The origins of the Israel-Palestine conflict | Part 1

2024 ж. 6 Ақп.
230 512 Рет қаралды

The Balfour Declaration was signed in 1917. It set out British support for the creation of a homeland for the Jewish people in Palestine. But when the Balfour declaration was signed the British had already promised Palestine to Arabs as an independent state and promised the French government that it would be an internationally administered zone - and even then, most of the land was still under Ottoman control.
So why did Britain make these three conflicting promises? How did it try to resolve them? And how did Britain’s strategy in the Middle East help to cause a century of conflict?
Lawrence of Arabia explained: www.iwm.org.uk/history/who-wa...
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  • Thanks for watching, look out for part 2 coming soon! Please remember to be polite in the comments. Any comments that we consider to be offensive or aggressive will be removed.

    @ImperialWarMuseums@ImperialWarMuseums3 ай бұрын
    • what a legacy sad but we need to protect it nevertheless

      @Houthiandtheblowfish@Houthiandtheblowfish3 ай бұрын
    • I'm sure they will be very uncontroversial

      @latch9781@latch97813 ай бұрын
    • Good luck 🤞 thanks for covering this.

      @_Wombat@_Wombat3 ай бұрын
    • Good luck 🤞 thanks for covering this.

      @_Wombat@_Wombat3 ай бұрын
    • Thank you

      @Ramiibr1@Ramiibr13 ай бұрын
  • this is the most neutral presentation of facts on the palestinian conflict by any channel on YT. the channel has no motive and no history of any political leanings except to present history as it was. thank you for presenting history as it was and to let the viewers make their own opinion based on the facts, who grabbed from whom and why the losers are persistent thorns on those who won.

    @countorlock3148@countorlock314818 күн бұрын
  • If it's not your land how do you promise it to someone else ! ! !

    @ashmiah4090@ashmiah4090Ай бұрын
    • With imperialism

      @closetglobe.IRGUN.NW0@closetglobe.IRGUN.NW028 күн бұрын
    • Britain defeated the Ottoman empire. thus taking control of their territory. so yes the land did belong to the British

      @yosefyonin6824@yosefyonin68246 күн бұрын
    • Land was conquered by the British intern makes it their land. Pretty straight forward when nations lose wars they also lose land.

      @hnd450@hnd4505 күн бұрын
  • Amazing! I'm looking forward to the second part!

    @Gszarco94@Gszarco943 ай бұрын
  • I love your videos. You have helped me learn about history way faster than ever

    @jeevachhprasad7751@jeevachhprasad77513 ай бұрын
  • yup they promised the land to both sides and ran away after their plans blew up in their faces

    @DannyK1992@DannyK19923 ай бұрын
    • Please show where Palestine was promised to the Arabs?

      @shainazion4073@shainazion40732 ай бұрын
    • Read McMahan-Hussain Correspondence which was in 1915@@shainazion4073

      @muhammadashar640@muhammadashar6402 ай бұрын
    • At the very beginning; 00:25​@@shainazion4073

      @ayazansariofficial682@ayazansariofficial682Ай бұрын
    • @@shainazion4073 did you not watch the video?

      @nennintoure9982@nennintoure9982Ай бұрын
  • Looking forward to seeing the second part!

    @WarhammerWings@WarhammerWingsАй бұрын
  • Thanks for creating vids relating to modern day events. Truly educational and entertaining!

    @poisonousbadge126@poisonousbadge1263 ай бұрын
  • PART 2 please. amazing clarity

    @sghound@sghound3 ай бұрын
  • I just discovered your channel and am enjoying listening to this video, a topic I studied as a student. Having worked in Central Asia, the picture at 6:22 is of a group in Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, or Tajikistan -- I'm going by the architecture and the clothes they wear.

    @sagapoetic8990@sagapoetic8990Ай бұрын
  • Well at the current situation it can be an explosive topic, but very informative to form one's own opinion..

    @mogens47@mogens473 ай бұрын
    • Lol

      @NathanDudani@NathanDudani3 ай бұрын
  • Just one point; as I understand it, the Sykes-Picot lines were not random doodlings by diplomats, they were based on the Ottoman Administrative regions, as you would expect.

    @nicksallnow-smith7585@nicksallnow-smith75853 ай бұрын
    • The Ottomans provincial borders were very different

      @stephenchappell7512@stephenchappell75123 ай бұрын
    • Yes, I think this is correct.

      @PhillipTheHeretic@PhillipTheHeretic3 ай бұрын
    • This is actually not true, the city of Rafah was split into two, and divided betw Egypt and mandatory Palastine, after the ottoman defeat in ww1 focourse nobody knew at the time what was being planned for the whole region.

      @00700719@007007193 ай бұрын
    • That's not true. The Ottoman administrative borders were very different from the British and French ones.

      @YishaiBarr@YishaiBarr25 күн бұрын
  • A clear informational video that shows the history of the region. Looking forward to part two.

    @thestoicsteve@thestoicsteve3 ай бұрын
  • Can't wait till the part two. wonderful episode.

    @user-et9xv6jp5l@user-et9xv6jp5l3 ай бұрын
  • In the past, Europe, including England and France, caused global instability, affecting non-European countries. It's surprising that Great Britain isn't more active in resolving conflicts, with the United States taking a more prominent role instead.

    @Phil-fw2ib@Phil-fw2ib8 күн бұрын
  • Highly recommened video. Provides some good elaboration on UK's political strategy in the region.

    @warberg80@warberg803 ай бұрын
  • And there I was thinking that Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Olden took the surrender of Damascus on 1 October 1918, hours before Feisal and Lawrence arrived.

