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|author = Hava Mendelle | |||
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|title = Is Misplaced Pages struggling to maintain neutrality in times of political unrest? | |||
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|date = December 23, 2023 | |||
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|url = https://www.spectator.com.au/2023/12/is-wikipedia-struggling-to-maintain-neutrality-in-times-of-political-unrest/ | |||
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|lang = en-US | |||
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|quote = There is a group of pro-Israel editors arguing with a group of pro-Palestinian editors about the misuse of a source on the genetic link between the ancient Canaanites and modern Jews and Arabs. | |||
|archiveurl = | |||
|archivedate = <!-- do not wikilink --> | |||
|accessdate = December 23, 2023 | |||
|author2 = Yaakov Menken | |||
|title2 = Misplaced Pages hates Israel and Jews | |||
|date2 = August 6, 2024 | |||
|org2 = ] | |||
|url2 = https://www.jns.org/wikipedia-hates-israel-and-jews/ | |||
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|quote2 = According to Misplaced Pages, an “apartheid” state is a Middle Eastern country in which both Jews and Arabs have civil rights, “Palestine” is a country that actually exists and Arabs are natives of the region. | |||
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|archivedate2 = <!-- do not wikilink --> | |||
|accessdate2 = August 6, 2024 | |||
|author3 = Shlomit Aharoni Lir | |||
|title3 = The crime of the century? Bias in the English Misplaced Pages article on Zionism | |||
|date3 = November 5, 2024 | |||
|org3 = ] | |||
|url3 = https://www.ynetnews.com/article/syf5kylb1g | |||
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|quote3 = This is how the article might look if it were subjected to a similar bias as seen in the ] article. | |||
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|accessdate3 = November 5, 2024 | |||
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== Property Losses Estimate == | |||
__TOC__ | |||
== unexplained edits and reverts == | |||
Evildoer, there are a number of problems with your edits and an important issue with your editing. To begin with the editing issue, when you make an edit that is challenged it is incumbent upon you to go to the talk page to seek a consensus for your changes. Re-reverting to make the contested edit is not how things are supposed to be done here. As to the actual problems with the edits: | |||
*Why were '']ines, ], ]'' removed from related to? | |||
*Why did you change ''European Jews to non-Jewish Europeans'' to ''Ashkenazi Jews to indigenous European groups''? | |||
*Why did you change ''Jewish immigrants'' to ''Jewish returnees'' in the wikilink ]? You'll notice the linked article begins with '''''Aliyah''' is the immigration of Jews ...''. Are you under the impression that the Jewish immigrants to Palestine had been there before? | |||
Please self-revert your changes and seek consensus for them here. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - 22:52, 20 December 2012 (UTC)</small> | |||
The last sentence of the header reads: | |||
*I put Mediterraneans and Sea Peoples back just now. I replaced Levantines with Middle Eastern peoples, as it's more general. | |||
"According to Perry Anderson, it is estimated that half of the population in the Palestinian territories are refugees and that they have collectively suffered approximately US$300 billion in property losses due to Israeli confiscations, at 2008–09 prices." | |||
*Because when someone says "European Jew", they usually mean "Ashkenazi Jew". However, it appears that I forgot to take Sephardic Jews into account when I made that edit. A minor error in judgment. | |||
*Regarding "European Jews to non-Jewish Europeans", I thought the phrasing was confusing, so I tried to make it clearer. I also don't see how "indigenous Europeans" is inaccurate, unless you believe Jews are an aboriginal people of Europe. | |||
*I don't know why it says "immigration of the Jews" on the Aliyah page. However, in most if not all other contexts, it means "return of the Jews from the diaspora". In that sense, the word "immigrant" directly implies that Jews have no ties to the region. Not only is that inaccurate, but POV pushing in its own right.] (]) 23:03, 20 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
::Before editing again and again and again - can we get you to read over ] one of our basic conduct essays. We talk - come to a consensus - then edit after the conversation is concluded.] (]) 23:18, 20 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
However, the *total* national wealth of neighbouring Jordan (population >10M, greater than 2x the current population of the Gaza Strip + the West Bank) is $146 billion, according to https://en.wikipedia.org/List_of_countries_by_total_wealth. Even if property in Israel is substantially more valuable per square foot (possible), Israel's total national wealth is only $1,046 billion or $1.05 trillion (same source), and Israel is an unusually stable/rich/technologically innovative country by Middle Eastern standards so the land in an independent Palestine has no guarantee to be as valuable as land in the state of Israel. | |||
One of the recurring problems I seem to have is that conversations between me and other editors never seem to go anywhere, especially when the other guy has a fairly strong POV. In most cases, they just quit midway through the conversation so as to keep the article the way it is, knowing that I will be accused of edit warring if I try to restore my edits. Do I have a strong POV myself? Yes. I am of Jewish descent myself and it's hard to remain calm when I see half-truths, if not outright lies, about my people being promulgated throughout the articles (such as that we are "colonists" and "ethnically European"). Manufactured realities are a familiar part of our history, and that's one of the reasons I am here, to make sure everything pertaining to the Jewish people remains strictly accurate and above all, neutral.] (]) 23:47, 20 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
I submit that this sentence should be removed as not credible, or at least have some sort of qualification added to it providing context (such as the total wealth of neighbouring Jordan). | |||
: You need to monitor your own neutrality as well as other peoples'. There is nothing neutral about "Jewish returnees" in reference to persons who have never been there before. It is a political statement and not a neutral expression. People who move from one country to another are called emigrants and immigrants. Those are the neutral words for them. Even the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics uses those words in its English pages. ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 00:30, 21 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
:Perhaps because those other guys dont believe it to be neutral to call European Jewish immigrants to Palestine ''returnees'' and that conversion among ''indigenous Europeans'' plays no role in the population of Ashkenazi Jews. That isnt a manufactured reality, and you would do well to understand that your view on a topic does not equate to what Misplaced Pages calls ''neutral''. Academic sources routinely discuss Jewish ''immigration'', including ''illegal immigration'', to Palestine. It is no more neutral to call these immigrants ''returnees'' than it is to call them ''invaders''. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - 00:39, 21 December 2012 (UTC)</small> | |||
== Indigineity == | |||
For the record, would a Native American family be considered immigrants if they moved to America after about 100 years or so? If your answer is yes, then I will concede.] (]) 00:45, 21 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
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:The two cases are not analogous, so I dont see the point of responding. I dont need you to concede, but Im hoping that youll recognize that Misplaced Pages is not Zionist, and that it shouldn't adopt a Zionist narrative. The idea that this is a ''return'' is a POV, one whose opposing POV is that this is an ''invasion''. You very obviously identify with one of those POVs and reject the other, but that does not mean that yours is "neutral". <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - 01:50, 21 December 2012 (UTC)</small> | |||
is based on sources and both reverters have provided none for their view, instead accusing editors relying on sources of POV pushing. ] (]) 08:30, 2 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Evildoer, I do not understand your consistent reverts and edits on this area, if you personally believe certain groups are not related to eachother, that's perfectly alright, you're entitled to your own views, but you cannot make edits like this based solely on your beliefs. Also there is no reason to remove Levantines from the list and replace it with the countries that make up the Levant, that just adds more words, when people can simply click on the Levant and see the countries that make it up. Regarding the Jewish section, why did you change it to Israeli's? That is not very informative considering Israel has Palestinians in it's population, and other ethnic groups that are not related to Palestinians as well. Keeping it set as Jews, while linking to Ashkenazim, Sephardim, and Mizrahi, shows the various specific Jewish groups related ethnically and genetically to the Palestinians. Lazyfoxx 06:59, 21 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
I |
:I would have also expected they contribute to this discussion by demonstrating which RS disagree. ] (]) 14:52, 2 June 2024 (UTC) | ||
::{{ping|Owenglyndur}} Consensus is built on WP guidelines and involves participating in the talk page discussion, not just refusal to accept some material. ] (]) 09:50, 3 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::I suppose it's best to just include modern peoples labels in this area, that is fine with me, although the Sea People's make up an important part of Palestinians history. Regarding Jews however, it is not accurate to encompass Askenazi and Sephardic's in the Levantine label, these groups are modern immigrants from Central Europe and Other regions of Europe, while some Mizrahi Jews are indeed Levantine, others are from other countries in the near east and do not belong in the label. Lazyfoxx 12:00, 23 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
*{{re|Selfstudier}} can you provide several references, including the exact text of the reference, that say Palestinians are indigenous. (I know they are already in the article, provide them below as well so we can compare them with any sources that say otherwise). ''']''' <sub>(Please ] on reply)</sub> 15:05, 3 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
*:Afaics, based on the latest revert by {{re|ABHammad}}, this is currently all about the difference between "native to" and "descending from". I do not understand the fuss over "native to", are there sources saying they are not? How can they be descended from but not native to? | |||
*:In fact based on the sourcing below, there is a good case for just describing them as indigeneous. ] (]) 09:55, 7 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
*::{{ping|ABHammad}} same question as above. ] (]) 15:20, 7 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
As part of a larger Jewish diaspora, both Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jews trace their origins to the Levant. That's why I included them as part of the Levantine group. I still think they should be included there.] (]) 01:08, 24 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
:That is a personal opinion that discards the views of scholars (eg Shlomo Sand}. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - 09:08, 24 December 2012 (UTC)</small> | |||
=== Sources === | |||
Sand's views are WP:FRINGE and contradicted by more numerous scholars (i.e. Josephus, Bartal, etc) with expertise in the field of antiquity and Jewish history, of which Sand has neither. That's without even mentioning numerous genetic studies which undermine his theory of Khazar origins. As it stands, consensus does not support Sand's arguments, so we can not lend any more weight to it than we would to any other fringe theory. ] (]) 01:13, 25 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
Let's collect up sources here, these are mentioned in the article: | |||
{{cite book |author=Dowty, Alan |year=2008 |title=Israel/Palestine |location=London, UK |publisher=] |page=221 |isbn=978-0-7456-4243-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RrcoTW_vKDUC&pg=PA221 |quote=Palestinians are the descendants of all the indigenous peoples who lived in Palestine over the centuries; since the seventh century, they have been predominantly Muslim in religion and almost completely Arab in language and culture. |author-link=Alan Dowty |access-date=29 November 2023 |archive-date=29 November 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231129193828/https://books.google.com/books?id=RrcoTW_vKDUC&pg=PA221#v=onepage&q&f=false |url-status=live }} | |||
{{cite book |last=Gelvin |first=James L. |title=The Israel-Palestine Conflict: One Hundred Years of War |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GDaZAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA93 |date=13 January 2014 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-107-47077-4 |page=93 |quote= Furthermore, Zionism itself was also defined by its opposition to the indigenous Palestinian inhabitants of the region. Both the "conquest of land" and the "conquest of labor" slogans that became central to the dominant strain of Zionism in the Yishuv originated as a result of the Zionist confrontation with the Palestinian "other". |access-date=29 November 2023 |archive-date=29 November 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231129192547/https://books.google.com/books?id=GDaZAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA93#v=onepage&q&f=false |url-status=live }} | |||
:Evildoer187, if you cannot disagree with another editor without accusing that person of being an antisemite, you don't belong here. Period. Now retract what you've written, apologize to nableezy, and ''maybe'' you won't end up at ]. — ] <sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub> 04:35, 25 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
* Abu-Libdeh, Bassam, Peter D. Turnpenny, and Ahmed Teebi. 2012. "Genetic Disease in Palestine and Palestinians". Pp. 700–11 in ''Genomics and Health in the Developing World'', edited by D. Kumar. ]. p. 700: "Palestinians are an indigenous people who either live in, or originate from, historical Palestine.... Although the Muslims guaranteed security and allowed religious freedom to all inhabitants of the region, the majority converted to Islam and adopted Arab culture." | |||
OK. I will delete the offensive parts of my statement then. I apologize.] (]) 04:46, 25 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
:No worries, I didnt see much wrong with it. But you may want to reign in the somewhat absurd analogies so that you arent comparing the work of a Jewish university professor at an Israeli school to an antisemitic forgery. As far as the content argument, Ill leave it to others to argue about the specific sources, but I dont think Misplaced Pages can take the position that all Ashkenazi or Sephardic Jews ''trace their origin to the Levant'' by any means other than tradition. <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">''']''' - 06:11, 25 December 2012 (UTC)</small> | |||
] argues otherwise, writing that Palestinians in ] times were "cutely aware of the distinctiveness of Palestinian history ..." and "lthough proud of their Arab heritage and ancestry, the Palestinians considered themselves to be descended not only from Arab conquerors of the seventh century but also from ] who had lived in the country since time immemorial, including the ancient ] and the ] before them." Khalidi, W., 1984, p. 32 | |||
::The article has been restored to the version before the edit war - And so we are all clear on this let me make sure all read the talk page main note at the top ''The article '''Palestinian people''', along with other articles relating to the Arab–Israeli conflict, is currently subject to active arbitration remedies - Editors who otherwise violate this 1RR restriction may be blocked without warning''.] (]) 17:02, 25 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
Not mentioned in the article: | |||
== Proposals == | |||
], | |||
"While each of these nations challenges the cultural and political legitimacy of the other '''serious scholarship informs us that both the Palestinians and the Israelis are indigenous to the territories that was once known as Canaan'''." | |||
Native Peoples of the World: An Encylopedia of Groups, Cultures and Contemporary Issues Steven L. Danver Routledge 2012 | |||
I can see that one of the older versions of this article has been restored. However, there are several problems with it... | |||
"Thus, Palestinians are considered by some to be the indigenous people of present-day Israel, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip. Other scholars dispute this view, asserting that Jews and others resided in Palestine" | |||
Reclaiming Palestinian Indigenous Sovereignty Jamal Nabulsi Pages 24-42 12 Jun 2023 https://doi.org/10.1080/0377919X.2023.2203830 "Drawing on the critical thought of Palestinians and other Indigenous peoples struggling against settler colonialism, I argue for a theorization of Palestinian indigeneity. Following from this indigeneity, I show that Palestinian Indigenous sovereignty is the embodied political claim to the land of Palestine." | |||
* "Other Levantines" is unnecessary, because they already fall under the bracket of Middle Eastern peoples, along with the Jewish diaspora, Arabs, etc. | |||
Indigeneity, Apartheid, Palestine: On the Transit of Political Metaphors Mark Rifkin | |||
* Travelers is spelled wrong. | |||
Cultural Critique Vol. 95 (Winter 2017), pp. 25-70 (46 pages) University of Minnesota Press https://doi.org/10.5749/culturalcritique.95.2017.0025 https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/culturalcritique.95.2017.0025 | |||
There are further sources that I have not reviewed in any detail at ]. ] (]) 16:21, 4 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
* Bedouin is not capitalized. | |||
:Editors {{re|Owenglyndur}} and {{Re|האופה}} continue to edit war, notwithstanding the sourcing provided above and without providing any contrary sourcing to back up their personal opinions. ] (]) 14:01, 13 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
* "In recent years, many genetic studies have demonstrated that, at least paternally, most of the various Jewish ethnic divisions and the Palestinians – and in many cases other ]ines – are genetically closer to each other than the Palestinians or the various Jewish groups to European groups." This is a much more accurate and complete statement than what is already there. The study in question was carried out on multiple Jewish diaspora groups, not just Ashkenazi and European Sephardi. I don't hold a strong opinion on this one in particular, but I would still recommend this revision.] (]) 05:20, 27 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
::As you can see here there are many sources stating waves of Muslim Immigration to the region: | |||
::Hi Evildoer, actually there is no reason to remove Levantines from the related peoples, in fact other Levantines are the '''most''' related peoples to Palestinians so that is a null point to have it removed, same goes for the Jewish diaspora and Arabs, both equally related groups to the Palestinians in different lights of view, it is nice to let readers know just enough specifics, but also to link them to the broader range as well, as is done with the "other Middle eastern peoples" at the end. Also if you find spelling errors, feel free to fix them, you do not need to worry, in fact I believe edits such as the misspellings of Travelers and Bedouin would be considered minor edits, because there is not much to dispute with spelling unless we are dealing with multiple language interpretation. Lazyfoxx 16:30, 27 December 2012 (UTC) <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) </span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
::] | |||
::As well as here: | |||
