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Jewish immigration; Suez; Peace Accords

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Presentation on theme: "Jewish immigration; Suez; Peace Accords"— Presentation transcript:

1 Jewish immigration; Suez; Peace Accords
KEY FEATURES PRACTISE Jewish immigration; Suez; Peace Accords

2 Key features question:
7 marks 3 paragraphs 10 minutes Precise facts

3 Key features questions to prepare:
7 marks 3 paragraphs: cause - effect - link 10 minutes Precise facts Explain the key features of: The British mandate British withdrawal from Palestine Jewish immigration Peel Commission (1937) White Paper/ McDonald Report (1939) Irgun or Haganah or Stern Gang PLO or Fatah or Hamas or Fedayeen UN Partition Plan Suez Crisis Six Day War Yom Kippur War US support for Israel or Soviet support for Arab nations Camp David Accords/ Oslo Peace Accords Intifada

4 Explain the key features of Jewish immigration to Palestine or the Arab Revolt (1936-1939)
A cause explained with precise facts An effect explained with precise facts Explanation of how both features link

5 Explain the key features of Jewish immigration to Palestine
One key feature of Jewish immigration to Palestine was its cause. Jews were promised a homeland in Palestine by the British in the Balfour Letter of This promise was made in response to Zionist claims that Jews should be allowed to settle in Palestine. The British made this promise because, at the time, they were anxious for USA to join the allies against Germany in the First World War and hoped that powerful Jews in USA would use their political influence to persuade the American government to join the war. A second key feature of Jewish immigration to Palestine was its effect. From 1919, with Palestine as a British mandate, Jewish immigration increased substantially to 75,000. This caused conflict between Jewish immigrants and the native Arab population, for example there were riots in Jaffa in 1921 resulting in the deaths of 30 Jews and 116 Arabs. The hostilities between the two groups intensified after 1933 when the Nazis came to power and began persecution of Jews in Germany and occupied territories. By 1939 there were 450,000 Jews in Palestine. The British struggled to maintain order between the two communities who were competing over resources and land ownership so eventually introduced the 1939 White Paper to limit Jewish immigration to just 10,000 per year. The link is that British promises encouraged Zionist ambition which, accelerated by the anti-Semitism of the Nazis, resulted in a destabilizing amount of Jews arriving in Palestine in a short space of time which created open hostility between Jews and Palestinians.

6 Explain the key features of the Suez Crisis 1956.
One key feature was its cause. A long term cause was Egypt’s humiliating defeat against Israel in the First Arab Israeli War of This meant the new leader of Egypt, Nasser, was keen to rally Arab nations against Israel and therefore relations between the two states were very hostile. This was made worse when…(short term cause – keep with Israel) Finally, (trigger cause – keep with Israel)

7 Explain the key features of the Suez Crisis 1956.
One key feature of the Suez Crisis was its effect. The international community were outraged by the surprise invasion of ….by….through the Sinai. The UN called for Israel to…. The Soviets….. As result, Israel was forced to….and a UN peace-keeping force was…..Arab hostility to Israel was now stronger than ever and Nasser was determined to …… In 1964 Nasser supported the setting up of the PLO which would… War erupted again between Egypt and Israel in 19__ The link is that…


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