    @shitbrick89@shitbrick893 ай бұрын
    • Yes but he left leaving the City unsecured. Feisal and Lawrence took control of the city; effectively it surrendered twice. However, Olden's part has been disgracefully underplayed ever since that day.

      @VaucluseVanguard@VaucluseVanguard3 ай бұрын
  • This is by far the best coverage of the conflict I have seen so far. Excellent!

    @ingGS@ingGS2 ай бұрын
    • It's biased in places, it decides to focus on some facts while ignoring others.

      @IF18a@IF18a2 ай бұрын
    • @@IF18aBut it doesn’t shy away from pointing a big finger at the Brits for having massively contributed to this situation.

      @oceanic8424@oceanic8424Ай бұрын
    • its only best because it sings your song, but is it true?

      @KibbutzSalem@KibbutzSalemАй бұрын
    • @@IF18a It's always easy to comment like that. Mention those which were ignored, so the picture be even better.

      @paweurbaniak6426@paweurbaniak6426Ай бұрын
  • Wonderful video, as always. Thank you. Note: the bottom part of Africa is not the Horn of Africa.

    @robrodell@robrodell3 ай бұрын
  • This seemed to end suddenly. Will there be a second episode?

    @mendo35@mendo353 ай бұрын
    • Yes.

      @LFX27@LFX273 ай бұрын
  • Is there an IWM video about TE Lawrence? I’d be interested in that.

    @nilesoien7867@nilesoien78673 ай бұрын
    • There is a movie about it, I don’t how much of it is fictitious but the movie is a great watch!

      @ingGS@ingGS2 ай бұрын
    • @@ingGS what is it called

      @disbish5472@disbish54722 ай бұрын
    • @@disbish5472 Lawrence of Arabia but this channel, Imperial War Museums, has a video on him, too. I recommend the director's cut of Lawrence of Arabia if you look for it. It does maximize Lawrence and minimize the Arab role and, yeah, it omits his awareness of Palestine being promised to the Zionists behind the backs of the Sharif and his sons, but it is still interesting to watch.

      @sagapoetic8990@sagapoetic8990Ай бұрын
    • I don't remember at what point Lawrence learned that the Palestine part of the land was promised out per Balfour's letters.

      @sagapoetic8990@sagapoetic8990Ай бұрын
    • There's a movie and a book.

      @ems4884@ems4884Ай бұрын
  • Great description of the situation, very impressive

    @Capt.sierra@Capt.sierra12 күн бұрын
  • Great video but so few views 😢 Pretty much confirms to few truly care about the issue and how it might get resolved.

    @alexfortin7209@alexfortin72093 ай бұрын
  • Feels like there should be a part two?

    @MrHolden17@MrHolden173 ай бұрын
    • Look at the thumbnail

      @yacoob69@yacoob693 ай бұрын
    • probably feels like that because it says "part 1" in the thumbnail lol

      @SweenRacing@SweenRacing3 ай бұрын
    • There is a part 2

      @Abduldoctor@Abduldoctor2 ай бұрын
  • Very very nice video! I found myself wondering what the origins of the Israel Palestine conflict are and needed to know. Now i see that it is more complicated than i first thought and that there are many groups/ countries involved.

    @kobedierckx2918@kobedierckx2918Ай бұрын
  • I’m actually doing my research paper on the Jewish Legion and the controversy of the Balfour Declaration. While pleased at the fact your organisation made this video I do believe some elements could have been expanded upon and one argument made in the video was not properly constructed. Mainly I wish the story of the Zion Mule Corps and Jewish Legion had actually been expanded upon because what I hope to argue in my paper is that these military units are more crucial to the history of this topic than we think. Mainly because it shows a British engagement with the concept of Zionism going back to the earliest days of the war. For context roughly 50,000 Jews from the Yishuv (the pre state community of Jews in what people call Palestine I’d call the land of Israel) were expelled from the Ottoman empire. The majority made their way to Alexandria where discussion quickly rose to establish a Jewish military unit to serve in the British for an offensive in the Middle East. Britain had at this time had discussions of forming a Jewish regiment but the community in England at this time leaned more towards wanting to assimilate into English society. Nether the less in 1915 due to British regulations of admitting foreign soldiers into their ranks. A supply unit was established that would serve at Gallipoli, mainly Cape Helles called the Zion Mule Corps. It was disbanded after the retreat from Gallipoli with 100 servicemen joining a London rifle regiment which would eventually become the basis of the 38th Royal Fusiliers. The first of 3 regiments of the Jewish Legion. The other 2 being the 39th and the 40th Royal Fusiliers. What’s crucial is the date of the establishment of the 38th. They were established in August of 1917 and a key scholar of this topic: Martin Watts and the primary source from their NCO Lt Col John Henry Patterson: with the Judeans in the Palestine campaign, shows that the 38th was established with the explicit intent to go and fight within the EEF in the Palestine campaign with an aim of the Zionist movement being awarded territory after the war. My criticism comes from the use of the armband to reach the conclusion that Zionism wasn’t a popular among us during the war. If you had used documentation from Lucien Wolff, the Board of Deputies, the book: we are coming, unafraid: the Jewish legions and the promised land in the First World War, to have made your argument I would have respected it, disagreed with it to some level but found it more able to hold water. I would counter with evidence that all 3 regiments served under both the British flag and the flag that would become the Israeli flag. Hatikva was sung alongside G-d save the king, recruitment posters I’ve seen for the 39th Royal Fusiliers, displayed in Canada and reports about the unit’s training, the march the 38th had through London and testimony from Patterson I would use to prove this point I do apologise if I’ve been rude but I believe you could have made your argument better by drawing upon other sources and do believe the role of Jewish military service in the British army during this time needs to be explored more to gain more of a proper understanding to Britain’s decisions

    @1HuntingShark@1HuntingShark3 ай бұрын
    • sorry, but zionism was truly not popular and most zionists were perceived like lunatics zealots that you do not want to be associated with. you clearly do not understand that in an age of booming science and innovation, fewer and fewer people were interested in religious ideas and jews were following the trend much faster than any minority around! atheism was very popular among born jews and many of the first wave of communist propagandists were people with jewish background! to them, speaking of ancient temple and chosen land really made no sense!