::] ] (]) 14:17, 13 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::WP is not a source. ] (]) 14:17, 13 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::That is right, but each article has dozens of sources to back up the claim. Read the sources. ] (]) 14:29, 13 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::Not the way it works, you need to contradict the sources above. Waiting. ] (]) 14:30, 13 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::Deer Sir, you asked for sources, i handed you 2 articles with plenty of sources. Read them. ] (]) 14:40, 13 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::See your talk page. ] (]) 14:45, 13 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::@], your unfortunately goes against repeated challenges (we haven't reached consensus) and does not demonstrate a willingness to engage in a constructive dialogue on this controversial issue. Please self-revert per WP:ONUS and as a gesture of openness to collaborative editing within our community. Thank you. ] (]) 19:05, 14 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Revert your 5 or more reverts first. ] (]) 19:06, 14 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::@], let's be honest, this approach isn't very mature. It's not just me, it's hree editors that have challenged this recent addition, yet you continue to push it into the article. I urge you to consider a self-revert, which would show your willingness to engage in good faith on this matter. As an experienced editor in our community, I ask that you to set a good example for collaboration. ] (]) 19:15, 14 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::You need to bring sources that support your version, not give lectures. ] (]) 19:21, 14 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:While I understand the complication involving the difference in meaning between "indigenous to an area" and "Indigenous Peoples," questioning whether Palestinians are "native" to Palestine is absolutely idiotic and frankly racist. Personally I have no tolerance for this and I doubt the rest of the community will, either. The only thing stopping me from filing at AE right now is lack of time, but if this doesn't stop I'll make time sometime in the next week unless someone else beats me to it. ] (]) 15:22, 13 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::@], @], @], what I'm seeking here isn't an effort to engage in a constructive good-faith discussion to achieve consensus, but rather threats from two expereinced editors. I agree with the opposing views here—I don't see a compelling reason to redefine a 23-year-old article on Palestinians by now labeling them collectively as "native." As evidenced by the current discussion on ], there is ongoing dispute within the community about using "indigenous" to describe all Palestinians. While I do believe that many Palestinian clans have lived in Palestine for centuries, maybe millenia, it's not appropriate to definitively classify an entire, very diverse population that includes recent migrants over the past three centuries. Are all Americans considered native to America? The analogy holds here. | |||
::Please stop the back-and-forth edit conflicts. Clearly, the community has not reached any consensus on the matter, and again, involved editors should be reminded that WP:''ONUS'' is among those seeking to change content. ] (]) 19:01, 14 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Half of the reverts are yours. ] (]) 19:03, 14 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::"not appropriate" according to sources, or just original research? Because I've now seen plenty of sources stating quite clearly that it ''is'' appropriate. ] (]) 19:45, 14 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::I'm sorry but no amount of sophistry can change that fact that Palestinians are native to Palestine, it's in the name for goodness sake. The same way (multi-ethnic) Syrians are native to ], or multi-ethnic Americans are native to ]. It's bad faith and incredibly dehumanising to insinuate Palestinians are not native to the land they are born on, suffered on, and ultimately die on, and we are just talking about those not dispersed in the diaspora. If you come from the paradigm where Arabs are from Arabia you have no ground to stand on and need to read ] before contributing further. ] (]) 19:51, 14 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::You might as well try and change ] to say it's made of cheese. ] (]) 20:41, 14 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::Actually it is more complicated than that. For example, one of the most distinguished Palestinian families - the Husayni family, to which belong important figures like ] and ] - claims to be descendants of the prophet Muhammad who clearly was not native to Palestine. See (the original source is in p. 1053). ] (]) 18:39, 15 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::That doesn't mean the Palestinians, or even Husaynis, are not native to Palestine. I mean, FFS, Muhammad lived over 1000 years ago! ] (]) 18:48, 15 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::That depends how you define "native". ] (]) 19:00, 15 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::For example - would you say that the current WASP descendants of the Mayflower immigrants are "native Americans"? It was after all over 400 years ago. Or would you say that the current Spanish inhabitants of the Caribbean Islands who might be descendants of the Columbus expedition are "native Caribbeans"? It was after all over 500 years ago. ] (]) 19:18, 15 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::More lame OR - and weak OR at that. Also, not only are you comparing comparatively irrelevant parallels (500 years doesn't hold much of a wick to 1,400 years when it comes to exponential population dispersal), but the European colonisation of the Americas was also accompanied by other trends, including the spread of diseases that the native population were not immune to. Flipping it though, note that the inhabitants of the Spanish Caribbean are not considered native Spanish today. The populations that move are those most exposed to loss of indigeneity. ] (]) 02:43, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::This is A) lame, anecdotal OR with respect to the topic of discussion, and B) you are incorrectly inferring that this information somehow reflects on the subject. Even if we assume that the claim of the Husaynis is correct (which is by no means guaranteed bearing in mind that peoples from across the Muslim world have been fabricating claims of descent from the prophet for political gain for 1,400 years), that would still have little bearing on whether they would today be considered part of the indigenous population today, and it would be gross OR to assume that it did ... populations blend, and distinctions on an individual level (or on the family level) are almost entirely irrelevant at a population level given the passage of time. ] (]) 02:10, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::The great majority of Palestinians claim descent from Arabian tribes, and belong to groupings such as Qays and Yaman, or clans from Transjordan, Egypt and the area. It is only a small portion that actually trace their ancestry to the ancient populations of the area. Why, then, have we decided, contrary to the majority of Palestinians' own oral traditions, as well as numerous historical sources documenting hundreds of migrations into the area during the last thousand years, that Palestinians can collectively be defined as 'native' based on a limited number of sources? ] (]) 06:37, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Because speculative theories based on anecdotal information are forum content, and sources are sources. ] (]) 06:55, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::This is exactly the opposite, the bold description as native is, in fact, the speculative theory here. I can suggest reading https://en.wikipedia.org/Origin_of_the_Palestinians#Historical_analysis, and https://en.wikipedia.org/Origin_of_the_Palestinians#In_oral_traditions, you will find plenty of reliable, academic sources there. ] (]) 07:07, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::See below. Oral traditions are in no way determinative. You've read genesis right? Origin myths are bull crap. Or bull's blood, literally, in some religions. And Misplaced Pages is not a reliable source, so let's not go in that particular direction. If you have a particular source that you think is directly relevant here, provide it. ] (]) 07:36, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::: To Vegan: You are arguing for something that you won't achieve. I'll make three comments. (a) According to the strong consensus of modern science, we are all natives of Africa. Should we put that in all articles about groups of people? (b) Everyone has two parents, two grandparents, etc.. That gives about 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 (give or take an inch) lines of descent (mother-father-father-...) back to Muhammad's time. Many of those lines of descent end at the same person, but still it is obvious that everyone has a large number of different ancestors living at Muhammad's time. Actually, of people living in the world at that time whose descendants survived until now, a majority are ancestors of each of us (this is something that has been studied mathematically). So that fact that a single line of descent to a particular person of that era can be asserted means nothing at all, just as the fact that I can prove descent from ] (which is true) doesn't make me Ukranian. (c) The fact is that, outside of very narrow meanings such as the place where an individual was born, "native" doesn't have a precise definition. The solution for us, as always, is to follow sources. ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 02:35, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::Yes, "native" doesn't have a precise definition, and this is especially true in regions like the Levant, which has been a crossroads between major civilizations, absorbing numerous migrations over millennia, often with open borders as part of large empires. We're not talking the aborigines or native americans here. Bottom line, I see no reason to use 'native' (except maybe political, if we're honest), to define a group whose distinct identity only got consolidated in the past century, with most of them seeing themselves as migrants from other places. ] (]) 06:55, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::You're confusing indigeneity with identity. While identifying with the land is a feature of indigeneity, having a national identity is not. Tribes in the Amazon are indigenous without reference to any kind of identity outside of their tribe/village. Identity is if anything misleading, as endogamous conceptions surrounding indigeneity are more likely to be misled by myth-building, especially in a specifically nationalistic context. For instance, Yasser Arafat's association of the Palestinians with the Jebusites was just ahistorical verbiage. Indigeneity is an anthropological question, not a cultural one. ] (]) 07:19, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::I don't believe I am confusing anything. Numerous political claims have been made over recent decades, including the aforementioned remark from Arafat. However, if you were to ask today's Palestinians about their origins, many would say they come primarily from Arabia, as well as from Transjordan, Egypt, and other regions. Only a minority claim local origins. ] (]) 08:15, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Yes, so again, you're just claiming some anecdotal oral testimony as something that somehow means something, and not even by way a source. ] (]) 08:57, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::While a bit of OR is acceptable on talk pages, please stop writing comment after comment with no reference to any sources. This is not a forum and it's just not helpful. ] (]) 09:29, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::@] I'm not sure you know what I am arguing for, so how do you know if I'll achieve it or not? | |||
::::::(1)The bottom line (literally) of your reply is that you admit that the word "native" doesn't have a precise definition. That means different people understand it differently, and that's a very good reason NOT to use it here as it can be misleading. | |||
::::::(2) Additionally you say that the solution is "to follow sources". Well here are several sources that point to the fact that some of the Palestinians trace their origins to outside of Palestine: | |||
::::::Swedenburg, Ted (2003). . University of Arkansas Press. p. 81. ] ]. <q>These primordialist claims regarding the Palestinians' primeval and prior roots in the land operated at the level of the collective. When it came to an individual's own family, however, Arab-Islamic discourse took precedence over archaeological justifications. I ran across no Palestinian villager (or urbanite) who claimed personal descent from the Canaanites. Villagers typically traced their family or their hamila's origins back to a more recent past in the Arabian peninsula. Many avowed descent from some nomadic tribe that had migrated from Arabia to Palestine either during or shortly after the Arab-Islamic conquests. By such a claim they inserted their family's history into the narrative of Arab and Islamic civilization and connected themselves to a genealogy that possessed greater local and contemporary prestige than did ancient or pre-Islamic descent. Several men specifically connected their forefathers' date of entry into Palestine to their participation in the army of Salih al-Din al-Ayyubi (Saladin), a historical figure whose significance has been retrospectively enlarged by nationalist discourse such that he is now regarded not merely as a hero of "Islamic" civilization but as a "national" luminary as well. (Modern nationalist discourse tends to downplay Salah al-Din's Kurdish origins.) Palestinians of all political stripes viewed Salah al-Din's wars against the Crusaders as a forerunner of the current combats against foreign intruders. Many considered Salah al-Din's victory over the Crusaders at Hittin (A.D. 1187) as a historical precedent that offered hope for their own eventual triumph even if, like the Crusader wars, the current struggle with Israel was destined to last more than two centuries. Family histories affiliated to earlier "patriotic" struggles against European aggression tied interviewees to a continuous narrative of national resistance. Villagers claiming descent from Arabs who entered Palestine during the Arab-Islamic conquest equally viewed these origins as establishing their historical precedence over the Jews</q> | |||
::::::Grossman D. (1984), , ''Geojournal,'' Volume 9, pages 393–406: "Migrations of families (mainly during the past three to four centuries) were recorded on the basis of local traditions in Samaria — the N part of the West Bank. The same destinations were more important also for migrants from outside Samaria. A strong “push” factor was found to explain migration from Hebron, Gaza, and Egypt — all S of Samaria. Trans-Jordanian migrations were, however, the most important ones outside those originating in Samaria itself." | |||
::::::Muhammad Suwaed (2015), , Rowman & Littlefield, p. 181 : "The tribes of the Bank region already penetrated the region during the period of the Ottoman rule. The history of the Bedouins in Palestine goes back a long way. It starts with the Arab invasion of Palestine in the 7th century". ] (]) 10:26, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::That some Palestinians trace their origins outside Palestine is irrelevant to the question here. What is required is sourcing that contradicts the sourcing I posted above, which assesses Palestinians as indigenous. In fact, at this point I am not convinced that we should not just flat out be saying so, that was why I originally created this section, to discuss that, not what native means. ] (]) 11:05, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::: As Self says, the fact that some Palestinians profess ancestry from outside Palestine does not impact the issue of indigenousity. Most likely David Ben-Gurion was descended from Gengis Khan, so what? And the fuzziness of the meanings of words is ''more'' reason to follow what sources say, not ''less''. ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 12:17, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::@], I disagree that the sources I brought are irrelevant. But putting that aside, let’s look at your sources. In truth I didn't pay much attention to your sources before, as I was responding specifically to Levivich’s ridiculous claim that saying that not all Palestinians are indigenous is like saying that the moon is made of cheese, and I didn't have time to thoroughly go over all of this long discussion. But I looked at your sources now, and here are some comments: 1. The sources I brought actually directly contradict at least one of the sources you gave. Your source from Walid Hamidi says that the Palestinians see themselves as descending also "from indigenous peoples who had lived in the country since time immemorial". Whereas my source from Swedenburg says "I ran across no Palestinian villager (or urbanite) who claimed personal descent from the Canaanites". | |||
::::::::2. Additionally, one of your own sources actually admits that the subject of Palestinian indigeneity is disputed among scholars: Native Peoples of the World: Steven L. Danver, , Routledge, 2012, p. 554: "Thus, Palestinians are considered by some to be the indigenous people of present-day Israel, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip. Other scholars dispute this view, asserting that Jews and others resided in Palestine-usually defined as the narrow strip of land bordered by the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea – long before the Arabs arrived in the seventh century”. | |||
::::::::Now for @], 3. As you can see in point 2 here, there are sources that dispute the view that the Palestinians are indigenous. Therefore if you want to follow the sources in a NPOV way, you need to mention this counter-view as well. At the very least you cannot write this claim in wiki-voice. I.e you should write the leading sentence as something like: “Palestinians are an Arab ethnonational group who, according to some scholars, are native to Palestine”. | |||
::::::::4. Alternatively you can simply decide not to use the word “native” or “indigenous”. The fact that some sources use this term, which you admit is fuzzy, doesn’t mean you must include it in the lead section. Personally I have no problem to agree in casual conversation or a political debate that both Palestinians and Jews are “native” to this land. And I think I have said as much in one of our earlier discussions on another related topic. But while in casual conversation or political debates we can use imprecise and fuzzy terms, it is a different matter altogether to use such fuzzy terminology in an encyclopedia entry, without explication. In an encyclopedia, and especially when talking in wiki-voice, we should be as precise as possible, and therefore take from the sources the precise facts they contain rather than whatever fuzzy (and disputed) adjective they use. | |||
::::::::5. My recommendation therefore is to change the leading sentence to something like: “Palestinians are an Arab ethnonational group who are descendants of various peoples who lived in Palestine over the millennia”. This has two advantages: (a) It contains a factual claim that appears more or less in all the sources and nobody disputes, so it can be said in wikivoice. (b) It avoids the fuzzy term “native”. ] (]) 08:42, 17 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::Still waiting for you and any of the objectors to find any sources yourselves that contest indigeneity. I have provided one that says, in the meta, that some do, now please locate them so we can assess the comparative weight. Native was a sort of compromise that hasn't been accepted and I didn't much like myself not because it was fuzzy but because it seems like an unnecessary dilution, so I am returning to indigenous, which has plenty of sourcing in support. ] (]) 09:24, 17 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::I don't know what sources the Encyclopedia refers to, as it doesn't have references. But I found some sources that it might had in mind, and several other sources that were published after the Encyclopedia: | |||
