News ID : 49605
Publish Date : 5/12/2020 11:28:45 AM
Nakba Day, the most sinister day in Palestinian history / 1

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Nakba Day, the most sinister day in Palestinian history / 1

Al-Nakba Day, or the Day of Judgment, is a day that, even more than seventy years after its occurrence, has not been erased from the minds of the free people of the world and Palestine. On this day, many Palestinians were forced to leave their homes due to the brutal actions of the occupying and occupying Zionist regime.

NOURNEWS- "Nakba" is an Arabic word meaning tragedy, a term referring to the war between the Zionist regime and the Palestinians in 1948, which eventually led to the establishment of the fake Israeli regime and displaced more than 800,000 Palestinians. On a day that the Palestinians do not have a happy memory of, but not to forget the right that was taken away from them on this day, every year on the 15th of May, with protests and rallies, the anniversary of this event as an anniversary. They remember misery.

During the 1948 conflict, more than 530 Palestinian towns and villages were razed to the ground, 15,000 Palestinians were martyred, dozens of Palestinians were executed en masse, and some 18,000 emigrated. According to the latest statistics, the number of Palestinian martyrs has risen to more than 100,000 since 1948.

On May 15, 1948, the Zionist regime occupied 78 percent of Palestinian territory, all of it except the West Bank and Gaza, and every year on this date, residents of Palestinian camps, villages, and cities, along with other Palestinians living abroad, reject various activities. They emphasize occupation. Some Palestinian refugees still hold the keys to their old homes 72 years later.

Occupation history

The incident came a day before, on May 14, 1948, representatives of Zionist political and nationalist parties and groups in occupied Palestine gathered in a hall in Tel Aviv, while the Arab armies continued to fight to destroy Israel. The city of Jerusalem was under military siege by Arab armies and Arab guerrilla units, and David bin Gurion read the Israeli Independence Charter and all the delegates present at the meeting signed it. Hours after the move, the United States and the former Soviet Union recognized the regime, and the Jewish Agency cited UN Resolution 181 as a document recognizing the regime. According to the Hebrew calendar in Israel, the 5th of Eyar is one of the national holidays in the Zionist regime.

Israel's independence charter expresses the Zionists' efforts to return to their homeland and declare the establishment of an independent state in the heart of another land, and in the name of the future government of Israel, it promises that Arabs living in this country will enjoy freedom and equal rights. He called on the neighbor for peace and reconciliation and suggested that they work together with Israel to rebuild the Middle East. Undoubtedly, these provisions are only for pouring water on the fire of war and the political consolidation of the Zionist regime, and the repeated condemnations of the Zionist regime by the repeated resolutions of the United Nations and the Security Council confirm this claim.

This charter is judicially and legally invalid and not binding on the government. In other words, the people of Israel cannot refer to the charter in the judiciary and the political establishment and demand the application of its provisions. However, this document is only morally and spiritually the most important historical document of the Zionist regime, and it obliges the governments and the parliament of Israel to do what is stated in this document.

Britain's role in the emergence of the Zionist regime

Although the Zionist regime was formed only one day after the withdrawal of the last British troops from Palestine, this action had its roots and roots that went back to the past and unholy thoughts. The groundwork for the formation of this regime dates back to half a century before the day of the announcement of the formation of this regime or the day of misery.

After the establishment of the first Zionist Congress in 1865 in the Swiss city of Bal and the establishment of a Jewish state in the land of Palestine, the Zionist migration to this land under the auspices of British colonialism by the World Zionist Organization began.

Four years later, the World Zionist Organization set up a company called the Jewish National Fund to buy land to settle Jewish immigrants in Palestine in order to speed up the process of Jewish immigration. The land purchased by the fund was considered the non-transferable asset of the Jewish people.

After the end of World war I, Jewish immigrants moved to Palestine. On this date, the Jewish Agency was formed to coordinate and expedite the process of Jewish migration.

With Hitler's rise to power in Germany, Nazism became an excuse to intensify the process of Jewish immigration to Palestine, bringing the total number of Jews living in Palestine to more than 650,000 in 1948, while only 12 percent. The occupied Palestinian territory was occupied by the Jews.

From then on, with the public support of British colonialism, the planned violence of Zionism began with the aim of fleeing the Palestinians and settling the immigrant Jews. In the same years, the United Nations, which had just been formed by the victorious sides of World War II and was fully at their disposal, issued a decree dividing the territory of Palestine into Jewish and Palestinian parts. Immediately after the issuance of Resolution 181, the bloody killings of Zionist assassination groups began.

 In fact, the Zionists alone cannot be blamed for the conspiracy to occupy and displace the Palestinian people. It should also be borne in mind that the occupation of Palestine was the result of sinister conspiracies that began in 1897 in the Swiss town of Bal, and during the British-led invasion of Palestine and the issuance of Balfour's sinister declaration in 1917, preparations for the Zionist presence. The Palestinians were given the right to occupy the land until the United Nations issued Resolution 181 on Palestine on November 29, 1947, almost a year before the catastrophic occupation of Palestine in 1948. And divided the country between Jews and Arabs.

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