User:Menem SJ/sandbox

Palestinians, Also, more historically People of Palestine that is referred to people who inhabited the Land of Palestine since the Ancient Greeks, when the term Palestine was invented for the first time. Prior to that date 'Giants' was referred to people who settled at the cross roads of civilizations those were present before the first Pharaoh kings dynasty on the Nile and the desert delta in the south west, and prior to Babylonian in the Mesopotamia, more precisely, at the time the Sumerians were the dynasty that ruled today's Iraq and Syria at times.

In modern history, the term has been refreshed and reused for the second time in early 21st century by the British invaders and the articulation of the mandate of Palestine in San Remo conference in April 1920.

Later on, and between the British naming of the mandate, and, Palestine national independence nominal declaration in Tunis by Yasser Arafat the Palestinian identity was born as we know it today.

In Art and literature such as novels and poetry, new wave of artist, narrators and storytellers emerged in 1960-Today who depicted two narratives that are not historically connected: the first picture dates back to Canaanite culture and the second picture doesn't start until the British mandate of Palestine as of 1917 with a significant media assets being explicitly borrowed from the British libraries and archives.

In a search paper published at the newly created think tank Pal 2050 they argued that the most feel of belonging shared among people of Palestine is their Arabic roots, However, this is widely challenged by southern arabs at official capacity. Underpinned by the fact the second generation refugees lost their family trees or birth records to proof their heritage due to wars and crusraids and shift of powers stamped on the history of this land.

the think group also favored the historical narrative that the most forming elements of the People of Palestine are Semitic manathira akkadins, and Byzantine. added to this mix the Hejaz, turks, seljoekis, ghassainah, morrocans, kurds, with clear absence of isralitite minority until the last half of the 19th century.

thus the term can not imply homogeneousity given the geographical location acted as a focal point for humans through out history.

main wars those involved Palestinians displacement:

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