      @strigoiu13@strigoiu13Ай бұрын
    • The Jews needed military experience because they knew that a conflict with the Arabs was going to happen.

      @Conn30Mtenor@Conn30Mtenor29 күн бұрын
  • The British followed one rule, ”Divide and conquer”

    @Liverpool-2004@Liverpool-20043 ай бұрын
    • They kinda did the same thing with India and Pakistan

      @tombearclaw@tombearclaw3 ай бұрын
    • Literally every country than invaded another have aswell - what British did is nothing new

      @SiegfriedDerDrachentoter@SiegfriedDerDrachentoter3 ай бұрын
    • We sold it 3 times 😢

      @scottfoster3445@scottfoster34453 ай бұрын
    • If two fish are fighting in a pond it means the British were there

      @sjoormen1@sjoormen13 ай бұрын
    • @@tombearclaw and Malaya!

      @chuckh5999@chuckh59993 ай бұрын
  • Outrageous! *spits out tea*

    @mihauadam5760@mihauadam57603 ай бұрын
  • Another interesting presentation...Thank you I WM. ROGER...PEMBROKESHIRE

    @rogerrees9845@rogerrees98453 ай бұрын
  • Israel is a historical provable contemporary of Egypt and Babilon, so very much before Rome or Palestine! Be ashamed!

    @old-gamer-01@old-gamer-013 ай бұрын
  • Beautifully succinct documentary that explains so much

    @gideon_todes@gideon_todesАй бұрын
  • I have been listening to a podcast, the rest is history, which stated one of the focusing factors for the British to enter the first world was their desire to protect their control of India from the Russians. As you point out the drawing of the middle eastern map was in part due to Britains desire to protect the Suez canal which gave them expedited access to India.

    @igorGriffiths@igorGriffiths3 ай бұрын
    • I love how that makes no sense at all. Britain and Russia were on the same side during the First World War, and Russia wouldn't have been able to get to India ever. There is this little thing called the Himalayan Mountain range that would prevent that.

      @CedarHunt@CedarHunt3 ай бұрын
    • The British were forced into the war because of treaties and alliances - same as the Germans were. Go look at some real history.

      @Sinsteel@Sinsteel3 ай бұрын
    • @@CedarHunt This is not about WW I, this is the Great Game. British, or East-INdia Company troops have gone into Afghanistan three times over the decades, to make sure to close the door to the INdian subcontinent to Russia. The Crimean War was also in no small part to check Russian expansionism. You need to step back and look at the larger picture.

      @shelbynamels7948@shelbynamels79483 ай бұрын
    • From the day the Brits took over the Suez Canal from the French, they considered it to be of vital strategic interest. There are a few good videos on Ytube dealing with the Suez Canal Crisis from 1956 that could have brought the major powers to the brink of war again. Even today, the incident with the near-stranded container ship, and, by extension of the canal thru the Red Sea, the missile attacks by the Houthis remind us of the importance of the canal to global commerce.

      @shelbynamels7948@shelbynamels79483 ай бұрын
    • The Empire Podcast explores the Great Game in detail@@shelbynamels7948

      @Raj-sp3ts@Raj-sp3ts3 ай бұрын
  • All the European colonial powers divided up the world by putting into the same territories groups of people who always lived in their own territory. This way, the native groups would fight among themselves rather than attack the colonial powers. That’s why ac

    @cathiehutcheson6556@cathiehutcheson65563 ай бұрын
  • Lovely of the Brits to make ''Plans'' for another people without asking first. Now what's that called in other circles??

    @jobson586@jobson58619 күн бұрын
  • Mr. Editor, a bit of a sudden ending there, combined with the KZhead advertisement, made it somewhat confusing. Food for thought.

    @N_Wheeler@N_Wheeler3 ай бұрын
  • Hmmm .... as someone who supports the IWM financially, I'll reflect on this and look forward to part 2's position

    @oliverbourne9599@oliverbourne95993 ай бұрын
  • Excellent historical documentary. 👏👏👏

    @BionicRusty@BionicRustyАй бұрын
  • Excellent video! Thank you.

    @theashman1967@theashman196717 күн бұрын
  • Royal Navy 1904 - 1926 changed from coal to oil Good relations with Arabs were essential Also, there were many politicians who loved Arabic culture - Anthony Eden spoke Arabic and was enraptured by the culture Many British simply "Didn't like Jews" Britain was NOT pro-Zionism : some folks were, most weren't

    @vinm300@vinm3002 ай бұрын
  • 1. Ottoman was once sending letter regarding about if war ever broke out in Europe they wanted to join triple Entente but rejected by British, France, and even Russian Empire because of their objectives doesn't aligned with any triple Entente nation. 2. Of all minister that holding power or we can say Three Giants in ottoman notably Minister of War Enver Pasha, Minister of Naval Djemal Pasha, and minister of interior Talaat Pasha were once students in the British and France studying all sectors then came in contact with nationalism idea.

