Read what they said. The Israelis destroyed 67 Druze villages in the Golan.
When you engage in combat and try to kill people, you risk having your village destroyed.
You're a typical Muslim SUpremacist: "JOOOZZZ are supposed to just lay down and die, NO FAIR that they fight back."
From the early 1950s the Israelis wanted more land and water. In Dayan's words they "coveted" more.. and instigated repeated provocations to try and start a war with Lebanon and Syria.
They wanted Muslims to stop killing their children.
You think that's unreasonable. You think Jews should be willing to die and have their children die in order for Islam to be supreme.
There is no question the Jews suffered horrible treatment in Europe .. but not in the Arab world where they were largely successful and prosperous.
Nationalism and racism are not a feature of Arab conscience. Many Jews moved to the Arab town of Hebron after the expulsion from Spain and Portugal without incident.
Why doesn't the arab world just say, ok, **** it, take Israel and we make peace.
They did.. It took some time.. Consider if refugees were given your home, farm and orchard. But although the Zionists were given a piece of land by the UN they always wanted more.. Chaim Weizmann tried to forcibly deport the rest of the Palestinians in 1950. He proposed (to ARAMCO and the SAG) that Palestinians should move to Arabia to build TAPLINE and take jobs from the Saudis.
We're not talking about me, we're talking about sand monkeys, not the brightest bulbs in the pack. They could have a big chunk of Jordan, the Saudis could set them up with all kinds of cash, the Iranians could stop trying to get nuked...
Sand monkeys?
The Arabs already had Jordan for 5,000 years.
Arab Jews were a minority, but they were very much part of the culture and they spoke Arabic not Yiddish. Look at Bon Fils photos from the 1880s an 1890s.
Bonfils studio photograph albums of Palestine, circa 1881 ...
Collection consists of two large cloth-bound photograph albums dating from circa 1881, housing 56 large albumen photographs taken by noted 19th century French photographer Félix Bonfils, who owned the Bonfils studio, and his Syrian assistant Georges Saboungi. The images were sold as souvenirs...
library.duke.edu
Bonfils, Félix, 1831-1885. Abstract: Collection consists of two large cloth-bound photograph albums dating from circa 1881, housing 56 large albumen photographs taken by noted 19th century French photographer Félix Bonfils, who owned the Bonfils studio, and his Syrian assistant Georges Saboungi. The images were sold as souvenirs, and portray cities and towns, landscapes, ruins, monuments, tombs, and other religious and historic sites of Palestine, …