Bullshit. As is nearly always the case with your posts, not a single word is true. Muslim hatred of Jews and violence against Jews began with the Muslim conquest of the ME and by the tenth century was ensconced in Muslim law.
"From the early years of Islamic civilization, Muslim jurists, basing on Qur’anic directives, devised an elaborate hierarchy in which monotheistic non-Muslims, such as Christians and Jews, would be “protected” at a low level and tolerated as second-class citizens. Guidelines for their treatment were embodied in the “Pact of ‘Umar.” Limitations on the status of non-Muslims included discriminatory clothing regulations and occupational restrictions. Non-Muslims were required to pay a poll tax (
jizya) as well as discriminatory taxes on agricultural produce."
At times tolerant, at other times intensely intolerant, Spain’s intergroup relations formed a fragile coexistence of Muslims, Christians, and Jews. Although often tenuous, the coexistence of diverse languages, peoples, and religions produced an extraordinary symbiosis and distinctive...
www.neh.gov
So hatred of Jews and persecution of Jews became core Muslim values of Muslim civilization, law and religion almost from the start of the Arab conquest of the ME and every Muslim child since then has been raised to hate Jews and even question if they were human - descended from pigs and apes- so Muslim hatred of Jews was in Palestine at least a thousand years before the first Zionist arrived. Claiming that it was the result of the Balfour declaration or the arrival of Jews after 1920 is a scurrilous lie.
You say relations between Jews and Muslims were much better when Jews were second class citizens subject to persecutions and humiliation throughout the Muslim world, and that is clearly what the majority of Palestinians want to see again.
A reasonable person looking at the facts would have to concluded that none of this is about securing Palestinian rights but only to try to prevent Jews and some other groups from having the same rights as Muslims.