    @irfansyahakhmadamagelang0958@irfansyahakhmadamagelang09583 ай бұрын
  • Very good and informative video - please do another part, preferably more to cover whole history of Isreali state

    @qbas81@qbas813 ай бұрын
  • I hear that Mt. Kilimanjaro was gifted away to a person across the continent by a person from across the continent. A natural feature.

    @Josephmutua-sy7mm@Josephmutua-sy7mm9 күн бұрын
  • High production value, great images from the period, but an overly simplistic cherry picked version of events aimed at pinning the current conflict on the British. Perhaps the IWM could make a video about the Rashidun Caliphate of the 7th century, or the subsequent Ottoman Empire’s persecution and massacre of non-Muslim minorities? Maybe then the layman would have a better understanding of the origins of the current conflict in the Middle East.

    @malpreece5008@malpreece50082 ай бұрын
    • an excellent and truthful comment

      @makedonistoi@makedonistoiАй бұрын
    • that's because Britain WAS the one to sell it.... Arabs already lived in the area before 7th century, because they were already there when people came from Africa, same with people from the med.

      @Ladybird55505@Ladybird55505Ай бұрын
    • ⁠@@Ladybird55505Britain didn’t ‘sell’ the land. They re-established a homeland for the Jews after defeating the Ottoman Empire, which they were obliged to do after the Ottoman’s attacked their ally Russia during WW1. If the Ottoman’s hadn’t attacked Russia the Muslims may still be abusing ‘Dhimmis/Kafirs’ across the entire region, as they had done for centuries.

      @malpreece5008@malpreece500812 күн бұрын
  • How on earth did you get out an informative video with the current UK government's culture wars going on? I really do admire your integrity and courage, for the truth belongs to those with money in this modern world.

    @ashoakwillow@ashoakwillow3 ай бұрын
    • Culture wars in Britain? Surely not. I'm an American who lived in Britain for over ten years and nothing I saw there even remotely compares to the American culture wars. There's just the old knee-jerk nationalism where some British people want to be way more of an isolated, insular nation than Britain ever has been and is realistic, given economic and political links to the Continent and world

      @ems4884@ems4884Ай бұрын
  • Echoing the comments of others… what next? This is fascinating insight into this troubled part of the world.

    @sjdyt@sjdyt3 ай бұрын
  • Lord Balfour went to Eton. Anyone else seeing the link between crass incompetent politicians and that establishment?

    @slightlyconfused876@slightlyconfused8763 ай бұрын
    • If only it was an issue of only one school. Rather, it seems more to be a temperamental issue rather than an environmental one. Consider the politicians and aspiring politicians from working class backgrounds at school. It was always the swotty, the snitches, the teacher's pets, the ones determined to make sure all the other children follow the rules. It's clear when you listen to the Labour politicians they have spent most of their lives believing, probably rightly if viewed in terms of academic success, that they are better than their peers. Unfortunately, you tend to find those who come from a less well of background who gain power can be even more tyrannical than the snobs.

      @zelig1799@zelig17993 ай бұрын
    • Nicola sturgeon springs immediately to mind😂

      @TheScudabear1@TheScudabear13 ай бұрын
    • No, you’re the first person I’ve ever heard make that original and revealing association.

      @sam.p12345@sam.p123453 ай бұрын
  • Generally a very balanced and interesting account. My one quibble - starting in 1914 does rather skew the argument! It would be equivalent to starting at 1973 - ie that Egypt invaded Israel in the Sinai desert and occupied Israeli land! Very disingenuous I’m sure everyone would agree. The point being - where you start the story massively changes perception. What you missed is that the Jews in Israel were occupied by a foreign power (Rome) and over time were kicked out of their homeland by many peoples - including by the Arabs. The Arab colonisation of the levant and North Africa often gets a free pass. But if people have a lawful claim to land they were kicked out of (think Palestinian refugees, Ukrainian refugees etc) then how long does it last and why have you picked that time? It’s a messy situation - and frankly trying to blame Britain for the mess rather absolves all the actual people on the ground fighting over it…

    @jpevans01@jpevans013 ай бұрын
    • There were other people in Jerusalem before Abraham migrated from Iraq to Jerusalem. You just can't start with Jews were occupied by Rome.

      @aslampervez2294@aslampervez22943 ай бұрын
    • To me, the history of Jewish people pushed out of Israel is widely known, but it's the other side of the history that's over looked. Such as Iran helped Jewish people to move back into ancient Israel, and also helped to build their 2nd Temple. The Iranians actually commissioned for the temple to be built.

      @itseveryday8600@itseveryday86003 ай бұрын
    • IMO after 2,000 years one should be able to get over the fact that ones ancestors had been kicked out from somewhere. Imagine if every single group which had been kicked out somewhere over the past 2,000 years suddenly start aggressive actions to "return" today...

      @ralphbernhard1757@ralphbernhard17573 ай бұрын
    • The history of Europe, especially Eastern Europe, over the last few centuries is a history of displacement, genocide, forced relocation and ethnic cleansing. The grievances are manifold and long=standing. The key to a peaceful Europe is coming to terms with a status quo instead of nursing those multi=generational grudges. That has allowed most of Europe to enjoy one of its longest periods of peace, ever. The only parts of Europe that for the last eighty years since the end of WW II experienced the kind of murderous strife that is the historical default were the component states of the former Yugoslavia, and now Ukraine, and the reason for that is to reach back into history for some kind of wrongs that somebody feels needs to be redressed. That is the situation in today's Palestine. As long as the debate goes back further and further in time to arrive at some type of historical Ground Zero in the search for legitimacy for one's viewpoint, a solution for the future will always prove elusive.

