This is the final post (I promise!) in a series about the history of the war on Palestine. Part 1 told the history of the conflict from the beginnings of Zionism to the Nakba and the creation of Israel. Part 2 covered the formation of the PLO and its guerilla campaign. Part 3 covered the First Intifada and the Oslo Accords, and Part 4 discussed the Palestinian Authority and the rise of Hamas. In this final post I want to look at the wider context of Zionism, and the implications for where we are at right now. One of the slogans frequently used by Zionists in the 19th and 20th centuries was ‘a land without a people for a people without a land’. The phrase was first coined by Christian Restorationists (what we now more commonly call Christian Zionists) in the mid-19th Century and was later picked up by some of the Zionist leaders, including Chaim Weizmann, David Ben-Gurion and Yitzhak Ben-Zvi. At one level, the firs...
"Maybe in this day and age, love thy neighbor should also be love thy nature. After all we are all neighbors to nature; we live in a grand neighborhood called the biosphere, the realm of life on earth, and we depend on it. We are it and it is us, from our gut biome to what we eat, drink, and breathe. Love in this case should manifest as active care." Rebecca Solnit