The only city under Palestinian control with that situation is Bethlehem. However, the cities of Jerusalem, Nazareth, and Tiberias, which are under Israeli control also elicit controversy between Christian and Muslim ethnic Palestinian Israelis (Arab-Israelis).
There is no wall between Islam and Palestine, most Palestinians are Muslims.
The dominant conflict in Palestine is between Israelis (who are predominantly Jewish) and Palestinians (who are predominantly Muslim), but the conflict is a political one, not a religious one.
The warfare arranged by the Christians against Muslims is called the Crusades. It was political war under the religious claims by the Western Christian rulers to get control of what they called holy lands of Lebanon and Palestine.
The series of religious wars between Christians and Muslims over control of the Holy Land, known as the Crusades, occurred between the 11th and 13th centuries. The main goal of the Crusades was to secure Jerusalem and other holy sites in Palestine. The conflicts resulted in a mix of military victories and defeats for both sides.
both were battles between Muslims and christian kingdoms in Spain
This could be achieved mainly by solving the Israel-Palestine conflict with just and fairness.
Religious indifferences between the Christian and Muslim faith brought on controversy as the "Holy Land" of Jerusalem was occupied by the Muslim and the Pope sought to "reclaim was is rightfully the Christian people's land"
Palestine sits in the confusing ambiguous space between being a country and being a non-country. It has partial provisional sovereignty and incomplete recognition. Its lands are designated as Israeli-Occupied Territory, but not part of Israel proper.
The Crusades, a series of religious wars between Christians and Muslims, officially ended in 1291 when the Muslims captured the last Christian stronghold in the Holy Land. However, tensions and conflicts between Christians and Muslims have persisted in various forms throughout history.
To end violance between palestine and Israel.
IntroductionThere is not a large difference between the migration of Muslims to Medina and the migration of Jews to Mandatory Palestine. In both cases you had a population of people who were distinguished by belonging to a religious community distinct from the surrounding peoples and were subject to discrimination and death threats from those surrounding peoples.DifferencesHowever, the fundamental difference was that when the Muslims came to Medina, they were actually well-received by the indigenous Medinan tribes. Conversely, when the Jews came to Mandatory Palestine, they were subject to violence from the Arab Settled Muslims or Fellahin. This resulted in conflict from the first moment of entry. Another key difference was that the Jews had a historic presence and special relationship with the lands that comprised Mandatory Palestine. There were Ancient Jewish sites in the land and Jews saw their migration as a return home. Contrarily, when the Muslims came to Medina, they still considered Mecca their true home and spiritual center, exerting all of their energies on conquering Mecca.
Medieval crusades were caused by conflict between Christianity and Islam in Palestine. Christian Europe and Islamic Turcs had interests in the same area.