      @shelbynamels7948@shelbynamels79483 ай бұрын
    • 2000+ years ago

      @crappymeal@crappymeal2 ай бұрын
  • 1:25 wrong map for the Russian Empire in 1914. 10:59 it's pronounced Mesopotamia (meaning "between the rivers"), not "Mesopotania"

    @lashachakhunashvili1399@lashachakhunashvili13992 ай бұрын
  • A story that needs to be told. Thank you.

    @NR23derek@NR23derek3 ай бұрын
  • It's more to the situation than British involvement now...but its no surprise about this information.

    @CG_VON@CG_VONАй бұрын
  • The original title along the lines of “why britain is responsible for the arab-israeli conflict” was accurate. Too bad someone at the IWM lost their nerve.

    @kholt1776@kholt17762 ай бұрын
    • 😂 yes,k I like that one

      @Ladybird55505@Ladybird55505Ай бұрын
  • Thank you for the video

    @reginaldpasao8390@reginaldpasao83903 ай бұрын
  • Sure, I have heard of the Balfour Declaration. But until just now I had never had the chance to read what it actually says. It strikes me that for such an important document, it is surprisingly wishy-washy, to use the preferred academic term. As a official statement, it simply expresses a preference. It is not a law, a foreign policy objective of the Crown, or a carefully arrived-at, negotiated treaty obligation.' It simply seems to be a carefully worded, straddle the fence thinking of the Foreign Office, designed not to give too much away to either side, designed to be abandoned or at least modified should shifting circumstances require it. To make it the cornerstone of British foreign policy, is, to quote Sir Bernard Appleby, to put a burden on it that it is semantically and epistologically not designed to support".

    @shelbynamels7948@shelbynamels79483 ай бұрын
    • This was actually very intentionally done by the British. They knew how it conflicted with other promises they made, so they left it open to interpretation. Though it was made law in 1923 as part of the Mandate for Palestine. Interestingly though, people argue that the Balfour declaration being made law in Mandatory Palestine was in itself illegal. This is because the governing international law for Mandates which the League of Nations had agreed on, stipulated that countries like Britain were required to act effectively as trustees over their Mandates, and to act in the best interests of the people who lived their, ensuring the right to self determination. Since the Balfour Declaration alienated 90% of the population of Palestine from their political right to self determination, it violated a key component of the governing international law.

      @MrBeneneb@MrBeneneb2 ай бұрын
    • The Anti Israel narrative likes to pretend the declaration simply "handed over" the land to the Jews. I wish more people would simply read this short text. The very complicated history of the conflict is twisted to fit the tiktok activists.

      @AddieP91@AddieP912 ай бұрын
    • ever seen who he addressed it too?

      @Ladybird55505@Ladybird55505Ай бұрын
  • Are we the bad guys ? That's how you get an empire.

    @julianshepherd2038@julianshepherd20383 ай бұрын
    • I would say it wasn't "Us" as it was our ancestors but the bigger picture here is people want to blame someone for invading and taking land when that's exactly what ALL humans have been doing since the beginning of mankind, so there is no good guy or bad guy in that sense

      @John14-6...@John14-6...3 ай бұрын
    • @@John14-6...except that when “we” continue to fund imperial endeavors and destabilization in the region, you can’t really blame any ancestors. Neocolonialism exists.

      @omarkastrat513@omarkastrat5133 ай бұрын
    • lmao I love that sketch with David Mitchell 🤣

      @Ladybird55505@Ladybird55505Ай бұрын
  • The flippant drawing of borders were the British’s specialty. I wouldn’t be surprised if they meticulously planned it this way.

    @LFX27@LFX273 ай бұрын
    • I was thinking the same...sounds liek what they did in Africa

      @Ladybird55505@Ladybird55505Ай бұрын
  • What everyone miss to mention is that Jordan was part of the british mandate for palestine, so the arabs took 3 times more land than the jews, actually the so called "palestinan" arabs have a state since 1947, it is called Jordan, it has the same flag as the "palestinians" are waving today, the problem is, and the heart of the conflict , that the palestinians dont want a jewish state in that region in any borders or shape, "from the river to the sea" their famous chant makes that clear.

    @Lion_ofJudah@Lion_ofJudah2 ай бұрын
    • Exactly. That's the missing puzzle piece that founds the widely spread narrative of jewish "colonialism" in "palestine". Sadly this video doesn't account to that at all. Also the historical bounds of jews to that specific land are fatally overlooked and barely mentioned, which makes it seem like Aliyahs and jewish (re)migration to Israel was arbitrary.

      @jevro@jevro2 ай бұрын
    • It is because European immigrants have no right to usurp the indiginous population, which has lived there uninterrupted for over 5,000 years since the Canaanites.

      @arbitScaleModels@arbitScaleModels2 ай бұрын
    • sorry, but the jewish people simply were not there, so they did not took anything, just made a country as the other new ones in the area with churchill's backing. the jewish people in the area are mostly colonisers of the arab land so that's it. nothing wrong with that, good for them, they managed to fight some wars, win and make a pretty prosperous country for themselves. even today, after 100 years, the british mandate area is still mostly 50-50% jews and palestinian arabs.

      @strigoiu13@strigoiu13Ай бұрын
    • @@arbitScaleModels -jewish have right to be in israel and arabs have right to be in arabia,u have to be fair

      @makedonistoi@makedonistoiАй бұрын
    • The river to the sea? You mean that famous speech that Benjamin Netenyahu, gave in the UN? Your silly little username has given away your emotional bias and unnaceptance of facts that dob't support the Jewish narrative...

