalled at Christendom's naive belief that Jews can do no wrong. God's chosen people? 'Not all those of Israel are Israel' -Romans 9:6. Also Matthew 23:37.
Just type 'Nakba' in YT's search box, and learn of the beginning of what's been a slow strangulation -the world's longest apartheid of one people oppressing another.
"Why should the [Palestinians] make peace? If I was an Arab leader I would never make terms with Israel, that is natural. We have taken their country. Sure, God promised it to us, but what does that matter to them? Our God is not theirs. We come from Israel, it's true, but two thousand years ago, and what is that to them? There's been anti-Semitism, the Nazis, Hitler, Auschwitz, but was that their fault? They only see one thing: we have come here and stolen their country. Why should they accept that?" -David Ben Gurion, (leading founder of Israel and it's first prime minister. Like many Zionists, he was an atheist.
....'Most Zionists don't believe God exists, but they do believe he promised them Palestine!' -IIan Pappe, Jewish, Professor of History, University of Exeter. His many books include *'The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine'* and Gaza in Crisis (with Prof. Noam Chomsky -Jewish historian).
“Let us not ignore the truth among ourselves … politically we are the aggressors and they defend themselves… The *country* is theirs, because they inhabit it, whereas we want to come here and settle down, and in their view we want to take away from them their *country.”* -David Ben Gurion
I think the world naively presumed Jews, after suffering unspeakable abuse in WW2, would in turn never become abusers. “The Nazis made me afraid to be a Jew, Israelis made me ashamed to be a Jew.” -Dr Israel Shahak.
Not all those of Israel are Israel
My dear New Zealand Christian please read your Bible, the book of Act's chapter 2 you will see the holy spirit was poured on the Arabs in Jerusalem.That is just about a few years after our Lord Jesus Christ crucifixion before the destruction of the second temple.As a New Zealander you should be aware if Simcha used the same debate for the Maoris there would be no Europeans in new Zealand.Remeber also that there was no name for New Zealand but in the Maori tongue..The Arabs were in Palestine when our Lord walked that area.
My dear New Zealander Christian read your Bible the book of Act's chapter 2 and you will see Arabs are mentioned when the Holy spirit was poured out to the people in jerusalem.this was just a few years after our Lord Jesus Christ was crucified before the destruction of the second temple in 70 AD.As a new Zealander I wonder would happen if the Maoris wanted their land back from the Europeans and the native Americans theirs from the USA and the aborigines from the European Australians.Whether we call it Palestine or Israel the majority of people that was living there were Arabs proven by census of the Ottomans and the British and were attacked and are still attacked by the Zionists settlers
As a fellow kiwi, I was very fortunate to visit the Holy Land for Christmas and confirmed all of the history that I learned at university
Australia is ....Land of Aborygens
NZ is .....Land of ...
God bless and save Israel💙💙💙💙
Simcha you are a blessing. Spread light unto the darkness. AM ISRAEL CHAI
Thank you. I have missed your show so much.
Pagers for Palestine.
😊
you do realise that in addition to Hamas personnel, that innocent people are also killed and injured by these devices?
@@FairDingothe pager’s architects targeted combatants, October 7eventh targeted who again?
@@FairDingo..How many children were blownapart in Manchester?...and by what religion?...don't talk about innocents until you speak of all innocents....or is it only Palestinian children who matter to you?.....hypocrisy is not an admirable personality trait
7th century ideology meets 21st century precision cyber warfare....it was a beautiful thing....and piss funny too 😂😅😊
Precise, crisp, and to the point! Thanks for enlightening me on this subject.
Given today's events. never a better time to listen to what he's saying. Support and love from a non-Jew in Scotland. Am Israel Chai
Am Yisrael Chai. Baruch Hashem.
Why does the Professors in WESTERN UNIVERSITYS and POLITICIANS DO NOT KNOW THIS! THE TRUTH WILL SET YOU APART!😢❤🎉❤
They do know it. They just dislike it because it is inconvenient for them, and because of funding from anti Israel countries and organizations.
I myself saw how profesors (especially Jews) who are anti Israel get promoted. You will never see a pro Israel professor make it in the supposedly "free" academia.
Because they'll revoke your licence if you taught this ahistorical guff. And rightly so. History is not in biblical text.
Thank you for this history lesson . Everyone should know these facts. It is embarrassing, heartbreaking, and scary, too, see support for terrorist. Support for terrorist words I never dreamed would come out of an American mouth. God willing, I can only hope this short video changes minds and save innocent lives.