Author
Shamali, Ilham Jabr Salem, Salima, Aida Al-Sayyid Ibrahim, Najm, Zain Al-Abidin Shams Al-Din
Type
Book
Language
Arabic
Digital
Yes
Manuscript
No
Library
Royal Danish Library
Library Asset ID
ISSN: 2356-8321
Record ID
cdi_almandumah_primary_929550
Library Location
Directory of Open Access Journals
Notes
The middle of the nineteenth century represented a major turning point in the history of the Levant and Palestine, as weakness and weakness spread throughout the foundations of the Ottoman Empire. The colonial powers began to struggle with each other to impose their control over the Jews residing in Palestine, to include them with the protection that their nationals enjoyed in the Ottoman countries. Since then, colonial attention turned to exploiting the Jewish issue in the Arab Levant to serve its interests. Foreign consulates were formed, and there was intense competition between them to protect the Jews, help them immigrate, and control the lands, so the neighborhood was built. The first Jew in the city of Jerusalem in 1859 AD, under the auspices of the British Consulate, taking advantage of the land laws that were imposed on Palestine to grant foreign settlers the rights of others, and the prevalence of private ownership by Arab owners from Syria and Lebanon in Palestine. Jewish immigration to Palestine did not occur in a vacuum. The calls and ideas of the early Zionist thinkers revealed the extent of the planning that those people harbored to direct attention to the settlement of Palestine and organize Zionist work with complete intensity by providing institutions responsible for organizing immigration and providing Enough money to buy the land. Their ideas served as the foundations on which the Zionist Organization was founded in 1897 AD, so that settlement entered the stage of practical application on the land in 1901 AD.
Görüntüle
Majallat al-baḥth al-ʻilmī fī al-ādāb, 2018, Vol.19 (5), p.437-458