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Sharing the Promised Land: A Tale of Israelis and Palestinians

audiobook Sharing the Promised Land: A Tale of Israelis and Palestinians by Dilip Hiro in History

Description

Lithuanian Jewish Communities is a remarkable resource for students of Lithuanian Jewish history and for people descended from Lithuanian Jews. This volume lists; in alphabetical order; the major Jewish communities that existed in Lithuania before World War II. The name of each community is accompanied by information about it: when it was founded; the Jewish population in different years; shops and synagogues; and the names of citizens. An appendix locates each town on a map of Lithuania. Since most of the Jewish communities in Lithuania were destroyed in the Holocaust; this volume will be a valuable tool in recreating a picture of Lithuanian Jewry. Other appendices provide member lists from Lithuanian Jewish organizations throughout the world and list agencies that will provide help in further research on Lithuanian Jewry. Descendants of Lithuanian Jews who wish to trace their genealogy will be greatly helped by Lithuanian Jewish Communities.


#2759894 in Books Interlink Pub Group Inc 1999-04-01Format: IllustratedOriginal language:EnglishPDF # 1 8.98 x 1.15 x 5.81l; 1.25 #File Name: 1566563194372 pages


Review
14 of 21 people found the following review helpful. A Real Eye-Opener!By Kay KellyI was a supporter of the Palestinian cause before I read this well-footnoted book; but I still found it an eye-opener. A sampling of details new to me:1. I already knew Jews were a small minority in modern Palestine until an occupying power; Britain; allowed heavy Zionist immigration beginning in the 1920s. What I didn't know: most of that minority was descended from Jews who'd been expelled from Spain in the years after 1492. Not even they could claim thousands of years' unbroken residence in Palestine.2. One reason Israel was able to defeat the armed forces of five Arab countries in 1948-49 was that the U.N. had imposed an embargo on arms shipments to the combatants; and the Arab states were unable to obtain more arms--while the Israelis kept smuggling them in; mostly from Czechoslovakia; in violation of the embargo.3. In 1950-54; Israel experienced heavy Jewish immigration--but not the kind its founders wanted. The new arrivals were Jews from the Middle East and North Africa; many descended from those Jews expelled from Spain. Most of them had been content where they were; secure in their identity and proud of their culture. The Zionist takeover of Palestine spawned hostility toward Jews throughout the region; and the "Arab Jews" were forced to seek refuge in Israel--where the Zionists treated them like racial inferiors.4. Two prime ministers of Israel; Menachem Begin and Yitzhak Shamir; had headed Zionist terrorist groups in the 1940s.5. To avoid outright defeat in the Ramadan/Yom Kippur War in 1973; Israel obtained massive conventional arms shipments from the U.S.--by threatening to use nuclear weapons against Egypt and Syria if the U.S. didn't come through.6. A not-insignificant Israeli minority believes God has promised them all the land between the Nile and the Euphrates.There are some points on which I wish Hiro had gone into more detail. For example; he mentions that in addition to smuggling in arms during the 1948-49 war; Israel--unlike the Arab states--had its own weapons manufacturing capability. That must have been developed under British rule; and I'd like to know how and why the British let it happen. I'd also like to know more about Israel's influx of Jews from the former Soviet Union after its collapse: why did they leave their home region when it had ceased to be officially atheistic?I have reason to believe a map Hiro reproduces; purporting to show the 1947 partition plan; is inaccurate. It makes what was being offered the Arabs look even worse than it was.Otherwise; the only caveat I have about this book is that readers should be aware it was written in 1999. I hope the author will write another one about the horrors we've seen since then.

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