- 20 Dec 2015 01:35
#14634180
The Zionists were able to chose their own leaders and institutions. And a more or less united leadership was a great asset in the conflict. The British did not allow representative institutions for the Arabs (the proposed Arab agency would have members appointed) interfered with what elections there were and the chose of leadership. This is clearly favourable treatment for the Zionists.
The Zionists were gaining in strength through immigration. Restrictions just controlled have slowly the Palestinians were losing. It was not a stable status quo. The Palestinians were faced with a British Mandate Authority that was allowing the Zionists to grow in strength, Zionists who wanted to take over the entire mandate. They was no hope of fair dealing by the British. What other choice did the Palestinians have other than Revolt? '
for some detail how the British Mandate authority favoured Zionist Businesses over Palestinians.
http://content.lib.utah.edu/utils/getfi ... e/2511.pdf
The Zionists were gaining in strength through immigration. Restrictions just controlled have slowly the Palestinians were losing. It was not a stable status quo. The Palestinians were faced with a British Mandate Authority that was allowing the Zionists to grow in strength, Zionists who wanted to take over the entire mandate. They was no hope of fair dealing by the British. What other choice did the Palestinians have other than Revolt? '
for some detail how the British Mandate authority favoured Zionist Businesses over Palestinians.
http://content.lib.utah.edu/utils/getfi ... e/2511.pdf