answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

That depends Jews were for Arabs were against

User Avatar

Wiki User

10y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Why did people oppose partitioning Mandatory Palestine?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Prior to the Partition of Palestine what percentage of the population was Jewish?

In 1946 roughly 1/3 of the population of Mandatory Palestine was Jewish, roughly 600,000 people of a total population of 1.85 million people.


What were some industries of some people of palestine?

Most Palestinian Arabs were agricultural and the area had been a backwater for most of the Ottoman Period. The only major industries in Mandatory Palestine were those built by Zionist Jewish Settlers.


Are the palestine people muslims?

Yes. Most of the people of Palestine are the Muslims.


Describe the United Nations plan for partitioning the region of Palestine into a Palestinian State and a Jewish state?

Most people incorrectly believe that the UN Resolution "created" a Jewish State (Israel) and an Arab State (Palestine) on the map. This is not the case. What UN Resolution 181 does provide for is the permission for the different ethno-religious groups in Mandatory Palestine to declare a state. In the case of most mandates, the understanding was that the mandate would eventually become independent as one new state, like Iraq or Syria had. The case of a Palestine was therefore unique and needed the permission to deviate from the traditional path of independence. Because of their being two states, provisional borders had to be provided, which is why a map was used, but those borders would only come into play if both sides decided to remain at peace.


Was it mandatory to belong to nazi party in 1940s Germany?

Not mandatory for ordinary people. It would be mandatory for people in government leadership jobs.


Where do the people of Rafa Palestine originally come from?

What is some of the historical background of the people of Rafa in Palestine ?


How did people oppose or support slavery?

oppose - mean support - needed it


What is a secondary source for the early people?

the answer is easy they were doing a bronze and tools .......... . . bout in the end can everybody help Palestine people I love Palestine people they are relay nice . longed lived to Palestine ................. . death to the Israel people bout we gonna coll them Jews .some of them they are good bout the people how live in Palestine they are bad they kill the boys and girls and baby's .death to Israel ................. . Palestine is country ................


What foods did the people of First Century Palestine eat?

What did the people of Palestine They ate bread,chicken and beef. Pork was forbidden


How did Boris Yeltsin respond to communist coup attempts?

He advised people in Moscow to oppose the coup.


Why isn't palestine on the map?

Because it isn't a nation. It never has been. This is confusing, I know, but "Palestine" is called that by the people who live there because it is part of the last legitimate name used by a nation that controlled the region to identify it. The UK controlled the Mandatory of Palestine from 1920 to 1948. The region was carved up after WW2 and a nation was made for the Jews and a separate region (not a state) for the Arabic people. UN directive 181 gave the Jews the legitimacy to declare their area, Israel, a sovereign nation. The nonJews of the region never followed suit.


What is the difference between the migration of the Muslims to Medina and the migration of the Jews to Palestine?

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.