::::::::::Yahel, H., ]., Frantzman, S. (2012). ). ''Middle East Quarterly'', ''4'', p. 5: "Far from being the indigenous inhabitants, the Bedouin were relative latecomers to the Negev, preying on the villages and caravansaries that dotted the sparsely populated wilderness."; p. 14: "Although there is no official definition of indigeneity in international law, Negev Bedouin cannot be regarded as an indigenous people in the commonly accepted sense. If anything, the Bedouin have more in common with the European settlers who migrated to other lands, coming into contact with existing populations with often unfortunate results for the latter." | |||
::::::::::Frantzman, S., Yahel, H., Kark, R. (2012) . '''', ''17''(1), 78–104 :"The relatively new Bedouin claim to be classified as indigenous, having gained some international and academic support, is increasingly part of the self-perception of the educated elite among the Bedouin. However, the claim and international recognition face hurdles that the scholars mentioned above avoided discussing, many of which mirror the disputes and debates throughout the world that deal with indigenous peoples. For instance, one issue in the case of the Bedouin is the important and critical element of original occupancy of the land. The current Negev Bedouin tribes arrived to the Negev, from their historical homeland in the Arabian Desert, Transjordan, Egypt, and the Sinai, mainly since the eighteenth century and onwards. Scholars and activists have not wrestled or debated this issue." | |||
::::::::::] (2017). . Begin-Sadat Center Perspectives Paper No. 577: "Echoing Inbari, it is not to be argued here that 'there are no Palestinians' who thus do not deserve political rights, including self-rule and a state. To do so would be both logically and morally wrong. Palestinians have the right to define themselves as they see fit, and they must be negotiated with in good faith by Israelis. What Palestinians cannot claim, however, is that they are Palestine’s indigenous population and the Jews are settler-colonialists." | |||
::::::::::Ukashi, Ran (2018). "". Peace and Conflict Studies: Vol. 25: No. 1 , Article 7, p. 13: "Again, while making exception for those Arabized Peoples that could justifiably claim lineage directly to antiquity, it can be demonstrated that of the significant cohort of Arab economic migrants to Palestine from modern-day Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and elsewhere prior to partition in 1947, no reasonably Indigenous connection to the territory can be claimed." | |||
::::::::::]., & Troen, C. (2019). . '''', ''24''(2), 17–32: "We have argued that despite the admitted distortions there is a covert polemical advantage to designating Bedouins as well as other Palestinian Arabs as "indigenous" The deliberate use of the term “indigenous” in spurious scholarship furthers tendentious narratives for partisan and polemical advantage". | |||
::::::::::].; Futerman, Alan G. (2021). ''''. ]. p. 28: "Therefore, the claim to the widely held idea that Palestinian Arabs are the indigenous population of the land, with a millennia connection to it, is simply not based on facts." ] (]) 17:32, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::I have way more sources that that. And three of those are about the Bedouin? Keep trying tho. ] (]) 17:45, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::The Bedouins in Palestine are considered part of the Palestinians now. Don't you know that? And counting doesn't really matter here. If I show that there are RS that dispute the claim then it is disputed. ] (]) 17:53, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::Doesn't work like that. Wait and see. ] (]) 17:57, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::Wait for what? ] (]) 17:58, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::To see. ] (]) 17:59, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::To see what? ] (]) 18:00, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::::Asked and answered (twice). ] (]) 18:02, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::::Are you trolling me? ] (]) 18:03, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::::::Pot..kettle. ] (]) 18:12, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::::::I don't understand what you want. I told you - if different RS have different opinions on a claim then you cannot make this claim in a wikivoice. ] (]) 18:28, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::::::::We can if there is a clear majority, which there is, your sources, 3 of which only deal with a subset of Palestinians, are a distinct minority. ] (]) 18:35, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::::::::] ] (]) 18:38, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::::::::::" including all verifiable points of view which have sufficient due weight." Your sources do not demonstrate due weight, whereas the sources I have provided (dozens of them) clearly do. ] (]) 18:40, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::::::::::I disagree with you. I think my sources have sufficient due weight. ] (]) 18:45, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::::::::::::Well, we are back to wait and see. ] (]) 18:48, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::::::::::::I see you are back to trolling, so bye for now. I'll just note by way of parting that the editor/writer of the that you brought among your sources also thinks like me that this view has sufficient due weight to be mentioned. ] (]) 18:55, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::I have absolutely no idea why you think I am trolling. You ask a question and I reply is not trolling. I could just not reply at all if you would prefer. ] (]) 18:57, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::You repeat saying "wait and see" and refuse to explain what you mean by this. ] (]) 18:59, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::It means exactly that. ] (]) 19:08, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::Sorry, but I have more interesting things to do than waiting for unspecified things to happen... ] (]) 19:13, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::::::::We have an article on the Negev Bedouin, its ]. It isnt this article. ''']''' - 18:42, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::::::::::::The sources do not speak only about the Bedouins ] (]) 18:45, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::::::::::::They do except for a couple of them, one hysterical in its tone and the other representing a minority view published by an avowedly partisan think tank. ''']''' - 20:42, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::On the subject of Arab Bedouins specifically in the Southern Levant, I'm not sure whether these scholars got their sources, but the ] Arabs, and other Arab tribes and nomads, have indupitably roamed the deserts of the Southern Levant since antiquity. It doesn't get much more indigenous than being an tribal nomad in that desert. ] (]) 20:40, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
: They're Bedouin. They move around a lot. And then come back. And then go away. And then come back again. What causes this strange behavior? Next up, on ].] (]) 23:24, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::A single dated (2012 is quite old at this point) and generalist tertiary source by a non-specialist is not particularly useful in establishing current scholarly consensus. ] (]) 12:03, 17 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::It's off-topic, but incidentally Swedenburg does not affirm the claims. He says: {{tq|"Many avowed descent By such a claim they inserted their family's history into the narrative that possessed greater local and contemporary prestige than did ancient or pre-Islamic descent."}} So far from lending these "avowed claims" any credence, he points out the ulterior motives that accompany them (as well as other ahistorical narratives such as Saladin not being Kurdish). ] (]) 13:00, 16 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
I checked a few more sources: | |||
:::Done. What about the fourth proposed edit. You still haven't commented on that.] (]) 05:26, 28 December 2012 (UTC) | |||
* {{Cite book |authorlink=Ilan Pappe |last=Pappe |first=Ilan |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rrttEAAAQBAJ |title=A History of Modern Palestine |date=2022 |edition=3rd |orig-date=2004 |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-108-24416-9}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Rogan |first=Eugene |authorlink=Eugene Rogan |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=16U0mEbf4nAC |title=The Arabs: A History |date=2017 |orig-date=2009 |edition=Revised and updated |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-465-03248-8 |language=en}} | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Wolfe |first=Patrick |authorlink=Patrick Wolfe |url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Traces_of_History/3GznDwAAQBAJ |title=Traces of History: Elementary Structures of Race |date=2016 |publisher=] |isbn=9781781689189 |language=en}} | |||
All three refer to Palestinians as indigenous. In addition to the sources posted above by Self and others, I'd agree with using the term "indigenous." ] (]) 16:32, 17 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::Hello?] (]) 04:54, 1 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
:Same, and the idea that you can argue against sources that directly say something with sources that do not directly dispute it is a non-starter here. ''']''' - 16:45, 17 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
::I looked it over and revisited the study, and do not think that it should be worded that way, because although the study does include some non-european jews in its studies, it also does include many european jews, such as ashkenazi and sephardic jews, who are classified as european jews by definition. If you still feel it should, I encourage more editors to share their insight on this, besides myself. Lazyfoxx 00:15, 4 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
::More sources...might be some duplication, haven't finished checking them: | |||
::*::::* '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Abdullah, D. (2019). A century of cultural genocide in Palestine. In ''Cultural Genocide'' (pp. 227-245). Routledge. | |||
::*::::*: "The Zionist mission was, therefore, to ethnically cleanse the land. Theodore Herzl, the movement’s founder, was convinced that the fulfilment of their dream would result in the acute suffering and misery for the indigenous population." | |||
::*::::* '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Pappe, I. (2007). ''The ethnic cleansing of Palestine''. Simon and Schuster. | |||
::*::::* '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Nijim, M. (2020). ''Genocide in Gaza: Physical destruction and beyond.'' | |||
::*::::* '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Culverwell, S. M. (2017). Israel and Palestine-An analysis of the 2014 Israel-Gaza war from a genocidal perspective. | |||
::*::::*: ''Cites others and adopts their framework:'' "Pappé (2005), Shaw (2010), Docker (2012), Lloyd (2012), Rashed and Short (2012), and Rashed, Short and Docker (2014) have all analyzed the 1948 conflict from a settler-colonial perspective. In this relationship, these scholars recognize the Zionist Jews as the ‘settlers’ and the ‘Arab Palestinians’ as the indigenous population." | |||
::*::::* '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Atallah, D. G., & Awartani, H. (2024). Embodying Homeland: Palestinian Grief and the Perseverance of Beauty in a Time of Genocide. ''Journal of Palestine Studies'', 1-9. | |||
::*::::* '''Indigeneity is about identity, not practice, and both Israelis and Palestinians incorporate it into theirs''' Busbridge, R. (2018). Israel-Palestine and the settler colonial ‘turn’: From interpretation to decolonization. ''Theory, Culture & Society'', 35(1), 91-115. | |||
::*::::* '''Implies in passing that Palestinians are indigenous''' Moses, A. D. (2011). Paranoia and Partisanship: Genocide Studies, Holocaust Historiography, and the ‘Apocalyptic Conjuncture’. ''The Historical Journal'', 54(2), 553-583. | |||
::*::::*: "the mufti still features in Zionist literature as a co-perpetrator of the Holocaust, converting him from an indigenous, anti-colonialist to an Arab-Muslim-Nazi, the ancestor of Hamas, Hizbollah, Iran, and other 'Islamofascist' enemies of Israel" | |||
::*::::* '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Tabar, L., & Desai, C. (2017). Decolonization is a global project: From Palestine to the Americas. ''Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society'', 6(1). | |||
::*::::*: "In 1948, the Zionist settler colonization of Palestine culminated in the mass eviction of the overwhelming majority of the indigenous Palestinian people" | |||
::*::::* '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Said, E. (1999). Palestine: memory, invention and space. ''The landscape of Palestine: Equivocal poetry'', 3-20. | |||
::*::::*: "The link between the metaphors of buildings and housing, and erasure, with the necessary steps to the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine was always clear to the country's indigenous inhabitants" | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Abu-Saad, I. (2001). Education as a tool for control vs. development among indigenous peoples: The case of Bedouin Arabs in Israel. ''Hagar: International Social Science Review'', 2(2), 241-259. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Both have a claim to indigeneity''' Ukashi, R. (2018). Zionism, Imperialism, and Indigeneity in Israel/Palestine: A Critical Analysis. ''Peace and Conflict Studies'', 25(1), 7. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Pappe, I. (2018). Indigeneity as cultural resistance: Notes on the Palestinian struggle within twenty-first-century Israel. ''South Atlantic Quarterly'', 117(1), 157-178. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Blatman, N., & Sabbagh‐Khoury, A. (2023). The presence of the absence: Indigenous Palestinian urbanism in Israel. ''International Journal of Urban and Regional Research'', 47(1), 119-128. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous, Israelis are explicitly non-indigenous''' Veracini, L. (2015). What can settler colonial studies offer to an interpretation of the conflict in Israel–Palestine?. ''Settler Colonial Studies'', 5(3), 268-271. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Nasasra, M. (2012). The ongoing Judaisation of the Naqab and the struggle for recognising the indigenous rights of the Arab Bedouin people. ''Settler Colonial Studies'', 2(1), 81-107. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous, Israelis are explicitly not''' Krebs, M., & Olwan, D. M. (2012). ‘From Jerusalem to the grand river, our struggles are one’: Challenging Canadian and Israeli settler colonialism. ''Settler Colonial Studies'', 2(2), 138-164. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous, Israelis are explicitly not''' Yiftachel, O. (2003). Bedouin-Arabs and the Israeli settler state. ''Indigenous people between Autonomy and globalization'', 21-47. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous, while Israelis are attempting to become indigenous''' Monterescu, D., & Handel, A. (2019). Liquid indigeneity: Wine, science, and colonial politics in Israel/Palestine. ''American Ethnologist'', 46(3), 313-327. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Abu-Rayya, H. M., & Abu-Rayya, M. H. (2009). Acculturation, religious identity, and psychological well-being among Palestinians in Israel. ''International Journal of Intercultural Relations'', 33(4), 325-331. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous, Israelis are explicitly not''' Blatman-Thomas, N. (2017). Commuting for rights: Circular mobilities and regional identities of Palestinians in a Jewish-Israeli town. ''Geoforum'', 78, 22-32. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous, Israelis are explicitly not''' Nabulsi, J. (2023). Reclaiming Palestinian Indigenous Sovereignty. ''Journal of Palestine Studies'', 52(2), 24-42. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Murphy, T. (2010). ‘Courses and Recourses’ Exploring Indigenous Peoples’ Land Reclamation in Search of Fresh Solutions for Israelis and Palestinians. ''Journal for the Study of Peace and Conflict'', 54-69. | |||
::*::::::::::# (about Negev Bedouins) '''Israelis are not indigenous''' Kram, N. (2013). ''Clashes over recognition: The struggle of indigenous Bedouins for land ownership rights under Israeli law''. California Institute of Integral Studies. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''We should move beyond a settler-indigenous framework''' Bashir, B., & Busbridge, R. (2019). The politics of decolonisation and bi-nationalism in Israel/Palestine. ''Political Studies'', 67(2), 388-405. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous, Israelis are explicitly not''' Sasa, G. (2023). Oppressive pines: Uprooting Israeli green colonialism and implanting Palestinian A’wna. ''Politics'', 43(2), 219-235. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Khatib, I. (2021). Attitudes of indigenous minority leaders toward political events in their trans-state national group: Between identity, conflict and values. ''Nationalism and Ethnic Politics'', 27(2), 149-168. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Israelis are not indigenous, they've merely attempted to claim indigeneity''' Cheyfitz, E. (2014). The force of exceptionalist narratives in the Israeli—Palestinian conflict. ''Native American and Indigenous Studies'', 1(2), 107-124. | |||
::*::::::::::# '''Palestinians are indigenous''' Arar, K. (2012). Israeli education policy since 1948 and the state of Arab education in Israel. ''Italian Journal of Sociology of Education'', 4(1), 113-145. | |||
::*::::::::::# (about the Druze) '''Israelis are not indigenous''' Yiftachel, O., & Segal, M. D. (1998). Jews and Druze in Israel: state control and ethnic resistance. ''Ethnic and Racial Studies'', 21(3), 476-506. | |||
::] (]) 18:19, 20 June 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::Let's keep adding sources here so that this doesn't get archived while there are ongoing discussions on the matter. ] (]) 09:16, 8 August 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::Adding more sources who hold the same partisan viewpoint does not alter the overall result. Yes, there are sources that adopt this framing, but most of them adhere to the settler-colonial paradigm of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and/or aligned with progressive and left-wing ideologies. The critical factor is the weight of evidence and whether this perspective achieves consensus within the scholarly community. Currently, this is not the case. ] (]) 09:57, 8 August 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::This section is for sources, feel free to add some. ] (]) 10:05, 8 August 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::Take, for example, <i>]'</i>s definition: <b>'Palestinians - A population of around 14 million people who trace their origins to British-ruled Palestine. Around 7 million Palestinians live in Israel, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip. Another 7 million are scattered across the Arab world and beyond. Nearly 6 million are registered as refugees.'</b> This outlet is famous for its radical centrist, neutral position. In this case, it exemplifies how a neutral definition of Palestinians should look like. Misplaced Pages should be neutral, not a partisan source. ] (]) 10:07, 8 August 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::Not a scholarly source. Such sources should be trivially easy to locate if there is actually any support for the position. ] (]) 10:09, 8 August 2024 (UTC) | |||
{{od}} Great work, {{u|Selfstudier}} and {{u|Vegan416}}. I'd recommend you to create a separate page under this talk page about Indigenous Sources, similar to ] under ]. ] is an FA-class article. | |||
If you have time, I'd also recommend for you to identify the authors of the works cited. Are they experts or academics? Do they have PhD? Things like that. It'd be also good to identify review articles (]). | |||
== Behar study == | |||
For example: | |||