      @Ladybird55505@Ladybird55505Ай бұрын
  • Is it factually correct to keep referring to that area as Palestine? That is not what I read from other sources.

    @liftfan2@liftfan2Күн бұрын
  • Why do you write Israel-Palestine if hamas attacked first? Or is it différent in english?

    @lizashevchuk@lizashevchuk11 күн бұрын
  • It’s easy to promise things to others that isn’t yours

    @janusjones6519@janusjones65193 ай бұрын
    • I see you don't understand about how power politics and The Great Game works.

      @obsidianjane4413@obsidianjane44133 ай бұрын
    • Whose was it? The ottomans?

      @yehoshuadalven@yehoshuadalven3 ай бұрын
    • That area was very clearly under British control.

      @pistonburner6448@pistonburner64483 ай бұрын
    • That’s what I’m thinking

      @marykali3603@marykali3603Ай бұрын
  • I'll just remind us all the Trans- Jordan Memorandum at the Cairo Conference of 1922, in which the Britts, rulers of Palestine, together with the Arab League States, takes off the Eastern part of palestine know as Jordan today from the equation of the "Jewish Homeland in Palestine" from the 1917 Balfour Dec.

    @user-qp2fs3kp9z@user-qp2fs3kp9z2 ай бұрын
  • This is what people should be watching not tiktoks

    @phatjuicycanofbeans9300@phatjuicycanofbeans93002 ай бұрын
    • your mind will explode when you find out this is whats on tiktok....

      @Ladybird55505@Ladybird55505Ай бұрын
  • Those of you that are really interested in the facts and history read 'Paris 1919' and 'Desert Queen' the life story of Gertrude Bell. I am afraid our children protesting today have no idea how the Middle East was created.

    @cliffkiehl2070@cliffkiehl207012 күн бұрын
  • GREAT COVERAGE, THANK YOU

    @Aronshmuli665@Aronshmuli6652 ай бұрын
  • Fantastic video!!! Never knew that 🇯🇴🇵🇸 were one state then divided into two

    @MichaelBrown-be7vn@MichaelBrown-be7vn22 күн бұрын
  • Thanks Britain.

    @truereason2784@truereason27843 ай бұрын
  • They don't call the Union Jack a Butchers Apron for nothing hey.

    @divarachelenvy@divarachelenvy3 ай бұрын
  • 1919 Versailles : Lloyd George was poor on geography - he though Mecca was in Syria But he was hot on bible studies : he suggested Israel's borders should run from "Ham to Beersheba". Civil servants had to trawl the archives to find ancient maps.

    @vinm300@vinm3002 ай бұрын
  • Hindsight.

    @mavberil.2059@mavberil.20593 ай бұрын
  • didnt it start with the Romans ?

    @jamoco1@jamoco19 күн бұрын
  • I am sure that the uprising involving Faisal also involved an obscure, unknown British officer and his Rolls Royce armoured cars, I am trying to remember his name, but clearly, I am not the only one to forget to mention T E Lawrence "of Arabia"?

    @megapangolin1093@megapangolin10932 ай бұрын
    • which one the one that mysteriously went missing on writing advice to Britian that they shouldn't splitting it this way?

      @Ladybird55505@Ladybird55505Ай бұрын
    • Perhaps they wanted to spend more time on less common knowledge aspects of the history

      @ems4884@ems4884Ай бұрын
  • The maps drawn post war were erroneous, Syria and Lebanon were not split yet, and the NW corner of Syria was not yet taken out.

    @biloz2988@biloz298820 күн бұрын
  • So the British will clean up their mess and all will be well. Maybe a single secular state called Balfouria would work.

    @douglasfur3808@douglasfur38083 ай бұрын
    • yeah put it in texas, the americans seem happy to play puppet to them

      @Ladybird55505@Ladybird55505Ай бұрын
  • Doesn't need a 15-minute explanation to answer the question. I can do it in a second: Yes.

    @ralphbernhard1757@ralphbernhard17573 ай бұрын
    • No.

      @emrekermen5334@emrekermen53342 ай бұрын
  • absolutely

    @angusmackaskill3035@angusmackaskill30353 ай бұрын
  • Lads we did it again!

    @neil4692@neil46923 ай бұрын
  • From the river to the sea, free of houses and buildings? Has the right to live in tents? Has the right to scramble to the sea, to get airdrop dispersed aid of food? March 2024.,..,

    @alsu4345@alsu43452 ай бұрын
  • This video insists on separating Levantine Christians from Arabs, all are Arabs, some are Muslims and some are Christians

    @mogh2603@mogh26033 ай бұрын
  • There was also an involvement from British Baptists in Zionism

    @LlyleHunter@LlyleHunter2 ай бұрын
  • Huge deaths to draw lines on a map

    @AindriuMacGiollaEoin@AindriuMacGiollaEoin3 ай бұрын
    • ...and there were never any deaths before that? The people there at the time wasn't the result of "huge deaths"?

      @pistonburner6448@pistonburner64483 ай бұрын
    • If anything drawing up borders prevented the coming conflict from getting really bad. There's always gonna be a vacuum of power with the British Empire leaving.

      @TheSm1thers@TheSm1thers3 ай бұрын
    • @@TheSm1thers Yes, and there already was a power vacuum due to the recoil and then dissolution of the Ottoman Empire...which had first created a synthetic and unsustainable situation in the region. Anyone claiming that the starting point with which Britain was working with would've been a "natural state of things" is a total lie!

