1.82 million Palestinians live in the Gaza Strip.
Many Palestinian people live in the Gaza.
it move to the strips
An example of Palestinians includes individuals who identify as part of the Palestinian people, primarily residing in the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and East Jerusalem. They share a common cultural and historical heritage, often linked to the land of historic Palestine. Many Palestinians also live in diaspora communities around the world, maintaining their identity and connection to their homeland.
The Declaration of Principles, signed in 1993, aimed to establish a framework for peace between Israelis and Palestinians, including limited self-governance for Palestinians in parts of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. For Palestinians living in Gaza, it represented a significant political opportunity, as it led to the establishment of the Palestinian Authority and increased autonomy. However, it also brought challenges, including ongoing conflict, economic difficulties, and internal divisions. The hopes for lasting peace remained unfulfilled, leading to disillusionment among many Palestinians.
The creation of Israel directly resulted in the Jewish-Arab Engagement of 1947-1949 which resulted in 720,000 Palestinians becoming refugees. This event is commemorated by Palestinians are the Nakba or Great Catastrophe.
It is about 2,200 miles from London to the Gaza Strip
Well that can refer to many things but that would be Palestinians that usually live in areas affected by Israel such as the territories of Gaza and the West Bank and these people take up arms against their enemies, whoever that might be.
Answer 1No, it one of major cities in Palestine.Answer 2Currently the territory is in de facto control of the Militant Hamas Organization which has severed ties with the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank. Gaza, by virtue of this is de facto an independent country, although no country recognizes it and most see it as an integral part of any future Palestinian State.
Important to whom is the question:1) Israelis: The Gaza Strip is one of the few places where the British Mandate of Palestine did not overlap with the historically Jewish region called the Land of Israel. Similar to how Palestinians have never made direct references to Tel Aviv being sacred to them, Jews have never made references about Gaza being sacred to them. If however, you were to move the Gaza Strip upwards along the Israeli coastline by one space east (that is to say that the western border of the Gaza Strip would start where the eastern border is now), the Gaza Strip would have direct access to Tel Aviv, which is Israel's largest metropolis and which would even more severely hamper Israel's ability to negotiate amicably with the Palestinians. Also, you would be beginning to move into religiously significant territory.By and large, for Israelis, the Gaza Strip is significant specifically because it is insignificant.2) Palestinians: What makes Gaza important is nothing other than history. It was the first territory that Israel finally conceded as a contiguous region (the West Bank territory conceded was non-contiguous) for a Palestinian State from what used to be the British Mandate of Palestine. Many Palestinians would probably have been happier if the first Palestinian State (of contiguous size) would have been formed in the Galilee along the Lebanese border as there remains to this day a large Arab-Israeli population there. If the Gaza territory, though were shifted one space west, (that is to say that the eastern border of the Gaza Strip would start where the western border is now), it would be in Egypt and thus not part of the British Mandate of Palestine which represents the entire former Arab region. If Gaza were shifted one space east, it would be bordered by Israel on three sides, further facilitating the debilitating blockade around the territory. (Currently the Egyptian Army coordinates the blockade with Israel, but that is always subject to whoever controls the Egyptian Army.)By and large for the Palestinians, the Gaza Strip is significant because it is the first contiguous piece of territory of the (hopefully) future independent Palestinian State. Location was largely irrelevant.
The fighting occurs primarily in the Gaza Strip, but there are still riots and low-level violence in the West Bank. However, many Palestinians still claim that the entire State of Israel belongs to the Palestinians, so the conflict is still over the entire former Mandate of Palestine.
As of 2010, the population of Israel is 5,726,000 Jews, 1,548,000 Arabs and 313,000 people outside these categories. The figures include Jews living in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, but exclude Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Roughly 1,400 Arab Christians live in Gaza today, down from 3,000 ten years ago. The number is decreasing due to the militancy and violence of Hamas and other Islamist thugs that oppress and repress the Christian population.