The Mandate for Palestine on April
24, 1920 that Depicts the Boundaries of the Land for the Jewish National Home
Destination Yisra’el – “Inherent in all the annals of history is the recognition of the ebb and flow of history as peoples come and go and nations rise and fall. But what is unique, there is only one people, who believed that upon the recognition by their Supreme Being that they were given not just a mandate but a obligation to finish out earth’s history with a return and resettlement to a land, that when they lived there flourished and was called a “land flowing with milk and honey” yet when they were gone, lay desolate, wasted and rejected by all nations, and all peoples.
Such is the dialogue, many times bloody dialogue between the Jewish State of Israel and her neighbors. Recently there was a mandate given to an Israeli committee chaired by Retired Supreme Court Justice Edmond Levy to reexamine all the international laws over the decades of the legality of the Jewish people to build new homes, establish new cities, and develop new land for agriculture and husbandry used to feed, support, and sustain a population of people in the the Land of Israel; who once lived there, then were cast out by wars, and now return to participate in rebuilding a land that no one else wanted.
And then on the eve of the 4th of July, 2012, the National Holiday of the Signing of the Declaration of Independence of the United States of America, this Israeli committee declared that the Jewish Israeli citizens do have a legal right to settle in what are called the “Settlements” of Shomron and Judea. This was the former lands where the Northern Kingdom of Israel once ruled in Samaria and the former Southern Kingdom of Judah once reigned in Judea.
These reports have been widely reported around the world, and for the process of archiving this debate on Destination Yisra’el, will print this article about this critical debate during an era in which the existence of the world community of nations appears also to be in jeopardy. As reported by Eli E. Hertz with the Israel Hayom Staff on July 9, 2012, we begin:
"Right to Live and the Right to Settle"
Retired Supreme Court Justice Edmond Levy
Yehuda Z. Blum, Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Israel to the United Nations had this to say on June 11, 1979:
Yehuda Z. Blum – “A corollary of the inalienable right of the Jewish people to its Land is the right to live in any part of Eretz Yisrael, including Judea and Samaria which are an integral part of Eretz Yisrael. Jews are not foreigners anywhere in the Land of Israel. Anyone who asserts that it is illegal for a Jew to live in Judea and Samaria just because he is a Jew, is in fact advocating a concept that is disturbingly reminiscent of the 'Judenrein' policies of Nazi Germany banning Jews from certain spheres of life for no other reason than that they were Jews. The Jewish villages in Judea, Samaria and the Gaza district are there as of right and are there to stay.
"The right of Jews to settle in the Land of Israel was also recognized in the League of Nations 'Mandate for Palestine' which stressed 'the historical connection of the Jewish people with Palestine and ... the grounds for reconstituting' - I repeat, reconstituting 'their national home in that country.'
"The Mandatory Power was also entrusted with the duty to encourage 'close settlement by Jews on the land, including state lands and waste lands not required for public purposes.'"
Speech at the Louis D. Brandeis Award Dinner of the Zionist Organization of America. (Washington D.C., 11 June 1979)
************
Destination Yisra’el invites you to open and read the following article:
“This Land is My Land”, Mandate for Palestine, the Legal Aspects of Jewish Right” - PDF fileby Eli E. Hertz
Netanyahu urged to adopt report stating settlements are legal
The Mandate for
Palestine on July 24, 1922 - External Agreements
with the Hashemite King of Trans-Jordan that would Become the Home of the Arab
Palestinians that effectively reduced the Territory of Jewish Palestine by 77%
of the Original Mandate
Eli E. Hertz - "Ministers and politicians on the right have asked Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to adopt the findings of a committee which concluded that Israeli settlements in Judea and Samaria are not illegal under international law, since there was no official Palestinian entity in the territory before 1948.
As first reported by Israel Hayom last Tuesday, Retired Supreme Court Justice Edmond Levy, who headed a committee tasked with examining the legality of Jewish construction in Judea and Samaria, declared last Tuesday that Israelis have a legal right to settle the area.
“According to international law, Israelis have a legal right to settle all of Judea and Samaria, or at the very least the lands that Israel controls under agreements with the Palestinian Authority,” Levy stated. “Therefore, the establishment of Jewish settlements [in Judea and Samaria] is, in itself, not illegal.”
The committee was established by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in an effort to determine and cement the legal status of the outposts in Judea and Samaria, with an emphasis on communities that were not built on privately owned Palestinian land, whose status was still in doubt due to legal bureaucracy.
According to Levy, the report’s basic conclusion is that from an international law perspective, “the laws of ‘occupation’ do not apply to the unique historic and legal circumstances surrounding Israel’s decades-long presence in Judea and Samaria.”
“Likewise,” the report said, “the Fourth Geneva Convention [relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War] on the transfer of populations does not apply, and wasn’t intended to apply to communities such as those established by Israel in Judea and Samaria.”
Environmental Protection Minister Gilad Erdan (Likud) welcomed Levy’s findings, and said that he plans to ask the prime minister to convene the Ministerial Committee on Settlement Construction to discuss the report and devise a policy that would reflect its findings, Israel Radio reported. “The report rectifies an unjust situation – both historically and legally – that was perpetuated by the skewed political views that governed Sasson’s outpost report,” Erdan told the radio station.