      @pistonburner6448@pistonburner64483 ай бұрын
  • Quick question - why couldn’t Britain or any other western country offer a place for Jews? Did they not want them in their country ? Why place them in a country where the original residents didn’t want to share their country ? This move in1947, seemed to have displace many Palestinians and they were treated with injustice by the UN. America is so large, why couldn’t one state be given to the Jews? Seems like the west were always racist to Jews, it was only Muslims who voluntarily gave Jews a place to live - during the ottomon empire in the 1880.

    @sc2881@sc2881Ай бұрын
    • The Jews WERE the original residents.

      @freddyt55555@freddyt55555Ай бұрын
    • Muslims actively prohibited Jews into the British mandate and then Muslim countries ethnically cleaned Jews from their countries.

      @Andy-ck6dq@Andy-ck6dqАй бұрын
    • @@freddyt55555 incorrect

      @Ladybird55505@Ladybird55505Ай бұрын
    • Theyve been removed from 109 countries over the course of thousands of years... pretty self explanitory

      @Ladybird55505@Ladybird55505Ай бұрын
  • Palestine wasn't Britain's to give a way in the first place.

    @TheodoreBrecht@TheodoreBrecht3 ай бұрын
    • Correct. Abraham purchased the Land of Israel from the previous inhabitants (an example: Genesis 23:3) and bequeathed it to his son Isaac who bequeathed it to his son Jacob who bequeathed it to his sons known as the Twelve Tribes of Jacob, that is, the Jewish people. What's more, look in the Jewish Bible and see how many mentions there are of Jerusalem and the Land of Israel. God Almighty the Creator gave the Land of Israel to the Jews.

      @MHPloni-kl5ec@MHPloni-kl5ec3 ай бұрын
    • @@MHPloni-kl5ec *Bro's quoting the Bible like it's historical fact. LOL!*

      @RedSpectreHaunting@RedSpectreHaunting3 ай бұрын
    • They had kicked out the Ottomans, so it was.

      @EvoraGT430@EvoraGT4303 ай бұрын
    • Your argument fails as there is no such thing as God. The land belongs to all peoples.

      @jablot5054@jablot50543 ай бұрын
    • Nor was it the Arab's to take.

      @RazKoller@RazKoller3 ай бұрын
  • still dont get it

    @Evrofthegreen@Evrofthegreen2 ай бұрын
  • Too bad this hasn't been put out years ago, year after year.

    @TJB-zt9tx@TJB-zt9tx12 күн бұрын
  • why is there even a question mark in the title? what is happening today in Gaza is a *direct* result of British imperial machinations in the 1st half of the 20th century, and US imperial machinations in the second. (and now it *is* about oil)

    @kidmohair8151@kidmohair81513 ай бұрын
  • You may consider this comment offensive but it is true none the less. Every time the British stick their noses in to other countries then leaves there has been nothing but a total failure. British empire ways are directly to blame for current problems in the middle east.

    @hokepoke3540@hokepoke354020 күн бұрын
  • If you compare the treaties of Versailles, (the harshness of which is attributed to the rise of Hitler) Saint-Germain, Trianon and Sevres, it's very easy to distinguish the extreme amount of racism inherent in the European mindset of the period: Germany lost a minimum amount of land and Austria was disbanded to give the locals their own states while Turkey lost pretty much everything except a small portion of lowest value rural inner Anatolia and any non-Christian locals were instead colonized by Britain and France.

    @sapphyrus@sapphyrus3 ай бұрын
    • I'm Turkish. Making the loss of land a race thing isn't fair. Racism isn't that significant in such decision making. All partition decisions were strategic and based on reason. Consider this: If there was racism, why did they support Arabs?

      @emrekermen5334@emrekermen53342 ай бұрын
  • I hope that part 2 will deal with: 1. Did the colonial powers have a right to do the division? It is not addressed strongly enough; 2. Was Palestine empty land, and how does Asher Ginsberg’s observations of Palestine in 1891 relate to this notion; 3. There were serious fights between Jewish settlers and native Arabs in Palestine throughout the 1930s. It is glossed over, thereby underplaying the beginnings of the illegal land claims of the Zionists; 4. There were about 4 or 5 Zionist terror groups, among them the father of Benjamin Netanyahu and Menachem Begin, who famously claimed to be the original terr0rist; 5. Why was the Balfour Declaration addressed to Rothschild, in particular, and was that part of a deal to bring America in to support the British in the war? This piece doesn’t adequately deal with the background to the conflicting promises and why the Brits ultimately favoured the Zionists. 6. This piece also does not adequately deal with the root cause of the current conflict, the Zionists’ master plan of establishing Greater Israel. It is the fulcrum of the manifesto of the Likud Party, founded by Begin. It is a matter of emphasis and important to understand the degree of culpability of not just the British Empire but also those currently in power in Israel who continue to push the Greater Israel agenda.

    @DMx4839@DMx48393 ай бұрын
    • Certainly, the land of Palestine was not empty. It had approximately 900,000 Palestinians, Muslims, Christians, and Jews.

      @noraibrahim8862@noraibrahim88622 ай бұрын
    • ​@@noraibrahim8862it didn't even have that population in the first British census on 1922. The land was highly underpopulated and had less than 350,000 people in it for over 1000 years before 1860.