Lazyfoxx could you please explain where does it say what you wrote in the article? Especially this " '''partial''' common ancestry or some recent ancestral influx from the Arabian peninsula. However it must be considered that these individuals may genetically cluster close due to geographical proximity rather than direct common ancestry, because some Bedouins, especially Negev Bedouins, have deep ancestral roots in Arabia and have lived in close proximity to Palestinians for hundreds of years.".As words partial and the last sentence in not in the source at all.--] (])/] 06:21, 7 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
* {{cite journal |doi=10.2307/2537362|jstor=2537362 |title=The Palestine Problem: An Overview |last1=Khalidi |first1=Walid |journal=Journal of Palestine Studies |date=1991 |volume=21 |issue=1 |pages=5–16 }} | |||
**{{tq|It was under British protection and by the force of British arms that duringthe first phase, from 1918 to 1948, the demographic, economic, military, and organizational infrastructure of the future Jewish state was laid, at the ex-pense of the indigenous Palestinian people and in the teeth of their resist-ance.}}. This is a review article and would be considered ]. The author, ], would be considered an expert in my opinion. ] (]) 23:11, 14 August 2024 (UTC) | |||
::I think it's called original research. ] (]) 16:05, 8 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
:Hi Shrike, I do express some concern with your edits as you have only included a small sentence from the study with no context and also failed to include other relevant information from the study concerning the Palestinian's genetics. First off, Autosomal Dna is noted to be similar with covergent populations, that is basic genetics, and this section about Palestinians is about their genetics, so accurate information should be expressed. Palestinians have lived in very close proximity to Negev bedouins, as they are and have been geographic neighbors. Also the rest of my addition, especially the bit comparing the Palestinians tested to various Jewish divisions is blatantly stated in the study, I suggest you read through again, the whole study in PDF rather than the abstract that is linked to in the reference. I believe the '''focus''' of the study was concerning Jewish populations and their relatedness to Palestinians and others if i'm not correct. | |||
:'''"According to a 2010 study by Behar at al titled "The genome-wide structure of the Jewish people," there is a close relationship between most contemporary Jews and non-Jewish populations from the Levant, such as Palestinians, Lebanese, Syrians, and Jordanians. Behar's explanation for these observations is a common genetic origin, which is consistent with an historical formulation of the Jewish people as descending from ancient Hebrew and Israelite residents of the Levant. " | |||
:If you wish to insist that '''some''' Palestinians are related to Negev Bedouins and Jordanians, you must at least not cherry pick what you wish to include from the study and also include the information about the Jewish populations and their relatedness to the Palestinians.''' The study shows in autosomal comparison and y-dna comparison maps that only a portion of Palestinians cluster near the Bedouins, Jordanians, and Saudi's tested, not '''all''' of the Palestinians tested. Lazyfoxx 06:35, 9 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
::The extended version still includes original research. Palestinians and Bedouins living in proximitry is no guarantee that they are intermingling (baby-making). Samaritans live in the Levant but many studies show that they don't baby-make much outside their communities. Bedouins, open and generous though they be, may not necessarily have been adding genetic material to their trade goods. | |||
::Also, it isn't cherry picking to discuss Palestinians without mentioning Jews. That argument, in this case, is self-defeating. Certainly you aren't suggesting that Palestinian identity is inexorably linked to Jews, right? ] (]) 00:07, 11 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
::Please show me relevant part of the source and how do you want to rephrase because your version doesn't appear to correspond to the source--] (])/] 11:28, 13 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
:Living in close proximity is no guarantee by itself that they intermingled, I agree with you Chicago Style. In the Behar study Shrike posted, it is shown that a few Palestinians cluster away from other Palestinians, more towards the Negev Bedouins in the study, this could, but does not positively indicate some geneflow between those individuals, however minute. Either way it would only apply to the small group of individuals in that cluster, not the group as a whole, and certainly not to the entire Palestinian population as a whole so I do not believe it can be applied in that context as Shrike intended with their edit. | |||
== Palestinian diaspora in Indonesia == | |||
:But yes it is cherry picking in this context to only include a small sentence concerning Bedouins with no context from a study about "Jewish Genetics and the relationship of Jews to other peoples." Those actions show a considerable bias if the rest of the study is not considered and acknowledged. Let's say for example it was study on Irish people and their relatedness to other groups, and in the study the Irish are found to cluster closely to both some English individuals tested but also with some Scottish individuals tested. Now by your reasoning it is sufficient to just say that the Irish individuals are related to the English, without mentioning the Scottish? That would lead a reader to believe that the Irish are only related to the English. That is not accurate reasoning and in fact seems like there would be some agenda behind such actions. | |||
{{Edit extended-protected|Palestinians|answered=yes}} | |||
:Also, inexorably linked to Jews? Some of the early Palestinians were Jewish while some Gentile individuals, that much is fact, Chicago Style, do you have an issue with that? Jewish individuals like others in Palestine have been absorbed into the Palestinian people, when discussing genetics there's no reason to leave anyone out from an unbiased standpoint, especially the Jews. ] Lazyfoxx 07:59, 11 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
There are about 7,000 Palestinians in Indonesia and no one includes them ] (]) 12:29, 21 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Your last paragraph really threw me. Do you have a sexxy-time viewing machine? Did Able make babies with Eve? Was Da Vinci gay? Is the milkman my dad? Genetics studies can be used to make inferences about the past. Only sexxy-time viewing machines can give you "facts" about past events. Please, enlighten me about how you know Canaanites = Jews = Palestinians and ≠ Arabs. ] (]) 10:55, 12 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
:] '''Not done''': it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a ] and provide a ] if appropriate.<!-- Template:EEp --> ] (<i>] • ] • ]</i>) 13:44, 21 October 2024 (UTC) | |||
:I really wasn't going to dignify you with a response after reading what you just wrote, what kind of response was that, honestly? You ''really'' threw me, Chicago Style. I try to assume good faith, but you show you are obviously quite an immature and agenda driven individual. Also, englighten '''me''' where have '''I''' said, and I quote you, "Canaanites = Jews = Palestinians and =/= Arabs"? | |||
== Edit warring == | |||
:Rather than put words into my mouth with whatever agenda you are trying to fulfill, I suggest you draw your attention to articles you'd actually be able to improve rather than degrade articles like this with your behavioral nonsense. | |||
:My goal here is the improvement of this article and the protection of it from bias, especially from radical viewpoints but also from personalized viewpoints on the other sides and angles related to these topics, what is '''your''' purpose here? ] Lazyfoxx 11:52, 12 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
::I'll agree it was on the immature side, but I've shown no agenda. You expressed the belief that the Israelites of yesteryear were absorbed into the Palestinian people. Maybe I'm mistaken, but it seemed like you were expressing the belief that Hebrews weren't a race, while Palestinians had an identity 2000 years ago. It's basically the Leila Khalid version of Golda Meir's "there are no Palestinians". Both are wrong. In the article, Rashid Khalili says that the Palestinian roots are deep, but the national consciousness is "relatively modern". So, my math equation was a question of why you said "Some of the early Palestinians were Jewish while some Gentile individuals, that much is fact, Chicago Style, do you have an issue with that?" That statement, besides being confrontational and accusatory, makes a claim of "fact" and I wanted to know how you came to learn this fact. I honestly thought you had a machine that could view people from the past having sex, because no geneticist would tell you facts about the past, only what modern DNA suggests. ] (]) 14:05, 12 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
:I don't know how long you've been on wikipedia, but it has been discussed in this article countless times the history of the Palestinian people and what peoples contributed to their makeup, some of those peoples included Jews, others included Gentiles. Whether or not the ancient Hebrews were a separate race, I'd have to say no, as they were able to reproduce with other homosapiens. They were an ethnic group of people with a shared religion and customs, yes. And did some of those people become absorbed into the population in Palestine and become Palestinians along with the Roman gentiles and others? yes again. ] Lazyfoxx 14:24, 12 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
::So you know this fact because it is your interpretation of past talkpage dialogue. That is even more ridiculous than telling me you saw it on a sexxy-time machine viewer. By the way, (I assume you're a trained biologist because you were lecturing Shrike on genetics) a race is capable of mating with other races in the same species. We can observe this in a laboratory, and therefore know it as fact. You're historical knowledge, no matter how politically convenient, is not.] (]) 06:56, 13 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
@Lazyfox:We should say only what the sources say we can't add anything from our head its called ]--] (])/] 08:26, 13 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
:No, Chicago Style, stop assuming, I know it's fact because through past dialogue discussions countless sources have been shown to indicate the facts about Palestinians in this article. Again, you are being immature and confrontational in your response towards me. It is not my personal historical knowledge, it is the knowledge from sources and history. Homo sapiens are a race, Chicago Style, there are subgroups of different ethnic groups within the race of homo sapiens, an ethnic group is not a separate race, if that were the case they would be a separate species and thus unable to produce viable offspring with other humans. Also, politically convenient? Who brought up politics besides you just now? If you wish to be a good wikipedian you should not be bringing up politics and focus on the sources and studies already found on the page. I think you have agendas on your mind other than the improvement of this article, and frankly I'm a bit annoyed. Also, it's spelled "your", unless you are implying that I myself am historical knowledge. Lazyfoxx 09:34, 13 January 2013 (UTC) <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) </span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
With , editor {{Re|Pyramids09}} reverted stable material with claim "Removing misleading information from lead and formatting", was but without initiating any discussion, which . | |||
I think pointing out petty grammar mistakes is immature and confrontational. So is trying to justify your unique definition of "race". Stop trying to score points and show me one, just one, source that proves a fact from 2000 years ago. An historian or anthropologist's assertion is not a fact. Also, was consensus achieved in these talk page recreations of ancient history? I perused the archives and see a lot of dispute and disagreement, even amongst editors with similar edit histories. This article should reflect the researched history of the Palestinian people, noting minority views when necessary, not Lazyfox and Saeb Erekat's Since Time Immemorial conjectures. | |||
Science and academics are quests for truth. Politics is trying to make others believe what you want. Which iz youz doin'? ] (]) 17:57, 13 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
:Right, this article should reflect the researched history of Palestinians, which it does for the most part, editors have been working improve it throughout the years, although neutrality has been disputed concerning bias toward Israeli/Zionist views as well as Palestinian bias, the article cites many sources and provides researched history of Palestinians, so I do not understand what you are asking, besides talking in circles. If you wish to claim that we must not post information in this article about Palestinians because you believe facts from thousands of years ago need proving beyond anthropological evidence and researcher works, then I suggest you take a look at the articles relating to many more ethnic groups of people on Misplaced Pages, including Jewish divisions, I believe that the major Jewish claim to the land of Israel is that "God promised the land of Israel to Abraham thousands of years ago." I believe Israel and Zionists have defended this "fact" with that of the writings in the Bible, what do you think about that? Lazyfoxx 02:11, 14 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
::::Trying to pigeonhole me, eh? You had an issue with Shrike's edit, which was sourced. You changed the edit, making it about Jews, oh the Jews. Then you went on an orgy of edits, including claims as ridiculous as Canaanite origins (even though they are only mentioned in the Bible) and something called "Palestinian Ottoman". Please take a look in the mirror and see you are POV pushing. For example, you added speculation about what languages people in Palestine spoke based on literature. Doncha know that writing is different than speaking? In modern Morocco, the people are more literate in French than Arabic, their spoken tongue. Additionally, finding some stuff written down in Petra (a trader city with no singular identity) doesn't let you speculate on what they spoke. You should restrict yourself to commentary on modern-day Palestinians, since your grasp of history is guided by political convenience. ] (]) 05:59, 14 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
:I see you don't have a response aimed at the question you asked me, seeing as how you are "pigeon holed" according to you. You don't know what you are talking about here Chicago Style, if you look again my initial edit of Shrike's edit did not "make it about the Jews" it simply included more information regarding the rest of the information from the study to convey Neutrality in this article. I am laughing at your accusation that my recent edits are POV pushed, all of my edits on this article are for the improvement of this article and I convey neutrality on the Israeli/Palestinian topic. When you say "including claims as ridiculous as Canaanite origins (even though they are only mentioned in the Bible) and something called "Palestinian Ottoman"." What does that even mean and how does it relate to my edit? You are rambling. And your edits, notably your most recent are '''clearly''' POV pushed, you are personally denying Palestinian history, which is cited in literature and sources throughout scholars, your recent edit on the article is nothing more than vandalism, not improvement of this article, and you should revert them. If you are concerned that something inserted in the article needs validation I suggest you read ], before you go on a tirade of deleting informative content. Lazyfoxx 07:03, 14 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
::"Denying Palestinian history"? So if I suggest that Palestinian national identity is less than 2000 years old, I'm a racist? Extremists from opposite sides of an issue are identical. You just pulled the "dont support Israel (unconditionally)? Must be an anti-Semite" card. Your last comment makes it seem that you see anything putting Palestnians in a bad light to be an indication of Zionism. Your black and white world must make you feel very righteous. | |||
::Upon rereading my comment, I noticed I misspelled "Palestinian". Betcha caught it and think Imma racist. But seriously, all narratives of history deserve a grain of salt. You seem to do what Creationists do, start with your beliefs and look for evidence that backs it up. ] (]) 16:29, 14 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
:Who called you a racist? I simply stated you are denying the history of Palestinians, which is clearly what you're doing. And how did I "just pull" the "dont support Israel (unconditionally)? must be an anti-semite card"? Explain yourself clearly. And no Chicago Style, I do not start with my beliefs and look for evidence of it, but thanks for another accusation yet again. I use information I have researched and found to be both informative and educational regarding the Palestinians and their history. You on the other hand do quite the opposite, it seems most of your edits since you have joined wikipedia have been deleting content from articles that you find offensive or do not fit your viewpoint. Lazyfoxx 16:48, 14 January 2013 (UTC) <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) </span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
Then {{re|Shoogiboogi}} reverted arguing no consensus and that . | |||
== Langauge additions == | |||
I trust that there will be a discussion before any further reverts, which judging by and the talk section ] above, appear to have no valid basis. ] (]) 14:56, 25 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
Do you have the "ʻAl kanfei Yonah" book?Could you please scan the relevant pages that correspond with your edits?--] (])/] 11:30, 13 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
: The indigeneity section of this talk page was begun after similar edit warring by two accounts later found to be socks of banned accounts. And round and round it goes!] (]) 15:05, 25 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::I am also very concerned that information with respect to Palestinians being native or indigenous keep getting removed. ] (]) 15:14, 25 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::I'll put together one of those giant multirefs for "indigenous", which should put that to bed; as far as I can tell that is the word used by every single scholar in this field (that I've checked so far). Also as far as I can tell, the only accounts that have challenged "indigenous" in recent years are the ] sockfarm accounts (now globally locked). ] (]) 15:19, 25 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::The only issue with "indigenous" is that it has different definitions depending on the field, such as . | |||
::::"Native" is far less likely to be challenged in the lead. | |||
::::I'll also be improving the Genetics section in the coming days and weeks. ] (]) 15:27, 25 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::It doesn't matter, though, because if all the RSes use "indigenous" and none use "native", Misplaced Pages's hands are tied on this. We can't OR our way around it by picking a word we think will be less likely to be challenged (even though I agree, it's less likely to be challeneged). We can't rewrite history for the sake of bringing stability to our articles, V and NPOV means using the same word the RSes use. I think when we're looking at a list of dozens of sources that includes every historian we can think of, we'll all "get it." ] (]) 15:32, 25 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::::That's what I mean by field. Historians may say "indigenous" but from international law perspective, it might have a more narrow definition. Maybe you can add a qualifier. Something like: | |||
