desertdudeshj wrote:Good post my @ss !
The zionist movement could have started in seventeen eleventy nine tivity, no one cares, only after WWII did Israel come into existance by Europeans jews. Jews which Europe and the US did not want or had no where left to go because everything they had was either stolen or destroyed.
Then these displaced Jews started a terror campaign, with such acts of terrorism like the King David bombing and later these very people who were responsible for such terrorist acts and gangs later went on to become the leaders of Israel.
The creation of Israel did come about through European guilt and Jewish Terror and not bollocks like Jewish birth right and the Torah being a land deed to Israel.
And atleast be decent enough to paste the link from where you choose to plagiarise material and pass it off as your own, parroting propaganda from sites trying to look smart and informed. Anyone who has read more than two of your posts knows you're not capable of writing anything cohesive or without drunk smileys. At the very least rewrite it in your own words !
http://zionism-israel.com/issues/Zionis ... right.html
Calm down dear! At this rate you'll do yourself a mischief
You wouldn't last long in the Diplomatic Corps munchkin.
This is the trouble trying to negotiate with Muslims, You're just so flighty! Jumping off the deep end because I forgot to post the link. Silly me
I posted it in the first post munchkin. Please accept my very sincere apologies for not repeating the link. I will ensure I'm punished severley later tonight.
But I do stand my post that the Jews have returned to their Promised Land.
At the risk of giving you a coronary munchkin, please read, and understand
, the following! Link provided at the end
The Promised Land
The history of the Jewish people begins with Abraham, and the story of Abraham begins when G-d tells him to leave his homeland, promising Abraham and his descendants a new home in the land of Canaan. (Gen. 12). This is the land now known as Israel, named after Abraham's grandson, whose descendants are the Jewish people. The land is often referred to as the Promised Land because of G-d's repeated promise (Gen. 12:7, 13:15, 15:18, 17:8) to give the land to the descendants of Abraham.
The land is described repeatedly in the Torah as a good land and "a land flowing with milk and honey" (e.g., Ex. 3:8). This description may not seem to fit well with the desert images we see on the nightly news, but let's keep in mind that the land was repeatedly abused by conquerors who were determined to make the land uninhabitable for the Jews. In the few decades since the Jewish people regained control of the land, we have seen a tremendous improvement in its agriculture. Israeli agriculture today has a very high yield.
Jews have lived in this land continuously from the time of its original conquest by Joshua more than 3200 years ago until the present day, though Jews were not always in political control of the land, and Jews were not always the majority of the land's population.
The land of Israel is central to Judaism. A substantial portion of Jewish law is tied to the land of Israel, and can only be performed there. Some rabbis have declared that it is a mitzvah (commandment) to take possession of Israel and to live in it (relying on Num. 33:53). The Talmud indicates that the land itself is so holy that merely walking in it can gain you a place in the World to Come. Prayers for a return to Israel and Jerusalem are included in daily prayers as well as many holiday observances and special events.
Living outside of Israel is viewed as an unnatural state for a Jew. The world outside of Israel is often referred to as "galut," which is usually translated as "diaspora" (dispersion), but a more literal translation would be "exile" or "captivity." When we live outside of Israel, we are living in exile from our land.
Jews were exiled from the land of Israel by the Romans in 135 C.E., after they defeated the Jews in a three-year war, and Jews did not have any control over the land again until 1948 C.E.
http://www.jewfaq.org/israel.htm