Part 1
By Ahmad Yahya
The Historical Background of the Occupation of Palestine
To understand the fire consuming Gaza today, and the heavy silence that surrounds it, one must return to the beginning. The current tragedy did not emerge overnight; it is the outcome of a long, complex, and violent historical process.
This historical inquiry begins with essential questions. How did a land with thousands of years of history, home to a deeply rooted people, become the center of one of the world’s longest and most intractable conflicts? When was the foundation of occupation laid, and which political, ideological, and colonial forces enabled its growth? And why, despite decades of diplomacy and shifting global power structures, has this conflict not only persisted but grown more entrenched and destructive?
The answers to these questions are crucial to grasping the scale of the catastrophe unfolding today.
The roots of the occupation of Palestine stretch back to the late nineteenth century, a period defined by the rise of nationalist movements across Europe. It was during this time that political Zionism emerged, calling for the establishment of a “national home for the Jewish people” in Palestine. At the time, Palestine was part of the Ottoman Empire and was overwhelmingly inhabited by Arab Palestinians. This political ambition gained official backing in 1917 with the issuance of the Balfour Declaration by the British government, which later assumed control of Palestine following World War I.
During the period of British rule, colonial policies profoundly altered the land. Jewish immigration was actively encouraged, land ownership patterns were reshaped, and administrative decisions consistently favored Zionist settlement. These measures gradually transformed Palestine’s demographic and territorial realities, generating repeated unrest and violent clashes with the indigenous Palestinian population.
After World War II and the horrors of the Holocaust, international pressure to establish a Jewish state intensified. In 1948, the United Nations proposed a partition plan that called for the creation of two states, one Jewish and one Arab. The Zionist leadership accepted the plan and declared the establishment of the State of Israel. Palestinians and neighboring Arab states rejected it, viewing the plan as unjust and imposed. The result was war, ending in Israel’s military victory and the expansion of occupation far beyond the territories originally allocated to the Palestinian state.
For Palestinians, 1948 marks the Nakba, the Catastrophe. Hundreds of thousands were forcibly displaced, their towns and villages destroyed, and their lands seized. This moment marked the beginning of a prolonged national trauma that continues to shape Palestinian life and political consciousness. The war of 1967, which brought the West Bank and Gaza under Israeli occupation, further deepened this reality, transforming displacement into a permanent condition and occupation into an entrenched system.
This article examines this history through an analytical and critical lens. It draws on historical records, international political debates, and the ideological foundations of the conflict. The aim is not simply to recount events, but to expose the underlying forces of colonialism, nationalism, and great-power politics that have sustained the Palestinian tragedy for decades.
Seen in this context, Gaza today cannot be dismissed as a narrow “security issue.” It is the latest chapter in a seventy-year-long story of dispossession, resistance, military occupation, and collective siege. Understanding this historical background is essential to comprehending the scale of the current humanitarian disaster, evaluating the silence of the international community, and recognizing the profound uncertainty that defines the road ahead.

















