Upon its establishment in February, the committee headed by Levi was charged with reviewing a 2005 government report by former State Prosecutor’s Office official Talia Sasson, which found that several dozen outposts had been built not only without state approval but on privately held Palestinian land. Officials said at the time that the report needed to be reviewed because Sasson, who later entered politics on the left-wing Meretz party list, may not have been entirely objective.
Head of the Yesha council [the council of the Jewish communities of Judea, Samaria and until 2005 in the Gaza Strip] Danny Dayan told Israel Radio that Levy’s report reflects a “thorough, exhaustive and serious legal document that stands in stark contrast to the report compiled by Talya Sasson in 2005; His recommendations should be read thoroughly and implemented in an orderly fashion.”
Sasson dismissed Levy’s assertion Monday, telling Israel Radio that the Israeli High Court of Justice is the only body vested with the authority to rule on the legal status of Judea and Samaria and that Levy’s report ignores the court’s ruling that declared some of the outposts illegal.
Science and Technology Minister Daniel Hershkowitz (New National Religious Party) echoed Erdan’s request to convene the ministerial forum and said he would like to see the report adopted without delay. He said that Sasson’s report was political and that the new report should be treated as a binding document.
The committee’s recommendations include the following: The government must clarify its position on the issue of Israeli settlements in Judea and Samaria to prevent varying interpretations of its policy; a new community will only be built after the government or an authorized ministerial committee has approved it; the expansion of a community outside the bounds of its authorized jurisdiction must first be approved by the defense minister or a ministerial committee on settlements, in coordination with the prime minister.
On the other hand, the committee declared that the encouragement provided by the government to the settlement enterprise constituted authorization. According to the committee, communities that were built on land owned by the state, or privately owned Israeli land, with the help of government bodies could not be classified as “unauthorized” due to the absence of an official government decision to authorize them. The very assistance provided by the government in their establishment constitutes implicit authorization.
Reacting to the report, the Association of Civil Rights in Israel said Monday that Levy’s conclusions were “unfounded and baseless in international law, and their aim is to legitimize and deepen the injustice perpetrated by successive Israeli governments in the Territories over the past 45 years. The settlement enterprise has created a wrongful situation in which the human rights of the Palestinians are totally subsumed in favor of the interests of settlers.”
“No committee has the ability to change international law, whose main tenet is defence of human rights,” ACRI said in a statement. “Since 1967, successive Israeli governments have held fast to the clear position that the Territories are held in belligerent occupation, that is, military occupation, and are thus not part of the State of Israel. In this matter there is complete agreement between the State of Israel and the international community. Reneging on this position, by a committee appointed by the prime minister, is scandalous,” ACRI added.
Alan Baker, who served in the past as the chief legal counsel to the Foreign Ministry and sat on the committee, dismissed the allegations that Levy’s report is politically biased, telling Israel Radio that the committee members took into account international law, Jordanian law (which is still partially enforced in Judea and Samaria owing to Jordan’s almost 20-year rule) and Israeli law.
Baker said there are no grounds to the claim that settlement construction in Judea and Samaria is illegal, so long as it is not carried out on Palestinian land without authorization and that the necessary construction permits are issued. Baker believes the lack of clarity over property rights in Judea and Samaria and related petitions by alleged landowners prompted the government to commission the report. He said that demolition of structures in those areas should be subject to legal review to avoid a situation in which a “Civil Administration official or clerk decides to do so.”
The Legal Forum for the Land of Israel, a group of activists and jurists, said of the report that “The Levy Committee frees the country from the horror show that was produced by jurists who had abused the interpretation of international law and tailored it to their political views. This was the first such instance where a serious committee headed by a [former] Supreme Court justice engages in a brainstorming session and issues a meaningful report that applies the proper interpretation to the law and points to the distortions created by the justice system. We implore the prime minister to embrace the report and have it serve as a guiding principle in government policymaking.”
************
The Biblical Mandate of the Bible clearly defined that the Land of Canaan later to become the Land of Israel would be a possession of G-d’s Chosen People “forever”. Yet this possession carried a condition, to follow the “613 Commands” of the Torah. The House of Israel refused and were exiled and their identities lost for two and a half millenniums.
A sizeable remnant of the House of Judah accepted the conditions, and out of it flourished over the centuries in both the Middle East and in Europe. As a covenanted people, they not only remembered their heritage but daily prayed for their return to Jerusalem to usher in the final “revealing” of the Jewish Messiah, David, son of David. Yet, the G-d of Israel gave an irrevocable promised by His honor of His Holy Name, that He would also reclaim, redeem, and restore the House of Israel back to the lands of their forefathers (Ezekiel 36). The destiny of the Lost Ten Tribes of the House of Israel is to come home in harmony with your brothers, the Jews of the House of Israel. If you want to learn more, Contact “Kol Ha Tor Vision”, the Voice of the Turtledove.
Here is a joint Orthodox Jewish and 10-Triber Mission to bring awareness of the imminent fulfillment of the Biblical Prophecies regarding the Redemption of all Israel (12 Tribes Re-conciled and Re-United). This super Event of all Times will entail Establishing the Shomron (the Ancient Bible Heartland of the Patriarchs) and the Judean Wilderness as part of the Land of Israel, and preparing the“Land” for the Return of the Lost Tribes of the House of Israel and then the Redemption of All Israel.
For inquiries about Kol Ha Tor Vision for the Lost Tribes of Israel, Visit – “Shomron Lives!”, a Spiritual Retreat and Guest House in Samaria.