::::::"Palestinians (Arabic: الفلسطينيون, romanized: al-Filasṭīniyyūn) are an Arab ethnonational group native to the region of Palestine. Historians see Palestinians as indigenous to their lands". ] (]) 15:39, 25 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I maintain it's about ''sources''. We don't need to look up the definition of "indigenous" and then decide if it applies to Palestinian--that would be ]. If the sources for this article says "indigenous," then this article says "indigenous," and that's it, ''even if'' we (or some of us) think the label doesn't apply. The sources are who decides if the labels apply. ] (]) 17:47, 25 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::::::I think it was Levivich who added this , before the above mentioned RFC and when we were still collecting sources but it seems to me that the matter has been resolved in favor of indigenous now, no reason to use an inaccurate wording. ] (]) 18:10, 25 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
This article states that Palestinians are indigenous to Palestine. However, this is very much wrong. If we go by the common definition of indigenous, which states "Inhabiting or existing in a land from the earliest times or from before the arrival of colonists", then the Jews would be indigenous, as Jews (or, in this case, their Israelite ancestors) are the first recorded people to inhabit the land of Palestine, being recorded in the Merneptah Stele.<ref name="John Day pp. 47">] (2005), ''In Search of Pre-Exilic Israel'', Bloomsbury Publishing, pp. 47.5 'In this sense, the emergence of ancient Israel is viewed not as the cause of the demise of Canaanite culture but as its upshot'.</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Spielvogel |first1=Jackson J. |title=Western civilization |date=2012 |publisher=Wadsworth/Cengage Learning |isbn=978-0-495-91324-5 |edition=8th |location=Australia |page=33 |quote=What is generally agreed, however, is that between 1200 and 1000 B.C.E., the Israelites emerged as a distinct group of people, possibly united into tribes or a league of tribes}}</ref><ref name="ThompsonMerneptah">{{Cite book |last=Thompson |first=Thomas L. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RwrrUuHFb6UC&pg=PA275 |title=Early History of the Israelite People: From the Written & Archaeological Sources |date=1 January 2000 |publisher=BRILL |isbn=978-90-04-11943-7 |pages=137ff |language=en |quote=They are rather a very specific group among the population of Palestine which bears a name that occurs here for the first time that at a much later stage in Palestine's history bears a substantially different signification.}}</ref>. Expulsion does not remove the status of indigenous. Meanwhile, Palestinian Arabs came from Arabia during the Muslim conquests of the seventh century.<ref>{{cite news |last=Hertz |first=Allen |date=2014-02-18 |title=Aboriginal rights of the Jewish People |url=https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/aboriginal-rights-of-the-jewish-people/ |work=Times of Israel |access-date=2024-11-29|ref=none}}</ref> Although some claim descendants from the Canaanites, this has been throughly disproven via archeological evidence, as well as testimonials from Palestinians themselves.<ref>{{cite book |last=Katz|first=Samuel |author-link= |date= |title=Battleground: Fact and Fantasy in Palestine |url= |location= |publisher= |page=126 |isbn=978-0933503038}}</ref>. Therefore, a more accurate lede would go something like this: Palestinians (Arabic: الفلسطينيون, romanized: al-Filasṭīniyyūn) are an ethnonational group descending from inhabitants of the region of Palestine over the millennia, and who are culturally and linguistically Arab. This was the lede for a while, being accurate and well sourced. I restored this lede in a recent revision (https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Palestinians&oldid=1265135214), which was then reverted without a stated reason along with a sockpuppet accusation. I believe that we should return to this correct lede, or at least hold a new RFC about this topic. Cheers. ] (]) 22:22, 25 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:P.S. If someone could collapse the references that would be nice. ] (]) 22:25, 25 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:Hi Shrike, what specific part of that section are you concerned with? Feel free to propose a "citations needed' superscript. The Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible, by David Noel Freedman, Allen C. Myers, Astrid Biles Beck, as well as The Ancient Languages of Syria-Palestine and Arabia by Roger D. Woodard support the edits I believe, the edits coincide with the general history in the region. Lazyfoxx 11:52, 13 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
:I'm open to RfC on this. The sources are clear. For example, | |||
::I am speaking about this edit that your sourced to Greenfeeld please supply the source .Until that please don't restore it.--] (])/] 06:49, 14 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
:There was no Anglo settler colony style population replacement in Palestine: | |||
:Before blatantly removing material from this article because a person doesn't agree with it, do you not think one should give the benefit of the doubt and read ] while consensus and sources are shown regarding the content in question? Lazyfoxx 07:18, 14 January 2013 (UTC) <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) </span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
:*{{cite book | last=Dowty | first=A. | title=Israel / Palestine |edition=5th | publisher=Polity Press |year=2023 | isbn=978-1-5095-5483-6 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=D3apEAAAQBAJ |author-link=Alan Dowty }}, Chapter 3: The Arab Story to 1914: {{tq2|Palestine was part of the first wave of conquest following Muhammad’s death in 632 CE; Jerusalem fell to the Caliph Umar in 638. The indigenous population, descended from Jews, other Semitic groups, and non-Semitic groups such as the Philistines, had been mostly Christianized. Over succeeding centuries it was Islamicized, and Arabic replaced Aramaic (a Semitic tongue closely related to Hebrew) as the dominant language}} | |||
::Please read ].You have failed to prove that material in the book you cited refers to Palestinian Arabs--] (])/] 08:45, 14 January 2013 (UTC) | |||
:*Chapter 10: The Perfect Conflict: {{tq2|Palestinians are the descendants of all the indigenous peoples who lived in Palestine over the centuries; since the seventh century, they have been predominantly Muslim in religion and almost completely Arab in language and culture.}} | |||
:You didn't answer my question, Shrike. Lazyfoxx 09:32, 14 January 2013 (UTC) <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) </span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
:*Genetic studies also seem to confirm this. For example, : {{tq|People related to these individuals contributed to all present-day Levantine populations}}. Especially note . Megiddo in the link refers to samples recovered from ]. These samples: "most of whom date to the Middle-to-Late ], except for one dating to the Intermediate Bronze Age and one dating to the Early Iron Age" ] (]) 14:16, 26 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::Actually, I definitely want an RfC on this. This content seems to be subject to long-term abuse, so I'd like a Misplaced Pages consensus on this. ] (]) 14:27, 26 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:::We could, although as I said above ] is already determinative, the close "Editors in favour of inclusion have provided sources that consider the situation in Palestine one that is relevant to this article. Those opposed have failed to challenge the significance of this view, or the reliability of the sources.", in addition the plethora of available sourcing also seems conclusive. ] (]) 14:37, 26 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
::::We should be considerate about how much community time we consume in these RfCs, but I definitely think we should proceed with an RfC if the edit war continues. ] (]) 15:17, 26 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
:All the available evidence suggests Palestinians are indigenous to the land, and are related to Jews and Samaritans, and others in the Levant (the links upthread to the study on Iron Age Canaanite populations is useful). If Arabisation removed indigeneity, then the Egyptians wouldn't be indigenous either. And would Hellenisation have the same effect, too? Incidentally, many undisputed capital-I ''Indigenous'' groups did arrive after/replace other groups – take the Kalinago, who reportedly replaced the Igneri and much of the Taíno, or the Inuit who reportedly replaced the earlier Dorset culture. So that's evidently not a deal-breaker, even if it did apply. But what we're learning more and more is that many of these cultures didn't so much ''invade and replace'' older cultures but were ''subsumed into them''. Clean breaks are relatively rare. Which is why British people today still have genetic continuity with bodies from 40,000 years ago, despite all the different people – Picts, Celts, Romans, Danes, Jutes, Angles, Saxons, Vikings, Normans, etc – who have lived on the British Isles. ] (]) 18:30, 27 December 2024 (UTC) | |||
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Property Losses Estimate
The last sentence of the header reads: "According to Perry Anderson, it is estimated that half of the population in the Palestinian territories are refugees and that they have collectively suffered approximately US$300 billion in property losses due to Israeli confiscations, at 2008–09 prices."
However, the *total* national wealth of neighbouring Jordan (population >10M, greater than 2x the current population of the Gaza Strip + the West Bank) is $146 billion, according to https://en.wikipedia.org/List_of_countries_by_total_wealth. Even if property in Israel is substantially more valuable per square foot (possible), Israel's total national wealth is only $1,046 billion or $1.05 trillion (same source), and Israel is an unusually stable/rich/technologically innovative country by Middle Eastern standards so the land in an independent Palestine has no guarantee to be as valuable as land in the state of Israel.
I submit that this sentence should be removed as not credible, or at least have some sort of qualification added to it providing context (such as the total wealth of neighbouring Jordan).
Indigineity
This revert is based on sources and both reverters have provided none for their view, instead accusing editors relying on sources of POV pushing. Selfstudier (talk) 08:30, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
- I would have also expected they contribute to this discussion by demonstrating which RS disagree. Makeandtoss (talk) 14:52, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
- @Owenglyndur: Consensus is built on WP guidelines and involves participating in the talk page discussion, not just refusal to accept some material. Makeandtoss (talk) 09:50, 3 June 2024 (UTC)
- @Selfstudier: can you provide several references, including the exact text of the reference, that say Palestinians are indigenous. (I know they are already in the article, provide them below as well so we can compare them with any sources that say otherwise). VR (Please ping on reply) 15:05, 3 June 2024 (UTC)
- Afaics, based on the latest revert by @ABHammad:, this is currently all about the difference between "native to" and "descending from". I do not understand the fuss over "native to", are there sources saying they are not? How can they be descended from but not native to?
- In fact based on the sourcing below, there is a good case for just describing them as indigeneous. Selfstudier (talk) 09:55, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
- @ABHammad: same question as above. Makeandtoss (talk) 15:20, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
Sources
Let's collect up sources here, these are mentioned in the article:
Dowty, Alan (2008). Israel/Palestine. London, UK: Polity. p. 221. ISBN 978-0-7456-4243-7. Archived from the original on 29 November 2023. Retrieved 29 November 2023. Palestinians are the descendants of all the indigenous peoples who lived in Palestine over the centuries; since the seventh century, they have been predominantly Muslim in religion and almost completely Arab in language and culture.
Gelvin, James L. (13 January 2014). The Israel-Palestine Conflict: One Hundred Years of War. Cambridge University Press. p. 93. ISBN 978-1-107-47077-4. Archived from the original on 29 November 2023. Retrieved 29 November 2023. Furthermore, Zionism itself was also defined by its opposition to the indigenous Palestinian inhabitants of the region. Both the "conquest of land" and the "conquest of labor" slogans that became central to the dominant strain of Zionism in the Yishuv originated as a result of the Zionist confrontation with the Palestinian "other".
- Abu-Libdeh, Bassam, Peter D. Turnpenny, and Ahmed Teebi. 2012. "Genetic Disease in Palestine and Palestinians". Pp. 700–11 in Genomics and Health in the Developing World, edited by D. Kumar. Oxford University Press. p. 700: "Palestinians are an indigenous people who either live in, or originate from, historical Palestine.... Although the Muslims guaranteed security and allowed religious freedom to all inhabitants of the region, the majority converted to Islam and adopted Arab culture."
Walid Khalidi argues otherwise, writing that Palestinians in Ottoman times were "cutely aware of the distinctiveness of Palestinian history ..." and "lthough proud of their Arab heritage and ancestry, the Palestinians considered themselves to be descended not only from Arab conquerors of the seventh century but also from indigenous peoples who had lived in the country since time immemorial, including the ancient Hebrews and the Canaanites before them." Khalidi, W., 1984, p. 32
Not mentioned in the article: Center for World Indigenous Studies, Indigenous Israelis and Palestinians "While each of these nations challenges the cultural and political legitimacy of the other serious scholarship informs us that both the Palestinians and the Israelis are indigenous to the territories that was once known as Canaan."
Native Peoples of the World: An Encylopedia of Groups, Cultures and Contemporary Issues Steven L. Danver Routledge 2012 "Thus, Palestinians are considered by some to be the indigenous people of present-day Israel, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip. Other scholars dispute this view, asserting that Jews and others resided in Palestine"
Reclaiming Palestinian Indigenous Sovereignty Jamal Nabulsi Pages 24-42 12 Jun 2023 https://doi.org/10.1080/0377919X.2023.2203830 "Drawing on the critical thought of Palestinians and other Indigenous peoples struggling against settler colonialism, I argue for a theorization of Palestinian indigeneity. Following from this indigeneity, I show that Palestinian Indigenous sovereignty is the embodied political claim to the land of Palestine."
Indigeneity, Apartheid, Palestine: On the Transit of Political Metaphors Mark Rifkin Cultural Critique Vol. 95 (Winter 2017), pp. 25-70 (46 pages) University of Minnesota Press https://doi.org/10.5749/culturalcritique.95.2017.0025 https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/culturalcritique.95.2017.0025
There are further sources that I have not reviewed in any detail at Talk:Genocide_of_Indigenous_peoples#RFC:_Palestinian_genocide_accusations. Selfstudier (talk) 16:21, 4 June 2024 (UTC)
- Editors @Owenglyndur: and @האופה: continue to edit war, notwithstanding the sourcing provided above and without providing any contrary sourcing to back up their personal opinions. Selfstudier (talk) 14:01, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- As you can see here there are many sources stating waves of Muslim Immigration to the region:
- Demographic history of Palestine (region)
- As well as here:
- Origin of the Palestinians Owenglyndur (talk) 14:17, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- WP is not a source. Selfstudier (talk) 14:17, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- That is right, but each article has dozens of sources to back up the claim. Read the sources. Owenglyndur (talk) 14:29, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- Not the way it works, you need to contradict the sources above. Waiting. Selfstudier (talk) 14:30, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- Deer Sir, you asked for sources, i handed you 2 articles with plenty of sources. Read them. Owenglyndur (talk) 14:40, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- See your talk page. Selfstudier (talk) 14:45, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- @Selfstudier, your recent revert here unfortunately goes against repeated challenges (we haven't reached consensus) and does not demonstrate a willingness to engage in a constructive dialogue on this controversial issue. Please self-revert per WP:ONUS and as a gesture of openness to collaborative editing within our community. Thank you. ABHammad (talk) 19:05, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
- Revert your 5 or more reverts first. Selfstudier (talk) 19:06, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
- @Selfstudier, let's be honest, this approach isn't very mature. It's not just me, it's hree editors that have challenged this recent addition, yet you continue to push it into the article. I urge you to consider a self-revert, which would show your willingness to engage in good faith on this matter. As an experienced editor in our community, I ask that you to set a good example for collaboration. ABHammad (talk) 19:15, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
- You need to bring sources that support your version, not give lectures. Selfstudier (talk) 19:21, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
- @Selfstudier, let's be honest, this approach isn't very mature. It's not just me, it's hree editors that have challenged this recent addition, yet you continue to push it into the article. I urge you to consider a self-revert, which would show your willingness to engage in good faith on this matter. As an experienced editor in our community, I ask that you to set a good example for collaboration. ABHammad (talk) 19:15, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
- Revert your 5 or more reverts first. Selfstudier (talk) 19:06, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
- @Selfstudier, your recent revert here unfortunately goes against repeated challenges (we haven't reached consensus) and does not demonstrate a willingness to engage in a constructive dialogue on this controversial issue. Please self-revert per WP:ONUS and as a gesture of openness to collaborative editing within our community. Thank you. ABHammad (talk) 19:05, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
- See your talk page. Selfstudier (talk) 14:45, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- Deer Sir, you asked for sources, i handed you 2 articles with plenty of sources. Read them. Owenglyndur (talk) 14:40, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- Not the way it works, you need to contradict the sources above. Waiting. Selfstudier (talk) 14:30, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- That is right, but each article has dozens of sources to back up the claim. Read the sources. Owenglyndur (talk) 14:29, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- WP is not a source. Selfstudier (talk) 14:17, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- While I understand the complication involving the difference in meaning between "indigenous to an area" and "Indigenous Peoples," questioning whether Palestinians are "native" to Palestine is absolutely idiotic and frankly racist. Personally I have no tolerance for this and I doubt the rest of the community will, either. The only thing stopping me from filing at AE right now is lack of time, but if this doesn't stop I'll make time sometime in the next week unless someone else beats me to it. Levivich (talk) 15:22, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
- @Levivich, @Selfstudier, @JJNito197, what I'm seeking here isn't an effort to engage in a constructive good-faith discussion to achieve consensus, but rather threats from two expereinced editors. I agree with the opposing views here—I don't see a compelling reason to redefine a 23-year-old article on Palestinians by now labeling them collectively as "native." As evidenced by the current discussion on Talk:Genocide of Indigenous peoples#RFC: Palestinian genocide accusations, there is ongoing dispute within the community about using "indigenous" to describe all Palestinians. While I do believe that many Palestinian clans have lived in Palestine for centuries, maybe millenia, it's not appropriate to definitively classify an entire, very diverse population that includes recent migrants over the past three centuries. Are all Americans considered native to America? The analogy holds here.
