UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY RESOLUTION 181
(Redirected from UN General Assembly Resolution 181)
On 29 November 1947 the United Nations voted on a plan for the partition of the British Mandate territory of Palestine to resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict in the British Mandate of Palestine. The plan came to be called the 'United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine' or 'United Nations General Assembly Resolution 181'. The plan was approved by the United Nations General Assembly by 33 votes to 13, with 10 abstentions.
The plan would have partitioned the territory of Palestine into Jewish and Arab states, with the Greater Jerusalem area, encompassing Bethlehem, coming under international control.
The British proposed a Palestine divided between a Jewish and an Arab State, but in time changed their position and sought to limit Jewish immigration from Europe to a minimum. This was seen by the Zionists and their sympathisers as betrayal of the terms of the mandate, especially in light of the increasing persecution in Europe (leading to the Holocaust). It was met with a popular uprising and guerilla war from Jewish and Arab militant groups, often viewed as one of several factors that forced the British to hand the problem of Palestine over to the United Nations. The failure of the British government and the United Nations to implement this plan, prior agreement between the Jewish Agency and King Abdullah to divide Palestine between them,[1] and rejection of the plan by the Arabs resulted in the War for Independence, also known as the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.
After the First World War and the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the victorious Allied Supreme Council met at the San Remo Conference in April 1920 to confirm the allocation of Ottoman lands under the proposed mandate system. Palestine was placed under British mandate.
The Balfour Declaration of 1917 and increased anti-Semitism in Europe, which had been on the rise since the late 19th century, led to a greater Jewish influx following the war.
On 24 July, in Europe, which had terms of the British Mandate over Palestine and Transjordan. On 16 September 1922 the League of Nations formally approved a memorandum from Lord Balfour confirming the exemption of Transjordan from the clauses of the mandate concerning the creation of a Jewish national home and is from the mandate's responsibility to ''facilitate'' Jewish immigration and land settlement.[2]
The British proposed a Palestine divided between a Jewish and an Arab State, but in time changed their position and sought to limit Jewish immigration from Europe to a minimum. This was seen by the Zionists and their sympathisers as betrayal of the terms of the mandate, especially in light of the increasing persecution in Europe. It was met with a popular uprising and guerilla war from Jewish militant groups, often viewed as one of several factors that forced the British to hand the problem of Palestine over to the United Nations.
The United Nations, the successor to the League of Nations, attempted to solve the dispute between the Jews and Arabs in Palestine. On May 15 1947 the UN appointed a committee, the UNSCOP, composed of representatives from eleven states. To make the committee more neutral, none of the Great Powers were represented. After spending three months conducting hearings and general survey of the situation in Palestine, UNSCOP officially released its report on August 31. A majority of nations (Canada, Czechoslovakia, Guatemala, Netherlands, Peru, Sweden, Uruguay) recommended the creation of independent Arab and Jewish states, with Jerusalem to be placed under international administration. A minority (India, Iran, Yugoslavia) supported the creation of a single federal state containing both Jewish and Arab constituent states. Australia abstained.
) for the and the eventual .
★ Blue = area assigned to a Jewish state in the original UN partition plan, and within the 1949 Israel armistice lines.
★ Green = area assigned to an Arab state in the original UN partition plan, and controlled by Egypt or Jordan from 1949-1967.
★ Light red = area assigned to an Arab state in the original UN partition plan, but within the 1949 Israel armistice lines.
★ Magenta = area assigned to the "Corpus Separatum" of Jerusalem/Bethlehem (neither Jewish nor Arab) by the plan, but controlled by Jordan from 1949-1967.
★ Greyish = area assigned to the "Corpus Separatum" of Jerusalem/Bethlehem (neither Jewish nor Arab) by the plan, but within the 1949 Israel armistice lines.]]

Palestine's land surface was approximately 26,320,505 dunums (26,320 km²), of which about one third was cultivable. By comparison, the size of modern day Israel (as of 2006) is 20,770,000 dunums (20,770 km²) (Israel#Geography Geography of Israel). The land in Jewish possession had risen from 456,000 dunums (456 km²) in 1920 to 1,393,000 dunums (1,393 km²) in 1945Khalaf, 1991, pp. 26–27. and 1,850,000 dunums (1,850 km²) by 1947 (Avneri p. 224). Israel
No figures of land ownership by Arabs were available, due to difficulties that were due to the incomplete transition from the unreliable Ottoman Land Code to a modern land registration system.
''See also: Land ownership of the British Mandate of Palestine''

The UN General Assembly made a non-binding recommendation for a three-way partition Israeli History at RepresentativePress. of Palestine into a Jewish State, an Arab State and a small internationally administered zone including the religiously significant towns Jerusalem and Bethlehem. The two states envisioned in the plan were each composed of three major sections, linked by extraterritorial crossroads. The Jewish state would receive the Coastal Plain, stretching from Haifa to Rehovot, the Eastern Galilee (surrounding the Sea of Galilee and including the Galilee panhandle) and the Negev, including the southern outpost of Umm Rashrash (now Eilat). The Arab state would receive the Western Galilee, with the town of Acre, the Samarian highlands and the Judean highlands, and the southern coast stretching from north of Isdud (now Ashdod) and encompassing what is now the Gaza Strip, with a section of desert along the Egyptian border.
The partition defined by the General Assembly resolution differed somewhat from the UNSCOP report partition. Most notably, Jaffa was constituted as an enclave of the Arab State and the boundaries were modified to include Beersheba and a large section of the Negev desert within the Arab State and a section of the Dead Sea shore within the Jewish State.
