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Land Acquisition
Israel’s military occupation of Palestine is horrifically reminiscent of South Africa’s Apartheid past. Yet, pro-Israeli apologists are shocked that the Zionist entity is being compared to Apartheid South Africa. In response, Zionists ask “Why Israel?”
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Uri Davis analyses how it was possible for Israel and its apartheid legislation notwithstanding, to still maintain its reputation in the West as the only democracy in the Middle East, and effectively to veil the apartheid cruelty it has perpetrated against the Palestinian people.
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"The consequence – if not motivation – of expropriating Palestinian lands and resources for the expansion of Israeli settlements, is the fragmentation and isolation of the Palestinian communities and facilitation of the expansion of illegal settlements."
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This book examines the situation of Arab Palestinian citizens of Israel, analyzing how the Palestinian collective identity has been shaped by social and political forces and how it poses major challenges to Israel’s policies, structure, and identity. Nadim Rouhana draws on surveys, interviews, and archival research to examine the evolvement of Palestinian identity in response to...
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Uri Davis establishes the apartheid roots within the establishment of Israel. The Jewish people, the victims of Nazi genocide in the Second World War, subjected the Palestinian people, beginning with the 1948-49 war, to criminal policies as mass deportation, population transfers and ethnic cleansing, prolonged military government (with curfews, roadblocks and the like), and economic,...
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Confirms in the clearest possible terms that all legislative and administrative actions taken by Israel to change the status of the City of Jerusalem, including expropriation of land and properties, transfer of populations and legislation aimed at the incorporation of the occupied section, are totally invalid and cannot change that status.
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Deplores Israel’s legislative and administrative measures to change the legal status of Jerusalem
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Sayegh's seminal book remains as important and as significant as when it was first published almost half-a-century ago. It describes how indigenous Palestinians ended up as second-class citizens in the state of Israel, afflicted by dispossession, persecution, domination and discrimination in almost all aspects of their lives.
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