      @shainazion4073@shainazion40732 ай бұрын
    • Israel accept s it doesn't have the totality of its land. Just the scraps. The Arab Palestinians should have done the same - greater Palestine was Jordan Lebanon and Southern Syria. The region given to them at Partition in 1948. Furthermore, as Zuheir Mohsen of the PLO stated: Palestinian people does not exist … there is no differences between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians, and Lebanese", though Palestinian identity would be emphasised for political reasons. In a March 1977 interview with the Dutch newspaper Trouw he stated that "between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese there are no differences. We are all part of one people, the Arab nation [...] Just for political reasons we carefully underwrite our Palestinian identity. Because it is of national interest for the Arabs to advocate the existence of Palestinians to balance Zionism. Yes, the existence of a separate Palestinian identity exists only for tactical reasons"...

      @paulamarsh1@paulamarsh12 ай бұрын
    • and the way he addresses these will give the legitimacy to his channel becasue we know that answers here.

      @Ladybird55505@Ladybird55505Ай бұрын
  • Next explain Lebanon

    @LlyleHunter@LlyleHunter2 ай бұрын
    • It was also formed by Britain’s mandate with a Christian majority until the early 1980s

      @LlyleHunter@LlyleHunter2 ай бұрын
  • Nice explantion 'history is fact

    @stillworkin9813@stillworkin981311 күн бұрын
  • 🤔 If I start my own religion and get a few thousand followers, can I then decide it's actually a nationality and demand a piece of someone elses land?

    @TheScudabear1@TheScudabear13 ай бұрын
    • According to Zionism: yes you can

      @carolinescheffer3780@carolinescheffer37802 ай бұрын
    • That's exactly the story of Muslim Arab conquests from the 7th century onward: inventing a religion on the Arabian Peninsula, getting followers in various tribes, Arabizing native peoples of the Middle East and beyond and claiming vast swaths of lands in the Middle East and North Africa.

      @lashachakhunashvili1399@lashachakhunashvili13992 ай бұрын
    • @@carolinescheffer3780 consider thinking before commenting. Jews are an ethnoreligious group separated by world history. It's not just a made up nationality.

      @jevro@jevro2 ай бұрын
    • Of course you can. You just might not win.

      @bldrtom@bldrtomАй бұрын
    • judaism has been an ethno-religion throught almost the entirety of its history

      @mahatmaniggandhi2898@mahatmaniggandhi289824 күн бұрын
  • 1:17 Why does that say Mumbai? It should be Bombay.

    @paololuckyluke2854@paololuckyluke28542 ай бұрын
  • Notice that the word Palestinians never appears in the document. Why? Because that description did not exist until the 1960s. They were simply Arab peoples.

    @Tiberius88@Tiberius8818 күн бұрын
  • How many Jews and Christians currently are living in Iran, Egypt, Jordan, Sudan, Libya, Syria, and Afghanistan? Less than ONE PERCENT. What happened to all those people? Forced out? What’s currently happening in Nigeria? in churches in Nigeria?

    @hawaiiflowers7066@hawaiiflowers706620 күн бұрын
  • Brits should've done the moral thing and not partition arab land they won from the ottomans

    @closetglobe.IRGUN.NW0@closetglobe.IRGUN.NW03 ай бұрын
    • They didnt. Read the whole of the Balfour Declaration

      @andym9571@andym95713 ай бұрын
    • It was NOT Arab lands, it was Ottoman Turkish lands.

      @shainazion4073@shainazion40732 ай бұрын
  • Well really, it was the mongols that obliterated the Middle East. If not for the Mongols, the Middle East would probably have remained strong and able to self determin.

    @dancummane3668@dancummane36683 ай бұрын
  • Objectively…..the British, for such a small nation, really punched well above its weight for centuries.

    @mikewingert5521@mikewingert55215 күн бұрын
  • In 1988 the Palestine National Council meeting in Algiers proclaimed the establishment of the State of Palestine. The Security Council demanded Israel withdraw its forces “forthwith and unconditionally” from Lebanon up to its internationally recognized boundaries. 06 June 1982.

    @SteveXNYC@SteveXNYCАй бұрын
    • Just because Palestine claims itself as a state with borders they want doesn’t make it a state. Palestinians aren’t even an ethnic people. They are just Arabic people that live in what has always been a traditional home for the Jewish people. They’ve been exiled multiple times throughout history but they have had a claim to that land going back to the days of Babylon. Palestine is just a name the Romans gave to the area to insult the Jews. So much of this recent Palestinian state narrative is just plainly made up.

      @clstrat837@clstrat8377 күн бұрын
  • No

    @lordsnooty4138@lordsnooty41383 ай бұрын
  • If two fish are fighting in a pond it means the British were there.

    @sjoormen1@sjoormen13 ай бұрын
    • Or the two fish were fighting before the British were there...then carried on after they left

      @andym9571@andym95713 ай бұрын
  • So its completely and utterly the french's fault

    @bravo2zero796@bravo2zero7963 ай бұрын
    • Isn’t everything 😃 lol Je plaisante, mes amis

      @nigeh5326@nigeh53263 ай бұрын
    • @nigeh5326 yes, exactly

      @bravo2zero796@bravo2zero7963 ай бұрын
    • The big problem that the UK has is immigration. The sooner that the Angles, Saxons, Jutes, Normans, Viking, Jews, Huguenots and Irish are shipped out, the better. I will be allowed to stay as my mum was from the South Wales mining valleys. This is of course the same tactic that is used by the current UK 'government', deflect attention away from the actual topic.

      @breamoreboy@breamoreboy3 ай бұрын
    • @@breamoreboy Nice racism.

      @obsidianjane4413@obsidianjane44133 ай бұрын
    • @@breamoreboyhow do you know your mum is south wales?By your analysis you’d have to trace your family roots back over 100 years to say that. You’re probably a mongrel, like most of us.

      @MsColl90@MsColl90Ай бұрын
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