Let There Be Peace Already

JStone -

So even though you now admit that Jews were not the first inhabitants of Egypt - you consider it their land?

Why?

Again - do you consider Southern Spain to belong to the Moors? to the Jews?
 
JStone -

So even though you now admit that Jews were not the first inhabitants of Egypt - you consider it their land?

Why?

Again - do you consider Southern Spain to belong to the Moors? to the Jews?

No the Northern area of Spain and France is Basque,the rest is is not Jewish because like Palestine NEVER WAS:cool:
 
JSStone -

Um....no, it just makes you very poorly informed. Or, perhaps more likely, you are once again being wilfuly ignorant.

Jews were not the first people in the area - the forefathers of the modern Egyptians (and Nubians) were.

Late Paleolithic

The Late Paleolithic in Egypt started around 30,000 BC.[2] The Nazlet Khater skeleton was found in 1980 and dated in 1982 from nine samples ranging between 35,100 to 30,360 years.[3] This specimen is the only complete modern human skeleton from the earliest Late Stone Age in Africa.[4]
Wadi Halfa

Some of the oldest known buildings were discovered in Egypt by archaeologist Waldemar Chmielewski along the southern border near Wadi Halfa.[2] They were mobile structures — easily disassembled, moved, and reassembled — providing hunter-gatherers with semi-permanent habitation.[2]

Prehistoric Egypt - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sia,remember what I told you,going around in ever decreasing circles........which with this mob will desend you into the pit of HELL.

Look you just can't communicate with idiots like this because all these Zionist have had a labotomy:cuckoo: the:cool:liq
 
"This message is hidden because docmauser1 is on your ignore list."

Ahhh, life is good.
 
YOUR INPUT HERE IS NOT REQUIRED........I am theliq ... I am renown for kicking ASS,so bend over LET ME SHOW YOU WHAT I KNOW.

What you are is a **** idiot weak asshole, with no brains and less future.

The shining example of an arab muslim defending loser internet teen looking at $100K in debt and no job because the zero opted for a very "useful" middle east studies degree from a local 2 year community college funded by a saudi douchebag.

Congratulations idiot, you'll be collecting my tax money through welfare and food stamps for the rest of your life. :clap2:
 
Well methinks it's all Arabic Land and all the IMMIGRANTS should go back to where they came from:cool:

"Arab" land? Is that like white person's land?

And if you want the immigrants to leave, when will the arab muslim filth go back to egypt, syria and jordan?

And when will verminous immigrant filth like you leave australia and go back to england, scumbag?
 
Well methinks it's all Arabic Land and all the IMMIGRANTS should go back to where they came from:cool:

"Arab" land? Is that like white person's land?

And if you want the immigrants to leave, when will the arab muslim filth go back to egypt, syria and jordan?

And when will verminous immigrant filth like you leave australia and go back to england, scumbag?

Since all arabs originate from their native arabia, by definition, all arabs living elsewhere are IMMIGRANTS.
 
JStone - Can you explain why you do not consider Egypt, Iraq, Libya or Jordan to be Arabic?

Genius, he never claimed they were not arabic-majority, he said that the pal arabs are illegal immigrants who came from those countries - and are not native to israel/west bank/gaza and have no claim to them.

You mean like most of the Israelis who aren't native to the area either?:eusa_shifty:
 
Since all arabs originate from their native arabia, by definition, all arabs living elsewhere are IMMIGRANTS.

So the MILLION Russians who have moved to Israel during the past 10 years or so should all go home?

btw: how many white Americans lived in America in 1,000BC?

There are days I would swear you have to an Arabic troll, you know! It's hard to imagine you can jump infront of so many trucks by accident.
 
JStone - Can you explain why you do not consider Egypt, Iraq, Libya or Jordan to be Arabic?

Genius, he never claimed they were not arabic-majority, he said that the pal arabs are illegal immigrants who came from those countries - and are not native to israel/west bank/gaza and have no claim to them.

You mean like most of the Israelis who aren't native to the area either?:eusa_shifty:

Ima Dunce, you mean like most Israelis who are indigenous to Israel and the Near East dating back 3000 years
 
most Israelis who are indigenous to Israel

Jewish 76.4% (of which Israel-born 67.1%, Europe/America-born 22.6%, Africa-born 5.9%, Asia-born 4.2%), non-Jewish 23.6% (mostly Arab)

Going back ONE generation, the figure for Israeli born is less than 50%.

Would you like to compare that figure to neighbouring Arab states?
 
most Israelis who are indigenous to Israel

Jewish 76.4% (of which Israel-born 67.1%, Europe/America-born 22.6%, Africa-born 5.9%, Asia-born 4.2%), non-Jewish 23.6% (mostly Arab)

Going back ONE generation, the figure for Israeli born is less than 50%.

