Palestine.
Most Arab leaders and Iran's leadership are opposed to a Jewish State (the exceptions being those of Egypt, Jordan, and Turkey).
1947
No Brit promised a Jewish state. The League of Nations handed a mandate to the British administer the Jewish homeland that was created when the Middle East was divided into different countries.
Palestinians
No particular state adopted this plan. It came from the United Nations and was chiefly supported by the Palestinian Jews (future Israelis), the United States, and the Soviet Union. It was opposed by the British and the Arab States.
divided into an Arab and a Jewish state.
they opposed western influence welcomed the existance of israel
No particular state adopted this plan. It came from the United Nations and was chiefly supported by the Palestinian Jews (future Israelis), the United States, and the Soviet Union. It was opposed by the British and the Arab States.
Answer 1The UN didn't create Israel, and there was no UN vote regarding Israel statehood.Answer 2It needs to be clarified that the vote occurred in 1947 and was not about voting for or against Israel. The United Nations Vote was about the validity and binding nature of UN Resolution 181, which was the United Nations Partition Plan. The Partition Plan gave legitimacy to both the establishment of a Jewish State and an Arab State. The Jews eventually used this legitimacy to declare the Independence of the State of Israel, but there has never been a referendum on Israel's legality.The list of countries that opposed the Partition Plan, usually because they opposed the legitimacy of a Jewish State were:AfghanistanCubaEgyptGreeceIndiaIranIraqLebanonPakistanSaudi ArabiaSyriaTurkeyYemen
The United Nations proposed a plan to divide Palestine into a Jewish state and an Arab state.
It means exactly what it sounds like: perspectives that are opposed to Jews and Judaism. Most often, these views are not just opposed to Jewish positive interests (such as Zionism and the State of Israel) but are opposed to Jewish neutral interests (such as the right to live as equals in society) and anti-negative interests (such as freedom from fear of violence and attacks).