“This is the heir; come, let us kill him, and let us seize on his inheritance.”
Matthew 21:38~46; Mark 12:7-
www.PeaceMakersNOW.org

Controversial Bestseller Shakes the Foundation of the Israeli State
By Joshua Holland
What if the Palestinian Arabs who have lived for decades under the heel of the modern Israeli state are in fact descended from the very same “children of Israel” described in the Old Testament?
And what if most modern Israelis aren’t descended from the ancient Israelites at all, but are actually a mix of Europeans, North Africans and others who didn’t “return” to the scrap of land we now call Israel and establish a new state following the attempt to exterminate them during World War II, but came in and forcefully displaced people whose ancestors had lived there for millennia?
What if the entire tale of the Jewish Diaspora -
That’s the explosive thesis of When and How Was the Jewish People Invented?, a book
by Tel Aviv University scholar Shlomo Zand (or Sand) that sent shock-
Its thesis has ramifications that go far beyond some antediluvian academic debate.
Few modern conflicts are as attached to ancient history as that decades-
Central to the ideology of Zionism is the tale -
This view of history animates all Zionists, but none more so than the influential
but reactionary minority -
Inventing a People?
Zand’s central argument is that the Romans didn’t expel whole nations from their territories. Zand estimates that perhaps 10,000 ancient Judeans were vanquished during the Roman wars, and the remaining inhabitants of ancient Judea remained, converting to Islam and assimilating with their conquerors when Arabs subjugated the area. They became the progenitors of today’s Palestinian Arabs, many of whom now live as refugees who were exiled from their homeland during the 20th century.
As Israeli journalist Tom Segev summarized, in a review of the book in Ha’aretz:
There never was a Jewish people, only a Jewish religion, and the exile also never
happened -
But this begs the question: if the ancient people of Judea weren’t expelled en masse, then how did it come to pass that Jewish people are scattered across the world? According to Zand, who offers detailed histories of several groups within what is conventionally known as the Jewish Diaspora, some were Jews who emigrated of their own volition, and many more were later converts to Judaism. Contrary to popular belief, Zand argues that Judaism was an evangelical religion that actively sought out new adherents during its formative period.