answersLogoWhite

0

no

User Avatar

Wiki User

16y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

Exile of Jews from palestine?

The Exile of Jews from palestine is known as the Diaspora


Why don't the Jews stop attacking Palestine?

Because Palestine keeps attacking the Jews.


How long were the Jews away from Palestine?

There have always been Jews in Palestine. They were not the majority between the years 132 CE and 1949 CE.


Did jews begin to migrate to palestine in 1982?

No. Jews had already been migrating to Israel/Palestine in substantial numbers since 1919.


Why were european jews in palestine happy about the balfour declaration?

The declaration gave the Jews of Palestine the hope that they might one-day have a country of their own.


Exile of the Jews from palestine called?

Diaspora.


Did the German Jews invade Palestine in 1948?

no


How do Jews feel in Israel?

they had part of palestine.


Who was governing body of Jews in Palestine?

Sanhedrin


Why are there conflicts in Palestine?

The Muslims and Jews both claim that Palestine is their land at that they have been living there for thousands of years. The Muslims do not have any proof of their claim, but the Jews do.


Why did the jews fly to palestine?

Most Jewish Immigrants to Mandatory Palestine came by boat, not planes. Those who did fly, generally chose to because of the distance. Of course, there are also rescue missions from after the Declaration of Independence of the State of Israel where Israel flew large planes to remote regions in the Arab World to help evacuate Jews in desperate circumstances and provide them a new home.


Have jews lived in peace in Palestine since Biblical times?

No. For most of the last 2,000 years, the Jews in Palestine were a repressed minority (or on occasion a repressed majority). Probably the most bloody period for Jews in Palestine was during the Crusades when Christian leaders slaughtered numerous Jews, especially in Jerusalem. However, Jews suffered other calamities in Palestine, such as the destruction of both Great Temples and the exile of significant portions of the Jewish population.