- Please stop the back-and-forth edit conflicts. Clearly, the community has not reached any consensus on the matter, and again, involved editors should be reminded that WP:ONUS is among those seeking to change content. ABHammad (talk) 19:01, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
- Half of the reverts are yours. Selfstudier (talk) 19:03, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
- "not appropriate" according to sources, or just original research? Because I've now seen plenty of sources stating quite clearly that it is appropriate. Iskandar323 (talk) 19:45, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
- I'm sorry but no amount of sophistry can change that fact that Palestinians are native to Palestine, it's in the name for goodness sake. The same way (multi-ethnic) Syrians are native to Syria, or multi-ethnic Americans are native to America. It's bad faith and incredibly dehumanising to insinuate Palestinians are not native to the land they are born on, suffered on, and ultimately die on, and we are just talking about those not dispersed in the diaspora. If you come from the paradigm where Arabs are from Arabia you have no ground to stand on and need to read Misplaced Pages:Competence is required before contributing further. JJNito197 (talk) 19:51, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
- You might as well try and change Moon to say it's made of cheese. Levivich (talk) 20:41, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
- Actually it is more complicated than that. For example, one of the most distinguished Palestinian families - the Husayni family, to which belong important figures like Amin Al Husayni and Faisal Husseini - claims to be descendants of the prophet Muhammad who clearly was not native to Palestine. See here (the original source is here in p. 1053). Vegan416 (talk) 18:39, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
- That doesn't mean the Palestinians, or even Husaynis, are not native to Palestine. I mean, FFS, Muhammad lived over 1000 years ago! Levivich (talk) 18:48, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
- That depends how you define "native". Vegan416 (talk) 19:00, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
- For example - would you say that the current WASP descendants of the Mayflower immigrants are "native Americans"? It was after all over 400 years ago. Or would you say that the current Spanish inhabitants of the Caribbean Islands who might be descendants of the Columbus expedition are "native Caribbeans"? It was after all over 500 years ago. Vegan416 (talk) 19:18, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
- More lame OR - and weak OR at that. Also, not only are you comparing comparatively irrelevant parallels (500 years doesn't hold much of a wick to 1,400 years when it comes to exponential population dispersal), but the European colonisation of the Americas was also accompanied by other trends, including the spread of diseases that the native population were not immune to. Flipping it though, note that the inhabitants of the Spanish Caribbean are not considered native Spanish today. The populations that move are those most exposed to loss of indigeneity. Iskandar323 (talk) 02:43, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- This is A) lame, anecdotal OR with respect to the topic of discussion, and B) you are incorrectly inferring that this information somehow reflects on the subject. Even if we assume that the claim of the Husaynis is correct (which is by no means guaranteed bearing in mind that peoples from across the Muslim world have been fabricating claims of descent from the prophet for political gain for 1,400 years), that would still have little bearing on whether they would today be considered part of the indigenous population today, and it would be gross OR to assume that it did ... populations blend, and distinctions on an individual level (or on the family level) are almost entirely irrelevant at a population level given the passage of time. Iskandar323 (talk) 02:10, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- The great majority of Palestinians claim descent from Arabian tribes, and belong to groupings such as Qays and Yaman, or clans from Transjordan, Egypt and the area. It is only a small portion that actually trace their ancestry to the ancient populations of the area. Why, then, have we decided, contrary to the majority of Palestinians' own oral traditions, as well as numerous historical sources documenting hundreds of migrations into the area during the last thousand years, that Palestinians can collectively be defined as 'native' based on a limited number of sources? HaOfa (talk) 06:37, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- Because speculative theories based on anecdotal information are forum content, and sources are sources. Iskandar323 (talk) 06:55, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- This is exactly the opposite, the bold description as native is, in fact, the speculative theory here. I can suggest reading https://en.wikipedia.org/Origin_of_the_Palestinians#Historical_analysis, and https://en.wikipedia.org/Origin_of_the_Palestinians#In_oral_traditions, you will find plenty of reliable, academic sources there. HaOfa (talk) 07:07, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- See below. Oral traditions are in no way determinative. You've read genesis right? Origin myths are bull crap. Or bull's blood, literally, in some religions. And Misplaced Pages is not a reliable source, so let's not go in that particular direction. If you have a particular source that you think is directly relevant here, provide it. Iskandar323 (talk) 07:36, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- This is exactly the opposite, the bold description as native is, in fact, the speculative theory here. I can suggest reading https://en.wikipedia.org/Origin_of_the_Palestinians#Historical_analysis, and https://en.wikipedia.org/Origin_of_the_Palestinians#In_oral_traditions, you will find plenty of reliable, academic sources there. HaOfa (talk) 07:07, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- Because speculative theories based on anecdotal information are forum content, and sources are sources. Iskandar323 (talk) 06:55, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- The great majority of Palestinians claim descent from Arabian tribes, and belong to groupings such as Qays and Yaman, or clans from Transjordan, Egypt and the area. It is only a small portion that actually trace their ancestry to the ancient populations of the area. Why, then, have we decided, contrary to the majority of Palestinians' own oral traditions, as well as numerous historical sources documenting hundreds of migrations into the area during the last thousand years, that Palestinians can collectively be defined as 'native' based on a limited number of sources? HaOfa (talk) 06:37, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- To Vegan: You are arguing for something that you won't achieve. I'll make three comments. (a) According to the strong consensus of modern science, we are all natives of Africa. Should we put that in all articles about groups of people? (b) Everyone has two parents, two grandparents, etc.. That gives about 1,000,000,000,000,000,000 (give or take an inch) lines of descent (mother-father-father-...) back to Muhammad's time. Many of those lines of descent end at the same person, but still it is obvious that everyone has a large number of different ancestors living at Muhammad's time. Actually, of people living in the world at that time whose descendants survived until now, a majority are ancestors of each of us (this is something that has been studied mathematically). So that fact that a single line of descent to a particular person of that era can be asserted means nothing at all, just as the fact that I can prove descent from Yaroslav the Wise (which is true) doesn't make me Ukranian. (c) The fact is that, outside of very narrow meanings such as the place where an individual was born, "native" doesn't have a precise definition. The solution for us, as always, is to follow sources. Zero 02:35, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, "native" doesn't have a precise definition, and this is especially true in regions like the Levant, which has been a crossroads between major civilizations, absorbing numerous migrations over millennia, often with open borders as part of large empires. We're not talking the aborigines or native americans here. Bottom line, I see no reason to use 'native' (except maybe political, if we're honest), to define a group whose distinct identity only got consolidated in the past century, with most of them seeing themselves as migrants from other places. HaOfa (talk) 06:55, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- You're confusing indigeneity with identity. While identifying with the land is a feature of indigeneity, having a national identity is not. Tribes in the Amazon are indigenous without reference to any kind of identity outside of their tribe/village. Identity is if anything misleading, as endogamous conceptions surrounding indigeneity are more likely to be misled by myth-building, especially in a specifically nationalistic context. For instance, Yasser Arafat's association of the Palestinians with the Jebusites was just ahistorical verbiage. Indigeneity is an anthropological question, not a cultural one. Iskandar323 (talk) 07:19, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- I don't believe I am confusing anything. Numerous political claims have been made over recent decades, including the aforementioned remark from Arafat. However, if you were to ask today's Palestinians about their origins, many would say they come primarily from Arabia, as well as from Transjordan, Egypt, and other regions. Only a minority claim local origins. HaOfa (talk) 08:15, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, so again, you're just claiming some anecdotal oral testimony as something that somehow means something, and not even by way a source. Iskandar323 (talk) 08:57, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- While a bit of OR is acceptable on talk pages, please stop writing comment after comment with no reference to any sources. This is not a forum and it's just not helpful. Selfstudier (talk) 09:29, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- I don't believe I am confusing anything. Numerous political claims have been made over recent decades, including the aforementioned remark from Arafat. However, if you were to ask today's Palestinians about their origins, many would say they come primarily from Arabia, as well as from Transjordan, Egypt, and other regions. Only a minority claim local origins. HaOfa (talk) 08:15, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- You're confusing indigeneity with identity. While identifying with the land is a feature of indigeneity, having a national identity is not. Tribes in the Amazon are indigenous without reference to any kind of identity outside of their tribe/village. Identity is if anything misleading, as endogamous conceptions surrounding indigeneity are more likely to be misled by myth-building, especially in a specifically nationalistic context. For instance, Yasser Arafat's association of the Palestinians with the Jebusites was just ahistorical verbiage. Indigeneity is an anthropological question, not a cultural one. Iskandar323 (talk) 07:19, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- @Zero0000 I'm not sure you know what I am arguing for, so how do you know if I'll achieve it or not?
- (1)The bottom line (literally) of your reply is that you admit that the word "native" doesn't have a precise definition. That means different people understand it differently, and that's a very good reason NOT to use it here as it can be misleading.
- (2) Additionally you say that the solution is "to follow sources". Well here are several sources that point to the fact that some of the Palestinians trace their origins to outside of Palestine:
- Swedenburg, Ted (2003). Memories of Revolt: The 1936–1939 Rebellion and the Palestinian National Past. University of Arkansas Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-55728-763-2.
These primordialist claims regarding the Palestinians' primeval and prior roots in the land operated at the level of the collective. When it came to an individual's own family, however, Arab-Islamic discourse took precedence over archaeological justifications. I ran across no Palestinian villager (or urbanite) who claimed personal descent from the Canaanites. Villagers typically traced their family or their hamila's origins back to a more recent past in the Arabian peninsula. Many avowed descent from some nomadic tribe that had migrated from Arabia to Palestine either during or shortly after the Arab-Islamic conquests. By such a claim they inserted their family's history into the narrative of Arab and Islamic civilization and connected themselves to a genealogy that possessed greater local and contemporary prestige than did ancient or pre-Islamic descent. Several men specifically connected their forefathers' date of entry into Palestine to their participation in the army of Salih al-Din al-Ayyubi (Saladin), a historical figure whose significance has been retrospectively enlarged by nationalist discourse such that he is now regarded not merely as a hero of "Islamic" civilization but as a "national" luminary as well. (Modern nationalist discourse tends to downplay Salah al-Din's Kurdish origins.) Palestinians of all political stripes viewed Salah al-Din's wars against the Crusaders as a forerunner of the current combats against foreign intruders. Many considered Salah al-Din's victory over the Crusaders at Hittin (A.D. 1187) as a historical precedent that offered hope for their own eventual triumph even if, like the Crusader wars, the current struggle with Israel was destined to last more than two centuries. Family histories affiliated to earlier "patriotic" struggles against European aggression tied interviewees to a continuous narrative of national resistance. Villagers claiming descent from Arabs who entered Palestine during the Arab-Islamic conquest equally viewed these origins as establishing their historical precedence over the Jews
- Grossman D. (1984), Spatial analysis of historical migrations in Samaria, Geojournal, Volume 9, pages 393–406: "Migrations of families (mainly during the past three to four centuries) were recorded on the basis of local traditions in Samaria — the N part of the West Bank. The same destinations were more important also for migrants from outside Samaria. A strong “push” factor was found to explain migration from Hebron, Gaza, and Egypt — all S of Samaria. Trans-Jordanian migrations were, however, the most important ones outside those originating in Samaria itself."
- Muhammad Suwaed (2015), Historical Dictionary of the Bedouins, Rowman & Littlefield, p. 181 : "The tribes of the Bank region already penetrated the region during the period of the Ottoman rule. The history of the Bedouins in Palestine goes back a long way. It starts with the Arab invasion of Palestine in the 7th century". Vegan416 (talk) 10:26, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- That some Palestinians trace their origins outside Palestine is irrelevant to the question here. What is required is sourcing that contradicts the sourcing I posted above, which assesses Palestinians as indigenous. In fact, at this point I am not convinced that we should not just flat out be saying so, that was why I originally created this section, to discuss that, not what native means. Selfstudier (talk) 11:05, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- As Self says, the fact that some Palestinians profess ancestry from outside Palestine does not impact the issue of indigenousity. Most likely David Ben-Gurion was descended from Gengis Khan, so what? And the fuzziness of the meanings of words is more reason to follow what sources say, not less. Zero 12:17, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- @Selfstudier, I disagree that the sources I brought are irrelevant. But putting that aside, let’s look at your sources. In truth I didn't pay much attention to your sources before, as I was responding specifically to Levivich’s ridiculous claim that saying that not all Palestinians are indigenous is like saying that the moon is made of cheese, and I didn't have time to thoroughly go over all of this long discussion. But I looked at your sources now, and here are some comments: 1. The sources I brought actually directly contradict at least one of the sources you gave. Your source from Walid Hamidi says that the Palestinians see themselves as descending also "from indigenous peoples who had lived in the country since time immemorial". Whereas my source from Swedenburg says "I ran across no Palestinian villager (or urbanite) who claimed personal descent from the Canaanites".
- 2. Additionally, one of your own sources actually admits that the subject of Palestinian indigeneity is disputed among scholars: Native Peoples of the World: Steven L. Danver, An Encylopedia of Groups, Cultures and Contemporary Issues, Routledge, 2012, p. 554: "Thus, Palestinians are considered by some to be the indigenous people of present-day Israel, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip. Other scholars dispute this view, asserting that Jews and others resided in Palestine-usually defined as the narrow strip of land bordered by the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea – long before the Arabs arrived in the seventh century”.
- Now for @Zero0000, 3. As you can see in point 2 here, there are sources that dispute the view that the Palestinians are indigenous. Therefore if you want to follow the sources in a NPOV way, you need to mention this counter-view as well. At the very least you cannot write this claim in wiki-voice. I.e you should write the leading sentence as something like: “Palestinians are an Arab ethnonational group who, according to some scholars, are native to Palestine”.
- 4. Alternatively you can simply decide not to use the word “native” or “indigenous”. The fact that some sources use this term, which you admit is fuzzy, doesn’t mean you must include it in the lead section. Personally I have no problem to agree in casual conversation or a political debate that both Palestinians and Jews are “native” to this land. And I think I have said as much in one of our earlier discussions on another related topic. But while in casual conversation or political debates we can use imprecise and fuzzy terms, it is a different matter altogether to use such fuzzy terminology in an encyclopedia entry, without explication. In an encyclopedia, and especially when talking in wiki-voice, we should be as precise as possible, and therefore take from the sources the precise facts they contain rather than whatever fuzzy (and disputed) adjective they use.
