No, you sound not just stupid, but demented.
Your might is right, barbarian ideals, would suggest Nazis stealing Jewish land in the Holocaust, and their belongings, and homes etc. was just conquest.
See how f*cked up you are?
It was conquest and the Jews never got their stuff back. Fortunately my ancestors made the Nazis pay. And freed your people. Again. You're welcome. Remember when Iraq invaded Kuwait. Conquest. But the coalition pushed them back.
You need to learn the operational definition of "theft".
Explain how stealing a nation, stealing their homes, stealing their valuables, holding it's people ransom, killing their people is somehow not theft, nor a crime, but some Hasidim Jew stealing bubble gum is a crime, and a thief.
You're a primitive, and stupid Jewish kook.
Might makes right in war. Victors tell history. I may be but I am the winner and you are the loser.
You are the loser, you can't even tell that Israel stole Palestine, and make up some war mongering, prehistoric might is right excuse, which I'm sure you only care about when Jews win.
You are the looser; Of course being a Pollack that was your destiny. You are so stupid you honestly can’t comprehend that tha areas you mention were parts of Egypt, Jordan, and Syria
The
Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem (
Ottoman Turkish: Kudüs-i Şerif Mutasarrıflığı;
Arabic: , also known as the
Sanjak of Jerusalem, was an
Ottoman district with special administrative status established in 1872.
[3][4][5] The district encompassed
Jerusalem as well as
Bethlehem,
Hebron,
Jaffa,
Gaza and
Beersheba.
[6] During the late Ottoman period, the Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem, together with the
Sanjak of Nablus and
Sanjak of Akka (Acre), formed the region that was commonly referred to as "Southern Syria"
[7] or "Palestine".
[3][nb 1]
The district was separated from
Damascus and placed directly under Constantinople in 1841,
[4] and formally created as an independent province in 1872 by
Grand Vizier Mahmud Nedim Pasha.
[4] Scholars provide a variety of reasons for the separation, including increased European interest in the region, and strengthening of the southern border of the Empire against the
Khedivate of Egypt.
[4] Initially, the
Mutasarrifate of Acre and
Mutasarrifate of Nablus were combined with the province of Jerusalem, with the combined province being referred to in the register of the court of Jerusalem as the "Jerusalem
Eyalet",
[8]and referred to by the British consul as creation of "
Palestine into a separate eyalet".
[9] However, after less than two months,
[9] the sanjaks of Nablus and Acre were separated and added to the
Vilayet of Beirut, leaving just the Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem.
[10] In 1906, the
Kaza of Nazareth was added to the Jerusalem Mutasarrifate, as an
exclave,
[11] primarily in order to allow the issuance of a single tourist permit to Christian travellers.
[12] The area was conquered by the
Allied Forces in 1917 during
World War I[6] and a military
Occupied Enemy Territory Administration (OETA South) set up to replace the Ottoman administration. OETA South consisted of the Ottoman sanjaks of Jerusalem, Nablus and Acre. The military administration was replaced by a British civilian administration in 1920 and the area of OETA South was incorporated into the
British Mandate of Palestine in 1923.
The political status of the Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem was unique to other Ottoman province since it came under the direct authority of the Ottoman capital
Constantinople.
[5] The inhabitants identified themselves primarily on religious terms, 84% being Muslim Arabs.
[7] The district's villages were normally inhabited by farmers while its towns were populated by merchants, artisans, landowners and money-lenders. The elite consisted of the religious leadership, wealthy landlords and high-ranking civil servants.
[
Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem - Wikipedia