At the time of the creation of the Israeli state in 1948, it is estimated that the Christians of Palestine numbered some 350,000. Almost 20 percent of the total population at the time, they constituted a vibrant and ancient community; their forbears had listened to St. Peter in Jerusalem as he preached at the first Pentecost. Yet Zionist doctrine held that Palestine was a land without a people for a people without a land. Of the 750,000 Palestinians that were forced from their homes in 1948, some 50,000 were Christians7 percent of the total number of refugees and 35 percent of the total number of Christians living in Palestine at the time.
In the process of Judaizing Palestine, numerous convents, hospices, seminaries, and churches were either destroyed or cleared of their Christian owners and custodians. In one of the most spectacular attacks on a Christian target, on May 17, 1948, the Armenian Orthodox Patriarchate was shelled with about 100 mortar roundslaunched by Zionist forces from the already occupied monastery of the Benedictine Fathers on Mount Zion. The bombardment also damaged St. Jacobs Convent, the Archangels Convent, and their appended churches, their two elementary and seminary schools, as well as their libraries, killing eight people and wounding 120.
I wonder if you checked the source of your material, because if you did you would have confined it to the trash.
The author is a well known NAZI ANTI SEMITIC JEW HATING POS COMMUNIST.
He is not a Nazi, is not anti-Semitic and is not a communist, in fact in 2011 Anders Strindberg the author received a Homeland Security Award in the U.S.:
"Strindberg was honored during graduation ceremonies on March 25 with the Lieutenant Commander David L. Williams Outstanding Professor Award.
The award is presented to the faculty member of the School of International Graduate Studies who has demonstrated the greatest dedication to the learning and intellectual growth of students, in residence and abroad, and through that dedication has had the greatest impact on the individual students and the course as a whole. The award is named in memory of Lieutenant Commander David L. Williams (USN), a Naval Postgraduate School alumnus killed in the terrorist attack on the Pentagon on September 11.
"The award, named for Commander Williams, is a reminder of what our work is about and why we are engaged in homeland security," Strindberg said. "Its an honor to be acknowledged as having contributed to homeland security in a very direct way."
Strindberg has taught at CHDS since 2007. Previously, he had worked as a professor, consultant and journalist, including six years as Special Correspondent for "Janes Intelligence Review."