- 5. My recommendation therefore is to change the leading sentence to something like: “Palestinians are an Arab ethnonational group who are descendants of various peoples who lived in Palestine over the millennia”. This has two advantages: (a) It contains a factual claim that appears more or less in all the sources and nobody disputes, so it can be said in wikivoice. (b) It avoids the fuzzy term “native”. Vegan416 (talk) 08:42, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
- Still waiting for you and any of the objectors to find any sources yourselves that contest indigeneity. I have provided one that says, in the meta, that some do, now please locate them so we can assess the comparative weight. Native was a sort of compromise that hasn't been accepted and I didn't much like myself not because it was fuzzy but because it seems like an unnecessary dilution, so I am returning to indigenous, which has plenty of sourcing in support. Selfstudier (talk) 09:24, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
- I don't know what sources the Encyclopedia refers to, as it doesn't have references. But I found some sources that it might had in mind, and several other sources that were published after the Encyclopedia:
- Yahel, H., Kark, R., Frantzman, S. (2012). Are the Negev Bedouin an indigenous people?). Middle East Quarterly, 4, p. 5: "Far from being the indigenous inhabitants, the Bedouin were relative latecomers to the Negev, preying on the villages and caravansaries that dotted the sparsely populated wilderness."; p. 14: "Although there is no official definition of indigeneity in international law, Negev Bedouin cannot be regarded as an indigenous people in the commonly accepted sense. If anything, the Bedouin have more in common with the European settlers who migrated to other lands, coming into contact with existing populations with often unfortunate results for the latter."
- Frantzman, S., Yahel, H., Kark, R. (2012) Contested Indigeneity: The Development of an Indigenous Discourse on the Bedouin of the Negev, Israel. Israel Studies, 17(1), 78–104 :"The relatively new Bedouin claim to be classified as indigenous, having gained some international and academic support, is increasingly part of the self-perception of the educated elite among the Bedouin. However, the claim and international recognition face hurdles that the scholars mentioned above avoided discussing, many of which mirror the disputes and debates throughout the world that deal with indigenous peoples. For instance, one issue in the case of the Bedouin is the important and critical element of original occupancy of the land. The current Negev Bedouin tribes arrived to the Negev, from their historical homeland in the Arabian Desert, Transjordan, Egypt, and the Sinai, mainly since the eighteenth century and onwards. Scholars and activists have not wrestled or debated this issue."
- Joffe, Alex (2017). Palestinian Settler-Colonialism. Begin-Sadat Center Perspectives Paper No. 577: "Echoing Inbari, it is not to be argued here that 'there are no Palestinians' who thus do not deserve political rights, including self-rule and a state. To do so would be both logically and morally wrong. Palestinians have the right to define themselves as they see fit, and they must be negotiated with in good faith by Israelis. What Palestinians cannot claim, however, is that they are Palestine’s indigenous population and the Jews are settler-colonialists."
- Ukashi, Ran (2018). "Zionism, Imperialism, and Indigeneity in Israel/Palestine: A Critical Analysis". Peace and Conflict Studies: Vol. 25: No. 1 , Article 7, p. 13: "Again, while making exception for those Arabized Peoples that could justifiably claim lineage directly to antiquity, it can be demonstrated that of the significant cohort of Arab economic migrants to Palestine from modern-day Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, and elsewhere prior to partition in 1947, no reasonably Indigenous connection to the territory can be claimed."
- Troen, I., & Troen, C. (2019). Indigeneity. Israel Studies, 24(2), 17–32: "We have argued that despite the admitted distortions there is a covert polemical advantage to designating Bedouins as well as other Palestinian Arabs as "indigenous" The deliberate use of the term “indigenous” in spurious scholarship furthers tendentious narratives for partisan and polemical advantage".
- Block, Walter E.; Futerman, Alan G. (2021). The Classical Liberal Case for Israel. Springer Nature. p. 28: "Therefore, the claim to the widely held idea that Palestinian Arabs are the indigenous population of the land, with a millennia connection to it, is simply not based on facts." Vegan416 (talk) 17:32, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- I have way more sources that that. And three of those are about the Bedouin? Keep trying tho. Selfstudier (talk) 17:45, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- The Bedouins in Palestine are considered part of the Palestinians now. Don't you know that? And counting doesn't really matter here. If I show that there are RS that dispute the claim then it is disputed. Vegan416 (talk) 17:53, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Doesn't work like that. Wait and see. Selfstudier (talk) 17:57, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Wait for what? Vegan416 (talk) 17:58, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- To see. Selfstudier (talk) 17:59, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- To see what? Vegan416 (talk) 18:00, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Asked and answered (twice). Selfstudier (talk) 18:02, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Are you trolling me? Vegan416 (talk) 18:03, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Pot..kettle. Selfstudier (talk) 18:12, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- I don't understand what you want. I told you - if different RS have different opinions on a claim then you cannot make this claim in a wikivoice. Vegan416 (talk) 18:28, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- We can if there is a clear majority, which there is, your sources, 3 of which only deal with a subset of Palestinians, are a distinct minority. Selfstudier (talk) 18:35, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Misplaced Pages:Neutral point of view#Explanation Vegan416 (talk) 18:38, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- " including all verifiable points of view which have sufficient due weight." Your sources do not demonstrate due weight, whereas the sources I have provided (dozens of them) clearly do. Selfstudier (talk) 18:40, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- I disagree with you. I think my sources have sufficient due weight. Vegan416 (talk) 18:45, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Well, we are back to wait and see. Selfstudier (talk) 18:48, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- I see you are back to trolling, so bye for now. I'll just note by way of parting that the editor/writer of the Native Peoples of the World: An Encyclopedia of Groups, Cultures and Contemporary Issues that you brought among your sources also thinks like me that this view has sufficient due weight to be mentioned. Vegan416 (talk) 18:55, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- I have absolutely no idea why you think I am trolling. You ask a question and I reply is not trolling. I could just not reply at all if you would prefer. Selfstudier (talk) 18:57, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- You repeat saying "wait and see" and refuse to explain what you mean by this. Vegan416 (talk) 18:59, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- It means exactly that. Selfstudier (talk) 19:08, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Sorry, but I have more interesting things to do than waiting for unspecified things to happen... Vegan416 (talk) 19:13, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- It means exactly that. Selfstudier (talk) 19:08, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- You repeat saying "wait and see" and refuse to explain what you mean by this. Vegan416 (talk) 18:59, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- I have absolutely no idea why you think I am trolling. You ask a question and I reply is not trolling. I could just not reply at all if you would prefer. Selfstudier (talk) 18:57, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- I see you are back to trolling, so bye for now. I'll just note by way of parting that the editor/writer of the Native Peoples of the World: An Encyclopedia of Groups, Cultures and Contemporary Issues that you brought among your sources also thinks like me that this view has sufficient due weight to be mentioned. Vegan416 (talk) 18:55, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Well, we are back to wait and see. Selfstudier (talk) 18:48, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- I disagree with you. I think my sources have sufficient due weight. Vegan416 (talk) 18:45, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- " including all verifiable points of view which have sufficient due weight." Your sources do not demonstrate due weight, whereas the sources I have provided (dozens of them) clearly do. Selfstudier (talk) 18:40, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Misplaced Pages:Neutral point of view#Explanation Vegan416 (talk) 18:38, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- We have an article on the Negev Bedouin, its Negev Bedouin. It isnt this article. nableezy - 18:42, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- The sources do not speak only about the Bedouins Vegan416 (talk) 18:45, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- They do except for a couple of them, one hysterical in its tone and the other representing a minority view published by an avowedly partisan think tank. nableezy - 20:42, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- The sources do not speak only about the Bedouins Vegan416 (talk) 18:45, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- We can if there is a clear majority, which there is, your sources, 3 of which only deal with a subset of Palestinians, are a distinct minority. Selfstudier (talk) 18:35, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- I don't understand what you want. I told you - if different RS have different opinions on a claim then you cannot make this claim in a wikivoice. Vegan416 (talk) 18:28, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Pot..kettle. Selfstudier (talk) 18:12, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Are you trolling me? Vegan416 (talk) 18:03, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Asked and answered (twice). Selfstudier (talk) 18:02, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- To see what? Vegan416 (talk) 18:00, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- To see. Selfstudier (talk) 17:59, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Wait for what? Vegan416 (talk) 17:58, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Doesn't work like that. Wait and see. Selfstudier (talk) 17:57, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- The Bedouins in Palestine are considered part of the Palestinians now. Don't you know that? And counting doesn't really matter here. If I show that there are RS that dispute the claim then it is disputed. Vegan416 (talk) 17:53, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- On the subject of Arab Bedouins specifically in the Southern Levant, I'm not sure whether these scholars got their sources, but the Nabataean Arabs, and other Arab tribes and nomads, have indupitably roamed the deserts of the Southern Levant since antiquity. It doesn't get much more indigenous than being an tribal nomad in that desert. Iskandar323 (talk) 20:40, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- I have way more sources that that. And three of those are about the Bedouin? Keep trying tho. Selfstudier (talk) 17:45, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Still waiting for you and any of the objectors to find any sources yourselves that contest indigeneity. I have provided one that says, in the meta, that some do, now please locate them so we can assess the comparative weight. Native was a sort of compromise that hasn't been accepted and I didn't much like myself not because it was fuzzy but because it seems like an unnecessary dilution, so I am returning to indigenous, which has plenty of sourcing in support. Selfstudier (talk) 09:24, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, "native" doesn't have a precise definition, and this is especially true in regions like the Levant, which has been a crossroads between major civilizations, absorbing numerous migrations over millennia, often with open borders as part of large empires. We're not talking the aborigines or native americans here. Bottom line, I see no reason to use 'native' (except maybe political, if we're honest), to define a group whose distinct identity only got consolidated in the past century, with most of them seeing themselves as migrants from other places. HaOfa (talk) 06:55, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
- That doesn't mean the Palestinians, or even Husaynis, are not native to Palestine. I mean, FFS, Muhammad lived over 1000 years ago! Levivich (talk) 18:48, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
- Actually it is more complicated than that. For example, one of the most distinguished Palestinian families - the Husayni family, to which belong important figures like Amin Al Husayni and Faisal Husseini - claims to be descendants of the prophet Muhammad who clearly was not native to Palestine. See here (the original source is here in p. 1053). Vegan416 (talk) 18:39, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
- They're Bedouin. They move around a lot. And then come back. And then go away. And then come back again. What causes this strange behavior? Next up, on In Search of... (TV series).Dan Murphy (talk) 23:24, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- A single dated (2012 is quite old at this point) and generalist tertiary source by a non-specialist is not particularly useful in establishing current scholarly consensus. Iskandar323 (talk) 12:03, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
- It's off-topic, but incidentally Swedenburg does not affirm the claims. He says:
"Many avowed descent By such a claim they inserted their family's history into the narrative that possessed greater local and contemporary prestige than did ancient or pre-Islamic descent."
So far from lending these "avowed claims" any credence, he points out the ulterior motives that accompany them (as well as other ahistorical narratives such as Saladin not being Kurdish). Iskandar323 (talk) 13:00, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
I checked a few more sources:
- Pappe, Ilan (2022) . A History of Modern Palestine (3rd ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-24416-9.
- Rogan, Eugene (2017) . The Arabs: A History (Revised and updated ed.). Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-03248-8.
- Wolfe, Patrick (2016). Traces of History: Elementary Structures of Race. Verso Books. ISBN 9781781689189.
All three refer to Palestinians as indigenous. In addition to the sources posted above by Self and others, I'd agree with using the term "indigenous." Levivich (talk) 16:32, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
- Same, and the idea that you can argue against sources that directly say something with sources that do not directly dispute it is a non-starter here. nableezy - 16:45, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
- More sources...might be some duplication, haven't finished checking them:
- Palestinians are indigenous Abdullah, D. (2019). A century of cultural genocide in Palestine. In Cultural Genocide (pp. 227-245). Routledge.
- "The Zionist mission was, therefore, to ethnically cleanse the land. Theodore Herzl, the movement’s founder, was convinced that the fulfilment of their dream would result in the acute suffering and misery for the indigenous population."
- Palestinians are indigenous Pappe, I. (2007). The ethnic cleansing of Palestine. Simon and Schuster.
- Palestinians are indigenous Nijim, M. (2020). Genocide in Gaza: Physical destruction and beyond.
- Palestinians are indigenous Culverwell, S. M. (2017). Israel and Palestine-An analysis of the 2014 Israel-Gaza war from a genocidal perspective.
- Cites others and adopts their framework: "Pappé (2005), Shaw (2010), Docker (2012), Lloyd (2012), Rashed and Short (2012), and Rashed, Short and Docker (2014) have all analyzed the 1948 conflict from a settler-colonial perspective. In this relationship, these scholars recognize the Zionist Jews as the ‘settlers’ and the ‘Arab Palestinians’ as the indigenous population."
- Palestinians are indigenous Atallah, D. G., & Awartani, H. (2024). Embodying Homeland: Palestinian Grief and the Perseverance of Beauty in a Time of Genocide. Journal of Palestine Studies, 1-9.
- Indigeneity is about identity, not practice, and both Israelis and Palestinians incorporate it into theirs Busbridge, R. (2018). Israel-Palestine and the settler colonial ‘turn’: From interpretation to decolonization. Theory, Culture & Society, 35(1), 91-115.
- Implies in passing that Palestinians are indigenous Moses, A. D. (2011). Paranoia and Partisanship: Genocide Studies, Holocaust Historiography, and the ‘Apocalyptic Conjuncture’. The Historical Journal, 54(2), 553-583.
- "the mufti still features in Zionist literature as a co-perpetrator of the Holocaust, converting him from an indigenous, anti-colonialist to an Arab-Muslim-Nazi, the ancestor of Hamas, Hizbollah, Iran, and other 'Islamofascist' enemies of Israel"
- Palestinians are indigenous Tabar, L., & Desai, C. (2017). Decolonization is a global project: From Palestine to the Americas. Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society, 6(1).
- "In 1948, the Zionist settler colonization of Palestine culminated in the mass eviction of the overwhelming majority of the indigenous Palestinian people"
- Palestinians are indigenous Said, E. (1999). Palestine: memory, invention and space. The landscape of Palestine: Equivocal poetry, 3-20.
- "The link between the metaphors of buildings and housing, and erasure, with the necessary steps to the establishment of a Jewish state in Palestine was always clear to the country's indigenous inhabitants"
- Palestinians are indigenous Abu-Saad, I. (2001). Education as a tool for control vs. development among indigenous peoples: The case of Bedouin Arabs in Israel. Hagar: International Social Science Review, 2(2), 241-259.
- Both have a claim to indigeneity Ukashi, R. (2018). Zionism, Imperialism, and Indigeneity in Israel/Palestine: A Critical Analysis. Peace and Conflict Studies, 25(1), 7.
- Palestinians are indigenous Pappe, I. (2018). Indigeneity as cultural resistance: Notes on the Palestinian struggle within twenty-first-century Israel. South Atlantic Quarterly, 117(1), 157-178.
- Palestinians are indigenous Blatman, N., & Sabbagh‐Khoury, A. (2023). The presence of the absence: Indigenous Palestinian urbanism in Israel. International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 47(1), 119-128.
- Palestinians are indigenous, Israelis are explicitly non-indigenous Veracini, L. (2015). What can settler colonial studies offer to an interpretation of the conflict in Israel–Palestine?. Settler Colonial Studies, 5(3), 268-271.
- Palestinians are indigenous Nasasra, M. (2012). The ongoing Judaisation of the Naqab and the struggle for recognising the indigenous rights of the Arab Bedouin people. Settler Colonial Studies, 2(1), 81-107.
- Palestinians are indigenous, Israelis are explicitly not Krebs, M., & Olwan, D. M. (2012). ‘From Jerusalem to the grand river, our struggles are one’: Challenging Canadian and Israeli settler colonialism. Settler Colonial Studies, 2(2), 138-164.
- Palestinians are indigenous, Israelis are explicitly not Yiftachel, O. (2003). Bedouin-Arabs and the Israeli settler state. Indigenous people between Autonomy and globalization, 21-47.
- Palestinians are indigenous, while Israelis are attempting to become indigenous Monterescu, D., & Handel, A. (2019). Liquid indigeneity: Wine, science, and colonial politics in Israel/Palestine. American Ethnologist, 46(3), 313-327.
- Palestinians are indigenous Abu-Rayya, H. M., & Abu-Rayya, M. H. (2009). Acculturation, religious identity, and psychological well-being among Palestinians in Israel. International Journal of Intercultural Relations, 33(4), 325-331.
