Vocabulary week 17.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
© ProQuest 2006 LT6: I can explain the causes, progression, and current state of the Arab/Israeli Conflict. Arab = Palestinian / Palestine Jew = Israeli.
Advertisements

Conflicts in the Middle East
Developments in the Israeli-Arab Conflict 1960s-1980s.
The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: A Lesson in Perspective
THIS PRESENTATION WAS MODIFIED AND ADAPTED FROM: THE ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN CONFLICT: A LESSON IN PERSPECTIVE CREATED BY: MARYLYNNE FILLMON FULBRIGHT-HAYS.
The Arab Israeli Conflict. Camp David Accords 1978 BACKGROUND Israel had control of the Sinai Peninsula (6 Day War) President Sadat (Egypt) & President.
Timeline of the Arab and Israel Conflict. Late 1800’s to WW 1 Zionism: Zionism: Theodore Herzl, a leading Jewish sympathizer, states that a Jewish homeland.
1 Historical Background to the Palestine-Israel Conflict Prepared for the Forum on the Palestine-Israel Conflict 09 May 2002 at the UP PCED Hostel By Rey.
Turmoil in the Middle East Conflict between Arab countries and Israel.
Concept: Conflict Creates Change
 The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is an ongoing dispute between Israel & Arab Palestinians  What is at the heart of the conflict?  Land, i.e. – Jerusalem!!!
The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: A Lesson in Perspective
1937 In wake of tension and periodic conflicts, idea of partition of Palestine is floated, but is rejected by both Arabs and Jews 1939 Outbreak of World.
Concept: Conflict Creates Change
ARAB-ISRAELI CONFLICT
Developments in the Arab/Palestinian-Israeli Conflict 1960s-1980s.
Do now: copy Israel (1948) vocabulary into your notebooks.
The Region in Question A Brief Background Diaspora – Jews scattered from the region by the Romans (Romans name the area “Syria Palaestina”) Byzantine.
Israel and Palestine The Jewish diaspora was the historical exile and dispersion of Jews from the region of the Kingdom The Palestinian population of around.
Arab-Israeli Conflict Arab Nationalism vs. Jewish Nationalism Arab Nationalism vs. Jewish Nationalism.
The Geopolitics of the Middle East The Arab Israeli Conflict.
Unit 4: Modern middle East
Jewish History Before Jesus, Jews lived in own kingdom in what in now known as Israel.
Attempts at Peace. Arafat accepts 242 & 338 (1988) Condemns violence Recognizes Israel Accepts UN Security Council Resolutions 242 (Israel withdraw from.
Arab-Israeli Conflict. Palestine/Israel Land Claims Jews claim the land (3,000 years ago, Jewish kings ruled Jerusalem) Jews claim the land (3,000 years.
The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
After The Holocaust. When the Allies arrived at the camps, this is what they saw…
NEXT Section 4 Conflicts in the Middle East Division of Palestine after World War II makes the Middle East a hotbed of competing nationalist movements.
Arab-Israeli Conflict Arab Nationalism vs. Jewish Nationalism.
The Israeli- Palestinian Conflict. The Ottoman Empire Lost in WWI From the Palestinian perspective: The Ottomans were Turks but at least they were Muslims.
The Arab-Israeli Conflict The heart of this conflict is a dispute over land/changing borders and religion.
People around the world increase the fight for Jewish homeland in the region where the ancient Hebrews lived …..this is called Zionism.
Arab-Israeli Conflict. Palestine/Israel Land Claims Jews claim the land (3,000 years ago, Jewish kings ruled Jerusalem) Jews claim the land (3,000 years.
UN Plan for Palestine (1947) Partition (separate) the area into 2 countries Israel (Jewish State) 55% of land and Palestine (Arab State) 45% of.
HWH UNIT 13 CHAPTERS 19.4 AND  Some terms to clarify  Arab: one who speaks the Arabic language  Muslim: a practitioner of Islam  Most Arabs.
September 5-17,  Anwar Sadat- President of Egypt  Menachem Begin- Prime Minister of Israel  Jimmy Carter- President of the United States.
Arab/ Israeli Conflict SS7H2 The student will analyze continuity and change in Southwest Asia (Middle East) leading to the 21st century. a. Explain how.
Israeli-Palestinian Conflict. Jews Yearn for a Homeland With the end of WWII, the Arab-Israeli conflict became the major political and military problem.
CONFLICTS IN THE MIDDLE EAST Setting the Stage After WWII the UN decided that the Jewish people in Europe should get their own nation. Came at a.
Conflicts in the Middle East Ch 18.4 CST Britain issues the Balfour Declaration CAUSES: – Increased immigration of Jews to Palestine –Zionists’
* The mandate system established after World War I was phased out after World War II by the Unites Nations. Recall that the French mandates were Syria.
Chapter 18 – Colonies Become New Nations Section 4 – Conflicts in the Middle East Main Idea : Division of Palestine after WWII made the Middle East a hotbed.
Historical Background Pre- WWI: Area of Palestine under Ottoman Empire After WWI: Area of Palestine under control of Britain until it became independent.
April 8, Who were the Sandinistas? 2.Who were the Contras? 3.Who were the Mujahideen? 4.Why did the soviets invade Afghanistan? 5.What was the US.
ARAB ISRAELI CONFLICT PART II
Presentation 5.
The israeli-palestinian conflict
The Conflict:
Ottoman Empire WWI England Palestinians Zionists United States
ARAB-ISRAELI CONFLICT
Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Israeli and Arab Conflict
Efforts at Peace.
Middle East, 1945-present.
Warm-Up and agenda for 3/5/15
Conflict in the Middle East
The Arab-Israeli Wars.
Do Now: Clear your desk and take out Part I of your SOL Review Guide. You may use it on the Review Quiz. After you turn in the quiz, grab today’s Agenda.
Arab/ Israeli Conflict
New Nations of the Middle East
Aim: Explain Arab-Israeli Peace Efforts
Jimmy carter and the camp david accords
Arab-Israeli Conflict
Conflicts in the Middle East
Middle East – focus on Israel
Israeli - Arab Conflict
Concept: Conflict Creates Change
Israel/Palestine Timeline
Tuesday, May 21st HW: Aim: What efforts have been made to achieve peace between the Arabs and Israelis? Do Now: Why is the historic region of Palestine.
Arab - Israeli Conflict Timeline The Violence Continues...
Presentation transcript:

