The Use of the Term in the Israeli-Arab Conflict From a Zionist Point of View- The Term "Exile" As an Example
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.31185/lark.3379Keywords:
Zionist literature, Jewish character, ExileAbstract
The Zionist literature attempted to portray the Jewish image in Western literary and societal circles through distortions and other accusations of anti-Semitism, and thereby convince the world that the Jewish character is not the one depicted in works such as Shakespeare's "The Merchant of Venice," Geoffrey Chaucer's "The Nun" (1430-1400 AD), or Charles Dickens' novel "Oliver Twist" (1812-1870 AD), where the English writer somewhat succeeded in altering concepts. Zionist literature carries the ideological and Talmudic thought, filled with all justifications that grant the Jewish people the right to Palestine and beyond, but it claimed that the Promised Land shared with the Palestinians should gradually be abandoned or they should be killed, and those remaining should be forcibly displaced, while the Zionists play the role of the suffering and the victim of nations, as David Ben-Gurion's words affirm: "The most important pillar of the Jews is the land, the connection is guaranteed, and the true Jew is the one who returns to it." This is evidenced by the literary stories in the Holy Scriptures that educate the Jewish child to detest humans. A Zionist literary discourse carries all the ideas of Jewish life imposed by Zionist authorities at the heart of the emotional artistic event to wash people's minds and convince them of the righteousness of Zionist positions. This means that cognitive and psychological frameworks were not far from other Zionist technical frameworks; each leads his work in the situation in which he places it.
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