Would you like to compare that figure to neighbouring Arab states?

You know less than zero, as usual.

Most Israeli Jews are indigenous to the Near East. Nearly one million Jews were expelled from Arab countries in the aftermath of the '48 War and were repatriated in Israel.

1 million Jews lived in Egypt in the 4th century BCE where the Septuagint Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible was translated to serve the large Greek-speaking Jewish community.

Read, learn...

Eminent Historian Sir Martin Gilbert, Author of 10 Books on Middle East History and History of Jerusalem

Jerusalem became the capital of the first Jewish kingdom in 1004 BC, over 3000 years ago. With the brief exception of the Crusader period, no other non-Jewish ruling power of Jerusalem made the city a capital but it was consistently a capital for the Jews. Driven into partial exile by Nebuchadnezzar in 586 BC, the Jews returned fifty years later and rebuilt Jerusalem as their capital. It was their capital, too, under the Maccabees. The unity of the city achieved in 1967, then, was more than a quirk of military geography. It was the fulfillment of unbroken historical longings.

In 1210, following the defeat of the Crusaders, groups of Jews began to return to Jerusalem. Henceforth, without interruption, and in every decade, individual Jews and groups of Jews reached the city from the Maghreb [north Africa] and elsewhere forming an ever-growing community. Driven out by the Tartar invasion of 1244, they had returned by 1250. Three times a day the Jews repeated in their prayers, "And to Jerusalem Thy city mayest thou return to mercy, and dwell in its midst as Thou hast spoken, and rebuild it soon in our days for evermore

Areas from which some 300 Rabbis travelled to Jerusalem, Acre and Ramla in 1210 AD, to strengthen the Jewish communities weakened by the Crusader massacres and expulsions. Jews are known to have traveled from throughout the region to Jerusalem [after 1267], settling permanently and forming by 1841 the largest single community in Jerusalem.

1000 AD: Jews take part in the defence of Haifa against the Crusades

1099:AD: Jews take part in the defence of Jerusalem against the Crusaders

1211: Several Rabbis from France and England settle in Jerusalem

1267: Maimonides arrives in Jerusalem and establishes a synagogue . During the next 500 years, Jerusalem is reinstated as a centre of Jewish learning.

In 1500, there were an estimated 10,000 Jews living in the Safed region

1563: Establishment of a Hebrew printing press in Jerusalem, the first printing press on the Asian Continent

By 1880 the Jews formed the majority of the population Jerusalem

During the 17th and 18th centuries, many Jerusalem Jews, scholars and rabbis, travelled from Jerusalem to teach in Jewish communities elsewhere, and also to seek alms and charity for the poorer members of their own community. there was also a regular movement of families, in both directions, between Jerusalem and several towns of the eastern Mediterranean region

Jewish villages in Israel 1855--1914...

Deganya
Jerusalem
Safed
Tiberias
Kinneret
Merhavya
Zikhron Yacov
Ekron
Mikveh Israel
Rishon le-Zion
Ben Shemen
Rehovot
Hulda
Kastinia
Artuf
Hebron
Ruhama
Beer-Toviya
Hartuv
Gedera
Kfar Uriya
Motza
Nes Ziona
Beer Yaakov
Nahalat Yehuda
Mahane Yehuda
Ein Ganim
Petah Tikvah
Kfar Sava
Kfar Mahal
Hadera
Gan Shmuel
Nahliel
Karkur
Givat Ada
Bat Shelomo
Tantura
Shefeiya
Yavneel
Beit Gan
Kfar Tova
Poriya
Sejera
Menahemya
Beitanya
Mizpa
Kfar Hittim
Bnei Yehuda
Mishmar Hayarden
Ayelet Hashashar
Ein Zeitim
Metulla
[ame=http://www.amazon.com/GilbertsThe-Routledge-History-Historical-Hardcover/dp/B0041CNUIC/ref=sr_1_24?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1333126978&sr=1-24]Amazon.com: Martin Gilbert'sThe Routledge Atlas of Jewish History (Routledge Historical Atlases) [Hardcover](2010): M., (Author) Gilbert: Books[/ame]
 
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JStone -

So even though you now admit that Jews were not the first inhabitants of Egypt - you consider it their land?

Why?

Again - do you consider Southern Spain to belong to the Moors? to the Jews?

No the Northern area of Spain and France is Basque,the rest is is not Jewish because like Palestine NEVER WAS:cool:

Really, Princess? Palestine was never Jewish? I just know you're gonna provide a link for that camel crap, right?:lol::lol::lol::lol:
 
The myth.

Most Israeli Jews are indigenous to the Near East. /QUOTE]

The reality:

Jewish 76.4% (of which Israel-born 67.1%, Europe/America-born 22.6%, Africa-born 5.9%, Asia-born 4.2%), non-Jewish 23.6% (mostly Arab)

Going back ONE generation, the figure for Israeli born is less than 50%.

