Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of maps
- Chronology
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: A New Look at Modern Palestine and Israel
- 1 Fin de Siècle (1856–1900): Social Tranquillity and Political Drama
- 2 Between Tyranny and War (1900–1918)
- 3 The Mandatory State: Colonialism, Nationalization and Cohabitation
- 4 Between Nakbah and Independence: The 1948 War
- 5 The Age of Partition (1948–1967)
- 6 Greater Israel and Occupied Palestine: The Rise and Fall of High Politics (1967–1987)
- 7 The Uprising and its Political Consequences (1987–1996)
- 8 A Post-Zionist Moment of Grace?
- 9 The Suicidal Track: The Death of Oslo and the Road to Perdition
- Postscript: The Post-Arafat Era and the New Sharon Age
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Glossary of Names
- Glossary of Terms
- Index
4 - Between Nakbah and Independence: The 1948 War
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of maps
- Chronology
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: A New Look at Modern Palestine and Israel
- 1 Fin de Siècle (1856–1900): Social Tranquillity and Political Drama
- 2 Between Tyranny and War (1900–1918)
- 3 The Mandatory State: Colonialism, Nationalization and Cohabitation
- 4 Between Nakbah and Independence: The 1948 War
- 5 The Age of Partition (1948–1967)
- 6 Greater Israel and Occupied Palestine: The Rise and Fall of High Politics (1967–1987)
- 7 The Uprising and its Political Consequences (1987–1996)
- 8 A Post-Zionist Moment of Grace?
- 9 The Suicidal Track: The Death of Oslo and the Road to Perdition
- Postscript: The Post-Arafat Era and the New Sharon Age
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Glossary of Names
- Glossary of Terms
- Index
Summary
THE UNSCOP DAYS
Bernard Newman, a British tourist, could still enjoy a normal day in Jerusalem towards the end of the Mandate, strolling in the Kedron Valley, on the way up to the city. He chose an hour of the day that a few weeks later would be particularly dangerous for foreigners, the time of the evening prayer. His is almost the last account we have of the situation before violence broke out. His report is full of sounds: snatches of the muezzin's from the minarets drowned by the many-toned bells of the Orthodox churches, or the more solemn boom from the bells of the Catholic churches. Nearby, goat-bells tinkled, and the shrill voices of children playing could be heard from the south. But he also noted the harsh sound of klaxons and the rattle of armoured cars.
This picture, which gives a background to daily life in Palestine at the time, was to change radically. The script for this drama was written outside Palestine. Previous attempts on the part of the Mandate to end the conflict gave way to dependence on the new international policeman, the United Nations. Palestine was the first serious regional conflict to be dealt with by the organization. From its foundation, the UN was paralysed by Cold War politics. On the basic outline for Palestine, however, Russia and the USA, the two superpowers concurred: Palestine was to be divided between the Zionist movement and the Palestinians.
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- Information
- A History of Modern PalestineOne Land, Two Peoples, pp. 122 - 140Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006