The Partition would have separated the Mandate for Palestine into a Jewish State, an Arab State, and a separate UN-governed area for the Old City of Jerusalem. However, since fighting broke out immediately after the UN Resolution was signed, the only effect of the Resolution was to grant legitimacy to the presence of two states, one Jewish and one Arab in the land of Mandatory Palestine.
in 1947 look on the internet for the 1947 UN Partition plan
Israel
UN Resolution 181: The Partition Plan for the Mandate of Palestine.
The city of Jerusalem was to become a corpus separatum, an international city under the UN.
Gaza, West Bank, and East Jerusalem are the Palestinian lands according to UN partitioning of lands between Israel and Palestine.
The UN proposal was the partition of Palestine between a Jewsih state and a Palestinian State. Although approved by vote of the UN General Assembly, it was never implemented because the neighboring Arab states invaded.
No. No country is leased by or to another country. Additionally, Palestine had no ability to lease out territory given that it was not a country at the time of Israel's independence. Israel received independence as a result of the UN Partition Plan of Mandatory Palestine.
About 70% of the area designated for Jewish administration under the 1947 UN partition plan. After the Arab-Israeli War of 1948-9, Israel controlled over 98% of the territory it was accorded by the UN Partition Plan and exercised control of 78% of the territory of the former Mandate of Palestine (as opposed to the 56% percent that Israel was accorded in the UN Partition Plan).
After World War II, the United Nations proposed a plan in 1947 to partition Palestine into separate Jewish and Arab states, alongside an international administration for Jerusalem. This plan aimed to address the conflicting national aspirations of Jews and Arabs in the region following the end of the British mandate. The Jewish leadership accepted the proposal, while the Arab leadership rejected it, leading to increased tensions and conflict in the area. The partition plan ultimately laid the groundwork for the establishment of Israel in 1948 and subsequent wars in the region.
The Partition Plan did not give Jerusalem to the Israelis. The plan was for the Jerusalem/Bethlehem area to be put under international control, from the United Nations itself and entirely surrounded by the proposed Arab State. Although, when the area became a hotspot in the Arab-Israeli War of 1948-9, no UN peacekeepers were dispatched to the area to defend its "internationalness".
It depends on how the question is read. If it is referring to UNGA Resolution 181 (II), which was passed in 1947 and was designed to deal with the British Mandate of Palestine, it was divided into 2 countries - Israel and Palestine, but the UN had proposed that the city of Jerusalem be made into a separate, international city. However, as a result of nearly 70 years of conflict, the current plan is to have the Eastern Jerusalem as the capital for the Palestinian State and the Western Jerusalem as the Capital for Israel State. Israel insists to have the whole Jerusalem as Israel capital.
In 1947, the United Kingdom decided to leave the problem of Palestine to the United Nations. Faced with increasing violence and conflict between Jewish and Arab communities in the region, the UK announced its intention to withdraw from its mandate over Palestine, leading to the UN's involvement in proposing a partition plan to resolve the conflict.