More than one million Israeli citizens have moved from Russia during the past 20 years alone.

As always Stone - PLEASE POST HONESTLY.
 
The myth.

Most Israeli Jews are indigenous to the Near East. /QUOTE]

The reality:

Jewish 76.4% (of which Israel-born 67.1%, Europe/America-born 22.6%, Africa-born 5.9%, Asia-born 4.2%), non-Jewish 23.6% (mostly Arab)

Going back ONE generation, the figure for Israeli born is less than 50%.

More than one million Israeli citizens have moved from Russia during the past 20 years alone.

As always Stone - PLEASE POST HONESTLY.


You know less than zero. Repeating the same mistake doesn't make it correct, it merely shows your own self-defeat.

Most Israeli Jews are indigenous to the Near East. Nearly one million Jews were expelled from Arab countries in the aftermath of the '48 War and were repatriated in Israel.

1 million Jews lived in Egypt in the 4th century BCE where the Septuagint Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible was translated to serve the large Greek-speaking Jewish community.

Read, learn...

Eminent Historian Sir Martin Gilbert, Author of 10 Books on Middle East History and History of Jerusalem

Jerusalem became the capital of the first Jewish kingdom in 1004 BC, over 3000 years ago. With the brief exception of the Crusader period, no other non-Jewish ruling power of Jerusalem made the city a capital but it was consistently a capital for the Jews. Driven into partial exile by Nebuchadnezzar in 586 BC, the Jews returned fifty years later and rebuilt Jerusalem as their capital. It was their capital, too, under the Maccabees. The unity of the city achieved in 1967, then, was more than a quirk of military geography. It was the fulfillment of unbroken historical longings.

In 1210, following the defeat of the Crusaders, groups of Jews began to return to Jerusalem. Henceforth, without interruption, and in every decade, individual Jews and groups of Jews reached the city from the Maghreb [north Africa] and elsewhere forming an ever-growing community. Driven out by the Tartar invasion of 1244, they had returned by 1250. Three times a day the Jews repeated in their prayers, "And to Jerusalem Thy city mayest thou return to mercy, and dwell in its midst as Thou hast spoken, and rebuild it soon in our days for evermore

Areas from which some 300 Rabbis travelled to Jerusalem, Acre and Ramla in 1210 AD, to strengthen the Jewish communities weakened by the Crusader massacres and expulsions. Jews are known to have traveled from throughout the region to Jerusalem [after 1267], settling permanently and forming by 1841 the largest single community in Jerusalem.

1000 AD: Jews take part in the defence of Haifa against the Crusades

1099:AD: Jews take part in the defence of Jerusalem against the Crusaders

1211: Several Rabbis from France and England settle in Jerusalem

1267: Maimonides arrives in Jerusalem and establishes a synagogue . During the next 500 years, Jerusalem is reinstated as a centre of Jewish learning.

In 1500, there were an estimated 10,000 Jews living in the Safed region

1563: Establishment of a Hebrew printing press in Jerusalem, the first printing press on the Asian Continent

By 1880 the Jews formed the majority of the population Jerusalem

During the 17th and 18th centuries, many Jerusalem Jews, scholars and rabbis, travelled from Jerusalem to teach in Jewish communities elsewhere, and also to seek alms and charity for the poorer members of their own community. there was also a regular movement of families, in both directions, between Jerusalem and several towns of the eastern Mediterranean region

Jewish villages in Israel 1855--1914...

Deganya
Jerusalem
Safed
Tiberias
Kinneret
Merhavya
Zikhron Yacov
Ekron
Mikveh Israel
Rishon le-Zion
Ben Shemen
Rehovot
Hulda
Kastinia
Artuf
Hebron
Ruhama
Beer-Toviya
Hartuv
Gedera
Kfar Uriya
Motza
Nes Ziona
Beer Yaakov
Nahalat Yehuda
Mahane Yehuda
Ein Ganim
Petah Tikvah
Kfar Sava
Kfar Mahal
Hadera
Gan Shmuel
Nahliel
Karkur
Givat Ada
Bat Shelomo
Tantura
Shefeiya
Yavneel
Beit Gan
Kfar Tova
Poriya
Sejera
Menahemya
Beitanya
Mizpa
Kfar Hittim
Bnei Yehuda
Mishmar Hayarden
Ayelet Hashashar
Ein Zeitim
Metulla
[ame=http://www.amazon.com/GilbertsThe-Routledge-History-Historical-Hardcover/dp/B0041CNUIC/ref=sr_1_24?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1333126978&sr=1-24]Amazon.com: Martin Gilbert'sThe Routledge Atlas of Jewish History (Routledge Historical Atlases) [Hardcover](2010): M., (Author) Gilbert: Books[/ame]
 

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