Jewish People reclaiming sovereignty in biblical heartland after 3000 years

June 29, 2020 by David Singer
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The United Nations is disgracefully trying to prevent a miracle happening 100 years after the world first gave its historic imprimatur to an impossible dream becoming a possible reality:  The restoration of Jewish sovereignty in 1697km² of the Jewish People’s biblical heartland in Judea and Samaria (West Bank).

The defeat of the 400 years-old Ottoman Empire in World War 1 revived the Jewish People’s 3000 years-old dream of regaining nationhood in their ancient homeland – which had extended across both banks of the River Jordan where the twelve tribes of Israel had finally settled 40 years after their exodus from Egypt.

The San Remo Resolution signed by Great Britain, France, Japan and Italy on 25 April 1920 promised the Jews real hope.

The Treaty of Sevres involving the international community quickly followed on 10 August 1920.

The British Empire, France, Italy and Japan (“Principal Allied Powers”) were joined by Armenia, Belgium, Greece, the Hedjaz, Poland Portugal, Roumania, The Serb-Croat Slovene State and Czecho-Slovakia (“Allied Powers”) in this peace treaty signed with Turkey.

Signatories for the British Empire were representatives for:

  • His Majesty the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland 
  • The Dominion of Canada
  • The Commonwealth of Australia
  • The Dominion of New Zealand
  • The Union of South Africa
  • India

Article 95 provided that Palestine – within such boundaries as might be determined by the Principal Allied Powers – be administered by a Mandatory to be selected by them. The Mandatory was to be responsible for putting into effect the Balfour Declaration made on November 2, 1917, by the British Government – and adopted by the Allied Powers – in favour of the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people – it being clearly understood that nothing would be done which might prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine – or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country.

The League of Nations 51 member states unanimously appointed Britain as Mandatory and approved the terms of the Mandate for Palestine on 24 July 1922. 

Intervening political events in Syria between 1920 and 1922 involving France and Britain saw the Mandate’s provisions deny the Jewish People the right to reconstitute the Jewish National Home on the East Bank of the Jordan River where two and a half of the twelve tribes had settled after reaching the Promised Land.

Judea and Samaria were reserved however for the Jews under the Mandate – that right being preserved under article 80 of the 1945 United Nations Charter notwithstanding the demise of the League of Nations in 1946.

After Britain handed its Mandate back to the United Nations in 1948 – every Jew living in Judea and Samaria was driven out by the invading army of Transjordan which itself comprised 77% of the Mandate territory and had achieved independence in 1946.

Judea and Samaria were unified with Transjordan to become “The West Bank in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan” from 1950 to 1967 – recognized only by Great Britain, Iraq and Pakistan. Jordanian citizenship was extended to all its Arab citizens from 1954 to 1988. 

Jordan’s loss of Judea and Samaria to Israel in the 1967 Six-Day War saw some 450,000 Jews returning to reclaim their patrimony over the next 53 years – but the international community’s seal of approval soon changed to outright condemnation. President Trump’s 2020 Peace Plan has confirmed those vested legal rights acquired 1920-1922 by the Jewish People in Judea and Samaria. 

An amazing miracle is about to occur on 1 July without any parallel in world history.

David Singer is a Sydney lawyer and a foundation member of the International Analysts Network

Author’s note: The cartoon – commissioned exclusively for this article—is by Yaakov Kirschen aka “Dry Bones”- one of Israel’s foremost political and social commentators – whose cartoons have graced the columns of Israeli and international media publications for decades. His cartoons can be viewed at Drybonesblog.

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Comments

5 Responses to “Jewish People reclaiming sovereignty in biblical heartland after 3000 years”
  1. leon poddebsky says:

    The hue and cry, the howls of outrage, the threats of reprisals against Israel, within and without the UN, by “friends” as well as self-declared enemies demonstrate clearly the jungle that is international relations.
    Israel’s rights are iron-clad, but the very same “international community” that recognised those rights formerly under its own secular rules, now flouts those very same rules by its threats of sanctions and boycotts.
    Is it because they perceive Israel to be too weak to assert its rights?
    Boris Johnson, whose countrymen formerly were in the vanguard of the restoration of the Jews in Israel now has the unbridled temerity to talk about “illegal”!

    • Lynne Newington says:

      “Is it because they perceive Israel to be too weak to assert its rights?”
      Hardly Leon, it’s the staying power that gets them……if they don’t know that by now they never will.

    • DAVID SINGER says:

      Actually Boris Johnson when Foreign Secretary – writing in the Daily Telegraph on 29 October 2017 – ahead of the centenary of the Balfour Declaration on 2 November – stated:

      “I have no doubt that the only viable solution to the conflict resembles the one first set down on paper by another Briton, Lord Peel, in the report of the Royal Commission on Palestine in 1937, and that is the vision of two states for two peoples.”

      Peel recommended:

      “two sovereign independent States would be established – the one an Arab State, consisting of Trans-Jordan united with that part of Palestine which lies to the east and south of a frontier such as we suggest in Section 3 below; the other a Jewish State consisting of that part of Palestine which lies to the north and west of that frontier.”

      Poor Boris – Covid 19 apparently must badly affect a person’s memory.

  2. David Davidian says:

    The Treaty of Sevres also recognized Armenia (Article 88) with an expanse covering much of the northeast of today’s Turkey (Article 89). South of Armenia was a Kurdistan (Article 62) The region of Izmir north to European Istanbul would be Greek (Article 27). However, the Treaty of Lausanne superseded the Treaty of Sevres.

    Does the author of this article suggest a legal mechanism for the restoration of the Treaty of Sevres?

    Yerevan, Armenia

    • DAVID SINGER says:

      The Treaty of Sevres was indeed superseded by the Treaty of Lausanne but the provisions of Sevres relating to Palestine, Syria and Mesopotamia were unaffected by Lausanne.

      Restoring Sevres in relation to Armenia, Kurdistan and Izmir would require Turkey’s agreement.

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