- Palestinians are indigenous, Israelis are explicitly not Blatman-Thomas, N. (2017). Commuting for rights: Circular mobilities and regional identities of Palestinians in a Jewish-Israeli town. Geoforum, 78, 22-32.
- Palestinians are indigenous, Israelis are explicitly not Nabulsi, J. (2023). Reclaiming Palestinian Indigenous Sovereignty. Journal of Palestine Studies, 52(2), 24-42.
- Palestinians are indigenous Murphy, T. (2010). ‘Courses and Recourses’ Exploring Indigenous Peoples’ Land Reclamation in Search of Fresh Solutions for Israelis and Palestinians. Journal for the Study of Peace and Conflict, 54-69.
- (about Negev Bedouins) Israelis are not indigenous Kram, N. (2013). Clashes over recognition: The struggle of indigenous Bedouins for land ownership rights under Israeli law. California Institute of Integral Studies.
- We should move beyond a settler-indigenous framework Bashir, B., & Busbridge, R. (2019). The politics of decolonisation and bi-nationalism in Israel/Palestine. Political Studies, 67(2), 388-405.
- Palestinians are indigenous, Israelis are explicitly not Sasa, G. (2023). Oppressive pines: Uprooting Israeli green colonialism and implanting Palestinian A’wna. Politics, 43(2), 219-235.
- Palestinians are indigenous Khatib, I. (2021). Attitudes of indigenous minority leaders toward political events in their trans-state national group: Between identity, conflict and values. Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 27(2), 149-168.
- Israelis are not indigenous, they've merely attempted to claim indigeneity Cheyfitz, E. (2014). The force of exceptionalist narratives in the Israeli—Palestinian conflict. Native American and Indigenous Studies, 1(2), 107-124.
- Palestinians are indigenous Arar, K. (2012). Israeli education policy since 1948 and the state of Arab education in Israel. Italian Journal of Sociology of Education, 4(1), 113-145.
- (about the Druze) Israelis are not indigenous Yiftachel, O., & Segal, M. D. (1998). Jews and Druze in Israel: state control and ethnic resistance. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 21(3), 476-506.
- Palestinians are indigenous Abdullah, D. (2019). A century of cultural genocide in Palestine. In Cultural Genocide (pp. 227-245). Routledge.
- Selfstudier (talk) 18:19, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
- Let's keep adding sources here so that this doesn't get archived while there are ongoing discussions on the matter. Selfstudier (talk) 09:16, 8 August 2024 (UTC)
- Adding more sources who hold the same partisan viewpoint does not alter the overall result. Yes, there are sources that adopt this framing, but most of them adhere to the settler-colonial paradigm of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and/or aligned with progressive and left-wing ideologies. The critical factor is the weight of evidence and whether this perspective achieves consensus within the scholarly community. Currently, this is not the case. ABHammad (talk) 09:57, 8 August 2024 (UTC)
- This section is for sources, feel free to add some. Selfstudier (talk) 10:05, 8 August 2024 (UTC)
- Take, for example, The Economist's definition: 'Palestinians - A population of around 14 million people who trace their origins to British-ruled Palestine. Around 7 million Palestinians live in Israel, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip. Another 7 million are scattered across the Arab world and beyond. Nearly 6 million are registered as refugees.' This outlet is famous for its radical centrist, neutral position. In this case, it exemplifies how a neutral definition of Palestinians should look like. Misplaced Pages should be neutral, not a partisan source. ABHammad (talk) 10:07, 8 August 2024 (UTC)
- Not a scholarly source. Such sources should be trivially easy to locate if there is actually any support for the position. Selfstudier (talk) 10:09, 8 August 2024 (UTC)
- Take, for example, The Economist's definition: 'Palestinians - A population of around 14 million people who trace their origins to British-ruled Palestine. Around 7 million Palestinians live in Israel, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip. Another 7 million are scattered across the Arab world and beyond. Nearly 6 million are registered as refugees.' This outlet is famous for its radical centrist, neutral position. In this case, it exemplifies how a neutral definition of Palestinians should look like. Misplaced Pages should be neutral, not a partisan source. ABHammad (talk) 10:07, 8 August 2024 (UTC)
- This section is for sources, feel free to add some. Selfstudier (talk) 10:05, 8 August 2024 (UTC)
- Adding more sources who hold the same partisan viewpoint does not alter the overall result. Yes, there are sources that adopt this framing, but most of them adhere to the settler-colonial paradigm of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and/or aligned with progressive and left-wing ideologies. The critical factor is the weight of evidence and whether this perspective achieves consensus within the scholarly community. Currently, this is not the case. ABHammad (talk) 09:57, 8 August 2024 (UTC)
- Let's keep adding sources here so that this doesn't get archived while there are ongoing discussions on the matter. Selfstudier (talk) 09:16, 8 August 2024 (UTC)
- More sources...might be some duplication, haven't finished checking them:
Great work, Selfstudier and Vegan416. I'd recommend you to create a separate page under this talk page about Indigenous Sources, similar to Talk:Sustainable energy/Air pollution statistics under Talk:Sustainable energy. Sustainable energy is an FA-class article.
If you have time, I'd also recommend for you to identify the authors of the works cited. Are they experts or academics? Do they have PhD? Things like that. It'd be also good to identify review articles (WP:Secondary).
For example:
- Khalidi, Walid (1991). "The Palestine Problem: An Overview". Journal of Palestine Studies. 21 (1): 5–16. doi:10.2307/2537362. JSTOR 2537362.
It was under British protection and by the force of British arms that duringthe first phase, from 1918 to 1948, the demographic, economic, military, and organizational infrastructure of the future Jewish state was laid, at the ex-pense of the indigenous Palestinian people and in the teeth of their resist-ance.
. This is a review article and would be considered WP:Secondary. The author, Walid Khalidi, would be considered an expert in my opinion. Bogazicili (talk) 23:11, 14 August 2024 (UTC)
Palestinian diaspora in Indonesia
This edit request has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request. |
There are about 7,000 Palestinians in Indonesia and no one includes them Keyscher5 (talk) 12:29, 21 October 2024 (UTC)
- Not done: it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a "change X to Y" format and provide a reliable source if appropriate. Bsoyka (t • c • g) 13:44, 21 October 2024 (UTC)
Edit warring
With this edit, editor @Pyramids09: reverted stable material with claim "Removing misleading information from lead and formatting", was reverted but repeated the revert without initiating any discussion, which I then reverted as tendentious.
Then @Shoogiboogi: reverted arguing no consensus and that in turn was reverted.
I trust that there will be a discussion before any further reverts, which judging by This RFC and the talk section #Indigeneity above, appear to have no valid basis. Selfstudier (talk) 14:56, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- The indigeneity section of this talk page was begun after similar edit warring by two accounts later found to be socks of banned accounts. And round and round it goes!Dan Murphy (talk) 15:05, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- I am also very concerned that information with respect to Palestinians being native or indigenous keep getting removed. Bogazicili (talk) 15:14, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- I'll put together one of those giant multirefs for "indigenous", which should put that to bed; as far as I can tell that is the word used by every single scholar in this field (that I've checked so far). Also as far as I can tell, the only accounts that have challenged "indigenous" in recent years are the User:ABHammad sockfarm accounts (now globally locked). Levivich (talk) 15:19, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- The only issue with "indigenous" is that it has different definitions depending on the field, such as .
- "Native" is far less likely to be challenged in the lead.
- I'll also be improving the Genetics section in the coming days and weeks. Bogazicili (talk) 15:27, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- It doesn't matter, though, because if all the RSes use "indigenous" and none use "native", Misplaced Pages's hands are tied on this. We can't OR our way around it by picking a word we think will be less likely to be challenged (even though I agree, it's less likely to be challeneged). We can't rewrite history for the sake of bringing stability to our articles, V and NPOV means using the same word the RSes use. I think when we're looking at a list of dozens of sources that includes every historian we can think of, we'll all "get it." Levivich (talk) 15:32, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- That's what I mean by field. Historians may say "indigenous" but from international law perspective, it might have a more narrow definition. Maybe you can add a qualifier. Something like:
- "Palestinians (Arabic: الفلسطينيون, romanized: al-Filasṭīniyyūn) are an Arab ethnonational group native to the region of Palestine. Historians see Palestinians as indigenous to their lands". Bogazicili (talk) 15:39, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- I maintain it's about sources. We don't need to look up the definition of "indigenous" and then decide if it applies to Palestinian--that would be WP:OR. If the sources for this article says "indigenous," then this article says "indigenous," and that's it, even if we (or some of us) think the label doesn't apply. The sources are who decides if the labels apply. Levivich (talk) 17:47, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- I think it was Levivich who added this to begin with, before the above mentioned RFC and when we were still collecting sources but it seems to me that the matter has been resolved in favor of indigenous now, no reason to use an inaccurate wording. Selfstudier (talk) 18:10, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- It doesn't matter, though, because if all the RSes use "indigenous" and none use "native", Misplaced Pages's hands are tied on this. We can't OR our way around it by picking a word we think will be less likely to be challenged (even though I agree, it's less likely to be challeneged). We can't rewrite history for the sake of bringing stability to our articles, V and NPOV means using the same word the RSes use. I think when we're looking at a list of dozens of sources that includes every historian we can think of, we'll all "get it." Levivich (talk) 15:32, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- I'll put together one of those giant multirefs for "indigenous", which should put that to bed; as far as I can tell that is the word used by every single scholar in this field (that I've checked so far). Also as far as I can tell, the only accounts that have challenged "indigenous" in recent years are the User:ABHammad sockfarm accounts (now globally locked). Levivich (talk) 15:19, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- I am also very concerned that information with respect to Palestinians being native or indigenous keep getting removed. Bogazicili (talk) 15:14, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
This article states that Palestinians are indigenous to Palestine. However, this is very much wrong. If we go by the common definition of indigenous, which states "Inhabiting or existing in a land from the earliest times or from before the arrival of colonists", then the Jews would be indigenous, as Jews (or, in this case, their Israelite ancestors) are the first recorded people to inhabit the land of Palestine, being recorded in the Merneptah Stele.. Expulsion does not remove the status of indigenous. Meanwhile, Palestinian Arabs came from Arabia during the Muslim conquests of the seventh century. Although some claim descendants from the Canaanites, this has been throughly disproven via archeological evidence, as well as testimonials from Palestinians themselves.. Therefore, a more accurate lede would go something like this: Palestinians (Arabic: الفلسطينيون, romanized: al-Filasṭīniyyūn) are an ethnonational group descending from inhabitants of the region of Palestine over the millennia, and who are culturally and linguistically Arab. This was the lede for a while, being accurate and well sourced. I restored this lede in a recent revision (https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Palestinians&oldid=1265135214), which was then reverted without a stated reason along with a sockpuppet accusation. I believe that we should return to this correct lede, or at least hold a new RFC about this topic. Cheers. Pyramids09 (talk) 22:22, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- P.S. If someone could collapse the references that would be nice. Pyramids09 (talk) 22:25, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
- I'm open to RfC on this. The sources are clear. For example,
- There was no Anglo settler colony style population replacement in Palestine:
- Dowty, A. (2023). Israel / Palestine (5th ed.). Polity Press. ISBN 978-1-5095-5483-6., Chapter 3: The Arab Story to 1914:
Palestine was part of the first wave of conquest following Muhammad’s death in 632 CE; Jerusalem fell to the Caliph Umar in 638. The indigenous population, descended from Jews, other Semitic groups, and non-Semitic groups such as the Philistines, had been mostly Christianized. Over succeeding centuries it was Islamicized, and Arabic replaced Aramaic (a Semitic tongue closely related to Hebrew) as the dominant language
- Chapter 10: The Perfect Conflict:
Palestinians are the descendants of all the indigenous peoples who lived in Palestine over the centuries; since the seventh century, they have been predominantly Muslim in religion and almost completely Arab in language and culture.
- Genetic studies also seem to confirm this. For example, The Genomic History of the Bronze Age Southern Levant:
People related to these individuals contributed to all present-day Levantine populations
. Especially note Figure S4. Megiddo in the link refers to samples recovered from Megiddo, Israel. These samples: "most of whom date to the Middle-to-Late Bronze Age, except for one dating to the Intermediate Bronze Age and one dating to the Early Iron Age" Bogazicili (talk) 14:16, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
- Actually, I definitely want an RfC on this. This content seems to be subject to long-term abuse, so I'd like a Misplaced Pages consensus on this. Bogazicili (talk) 14:27, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
- We could, although as I said above Talk:Genocide of indigenous peoples#RFC Palestine is already determinative, the close "Editors in favour of inclusion have provided sources that consider the situation in Palestine one that is relevant to this article. Those opposed have failed to challenge the significance of this view, or the reliability of the sources.", in addition the plethora of available sourcing also seems conclusive. Selfstudier (talk) 14:37, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
- We should be considerate about how much community time we consume in these RfCs, but I definitely think we should proceed with an RfC if the edit war continues. Bogazicili (talk) 15:17, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
- We could, although as I said above Talk:Genocide of indigenous peoples#RFC Palestine is already determinative, the close "Editors in favour of inclusion have provided sources that consider the situation in Palestine one that is relevant to this article. Those opposed have failed to challenge the significance of this view, or the reliability of the sources.", in addition the plethora of available sourcing also seems conclusive. Selfstudier (talk) 14:37, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
- Dowty, A. (2023). Israel / Palestine (5th ed.). Polity Press. ISBN 978-1-5095-5483-6., Chapter 3: The Arab Story to 1914:
- All the available evidence suggests Palestinians are indigenous to the land, and are related to Jews and Samaritans, and others in the Levant (the links upthread to the study on Iron Age Canaanite populations is useful). If Arabisation removed indigeneity, then the Egyptians wouldn't be indigenous either. And would Hellenisation have the same effect, too? Incidentally, many undisputed capital-I Indigenous groups did arrive after/replace other groups – take the Kalinago, who reportedly replaced the Igneri and much of the Taíno, or the Inuit who reportedly replaced the earlier Dorset culture. So that's evidently not a deal-breaker, even if it did apply. But what we're learning more and more is that many of these cultures didn't so much invade and replace older cultures but were subsumed into them. Clean breaks are relatively rare. Which is why British people today still have genetic continuity with bodies from 40,000 years ago, despite all the different people – Picts, Celts, Romans, Danes, Jutes, Angles, Saxons, Vikings, Normans, etc – who have lived on the British Isles. Lewisguile (talk) 18:30, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
References
- John Day (2005), In Search of Pre-Exilic Israel, Bloomsbury Publishing, pp. 47.5 'In this sense, the emergence of ancient Israel is viewed not as the cause of the demise of Canaanite culture but as its upshot'.
- Spielvogel, Jackson J. (2012). Western civilization (8th ed.). Australia: Wadsworth/Cengage Learning. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-495-91324-5.
What is generally agreed, however, is that between 1200 and 1000 B.C.E., the Israelites emerged as a distinct group of people, possibly united into tribes or a league of tribes
- Thompson, Thomas L. (1 January 2000). Early History of the Israelite People: From the Written & Archaeological Sources. BRILL. pp. 137ff. ISBN 978-90-04-11943-7.
They are rather a very specific group among the population of Palestine which bears a name that occurs here for the first time that at a much later stage in Palestine's history bears a substantially different signification.
- Hertz, Allen (2014-02-18). "Aboriginal rights of the Jewish People". Times of Israel. Retrieved 2024-11-29.
- Katz, Samuel. Battleground: Fact and Fantasy in Palestine. p. 126. ISBN 978-0933503038.
- B-Class Palestine-related articles
- Top-importance Palestine-related articles
- Palestine-related articles needing attention
- WikiProject Palestine articles
- B-Class Ethnic groups articles
- High-importance Ethnic groups articles
- WikiProject Ethnic groups articles
- B-Class Israel-related articles
- High-importance Israel-related articles
- WikiProject Israel articles
- B-Class Arab world articles
- Top-importance Arab world articles
- WikiProject Arab world articles
- Misplaced Pages pages referenced by the press