Vocabulary week 17

Bell Ringer 1/9/17 How was your break? Write for 3 minutes without stopping. Be prepared to share out. (You can do this on the back of your BR sheet!)

Define vocabulary words for week 17 Objective/Agenda Define vocabulary words for week 17 Agenda: You must know these words for Friday! VOCAB Final: 1/26 (thursday)

Grades are all crazy in gradebook. Reminders Grades are all crazy in gradebook. I will be gone next week

Intifada- arabic for “tremor” “shudder” 1st: the Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, beginning in 1987. 2nd: was the second Palestinian uprising against Israel – a period of intensified Israeli-Palestinian violence. It started in September 2000

Camp David Accords Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and US President Jimmy Carter signed the Camp David Accords on September 17, 1978 in Washington, DC. The Details of the Camp David Accords: Called for a formal peace treaty to be signed between Israel and Egypt, within three months.

Yasser Arafat Born in Cairo in 1929, Yasser Arafat was named chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization 40 years later. He, along with Israeli leaders, tried to broker a peace deal between Palestine and Israel. Arafat ceded his PLO chairman post in 2003, and died in Paris in 2004.

Yitzhak Rabin Born on March 1, 1922, in Jerusalem, Yitzhak Rabin served as Israel's military chief of staff before becoming the country's first native-born prime minister in 1974. He reclaimed the post in the 1992 elections, and then became known for his historical peace negotiations with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, winning the Nobel Peace Prize in 1994. Rabin was killed by an extremist on November 4, 1995, in Tel Aviv.

Oslo Accords The Oslo Accords are a set of agreements between the government of Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO): the Oslo I Accord, signed in Washington, D.C., in 1993 and the Oslo II Accord, signed in Taba in 1995

Ariel Sharon Born on February 27, 1928, in Kfar Malal, Palestine (now Israel), Sharon served in Parliament and became minister of defense in 1981, later taking on other posts. He was elected prime minister in 2001 and served until 2006, upon suffering a stroke. After eight years in a coma, Sharon died on January 11, 2014 at the age of 85.

Mencachem Begin: Menachem Begin was born on August 16, 1913, in Brest- Litovsk, Poland (now Russia). He was prime minister of Israel from 1977 to 1983 and the co-recipient, with Egyptian President Anwar el-Sadat, of the 1978 Nobel Prize for Peace. Begin mounted an invasion of Lebanon in 1982 to oust the Palestine Liberation Organization. Civilian deaths during this conflict turned world opinion against Israel. Begin resigned office in 1983. He died in 1992.

Gaza Strip A territory occupying 140 square miles along the Mediterranean Sea just northeast of the Sinai Peninsula. The Gaza Strip is unusual in being a densely settled area but not recognized as part of any country. The first accurate census, conducted in September 1967, showed a population smaller than had previously been estimated as with nearly half of the people living in refugee camps. Pop. (2006 est.) 1,444,000.

6-Day War Also called June War or Third Arab-Israeli War, brief war that took place June 5–10, 1967. Israel’s decisive victory included the capture of the Sinai Peninsula, Gaza Strip, West Bank, Old City of Jerusalem, and the Golan Heights; the status of these territories subsequently became a major point of contention in the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Anwar Sadat Born on December 25, 1918, in Mit Ab al-Kawm, Egypt.. He served as vice president before becoming president in 1970. Though his country faced internal economic instability, Sadat would later earn the 1978 Nobel Peace Prize for entering into peace agreements with Israel. He was assassinated soon after, on October 6, 1981, in Cairo, Egypt, by Muslim extremists.