The land allocated to the Arab state (about 43% of Mandatory Palestine UN Partition Plan at Merip.) consisted of all of the highlands, except for Jerusalem, plus one third of the coastline. The Jewish state was to receive 56% of Mandatory Palestine, a slightly larger area to accommodate the increasing numbers of Jews who would immigrate there. The state included three fertile lowland plains — the Sharon on the coast, the Jezreel Valley and the upper Jordan Valley.
The bulk of the proposed Jewish State's territory, however, consisted of the Negev Desert. The desert was not suitable for agriculture, nor for urban development at that time. The Jewish state was also given sole access to the Red Sea and the Sea of Galilee (the largest source of fresh water in Palestine). The land allocated to the Jewish state was largely made up of areas in which there was a significant Jewish population. Map of population distribution at Passia.
The plan tried its best to accommodate as many Jews as possible into the Jewish state. In many specific cases, this meant including areas of Arab majority (but with a significant Jewish minority) in the Jewish state. Thus the Jewish State would have an overall large Arab minority. Areas that were sparsely populated (like the Negev), were also included in the Jewish state to create room for immigration in order to relieve the "Jewish Problem". The Jewish Problem at MidEastWeb.
The UNSCOP boundaries divided the population such that the Arab State would have a population of 735,000, including 10,000 (1%) Jews, and the Jewish State would have a population of 905,000, including 498,000 (55%) Jews.[3] Due to boundary adjustments the Arab population of the Jewish State decreased by approximately 85,000, so the Jewish State would have had a 61% Jewish majority.[4] The UNSCOP report noted that in the Jewish State there would be "about 90,000 Bedouins, cultivators and stock owners who seek grazing further afield in dry seasons." All population figures are based on 1945 statistics.
The majority of the Jews and Jewish groups accepted the proposal, in particular the Jewish Agency, which was the Jewish state-in-formation. A minority of extreme nationalist Jewish groups like Menachem Begin's Irgun Tsvai Leumi and Yitzhak Shamir's Lehi, (known as the Stern Gang) which had been fighting the British, rejected it. Begin warned that the partition would not bring peace because the Arabs would also attack the small state and that "in the war ahead we'll have to stand on our own, it will be a war on our existence and future".[5] Numerous records indicate the joy of Palestine's Jewish inhabitants as they attended to the U.N. session voting for the division proposal. Up to this day, Israeli history books mention November 29th (the date of this session) as the most important date in Israel's acquisition of independence, and many Israeli cities commemorate the date in their streets' names. However, Jews did criticise the lack of territorial continuity for the Jewish state.
The Arab leadership (in and out of Palestine) opposed the plan, arguing that it violated the rights of the majority of the people in Palestine, which at the time was 67% non-Jewish (1,237,000) and 33% Jewish (608,000). Arab leaders also argued a large number of Arabs would be trapped in the Jewish State as a minority. While some Arab leaders opposed the right of the Zionists to establish a state in the region, others criticized the amount and quality of land given to Israel.
On 29 November 1947, the United Nations General Assembly voted 33 to 13, with 10 abstentions, in favour of the Partition Plan, while making some adjustments to the boundaries between the two states proposed by it.
The division was to take effect on the date of British withdrawal from the Mandate Territory of Palestine. Both the United States and Soviet Union supported the resolution.
The 33 countries that voted in favour of the partition were: Australia, Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, Byelorussian SSR, Canada, Costa Rica, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, France, Guatemala, Haiti, Iceland, Liberia, Luxembourg, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Sweden, South Africa, Ukrainian SSR, United States of America, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Uruguay, Venezuela.
The 13 countries that voted against resolution were: Afghanistan, Cuba, Egypt, Greece, India, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey, Yemen.
The ten countries that abstained were: Argentina, Chile, Republic of China, Colombia, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Honduras, Mexico, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Yugoslavia.
One state (Thailand) was absent.
Following the adoption of the plan, Arab countries proposed to query the International Court of Justice on the competence of the General Assembly to partition a country against the wishes of the majority of its inhabitants (it would place 36% of the Arabs inside the Jewish state). This was narrowly defeated.
On the day after the vote, a spate of Arab attacks left seven Jews dead and scores more wounded. Shooting, stoning, and rioting continued apace in the following days. The consulates of Poland and Sweden, both of whose governments had voted for partition, were attacked. Bombs were thrown into cafes, Molotov cocktails were hurled at shops, a synagogue was set on fire. On December 3, at the instigation of the Palestinian leadership, a large mob ransacked the new Jewish commercial center in Jerusalem, looting and burning shops and stabbing and stoning whomever they happened upon. The next day, some 120–150 armed Arabs attacked Kibbutz Efal, on the outskirts of Tel Aviv, in the first large-scale attempt to storm a Jewish village.[6]
The United Kingdom refused to implement the plan arguing it was unacceptable to both sides. It also refused to share the administration of Palestine with the UN Palestine Commission during the transitional period. It terminated the British mandate of Palestine on May 15, 1948.
Fighting began almost as soon as the plan was approved, beginning with the Arab Jerusalem Riots of 1947. The fighting would have an effect on the Arab population of Palestine, as well the Jewish populations of neighboring Arab countries.
Meeting in Cairo in November and December of 1947, the Arab League adopted a series of resolutions aimed at a military solution to the conflict.
★ from the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs
★ from the Yale Law School
★ Information on UN 181 from The Jerusalem Fund/Palestine Center
★ United Nations Information System on the Question of Palestine
★ Arab revolt
★ Hussein-McMahon Correspondence
★ Sykes-Picot Agreement
★ Mandate for Palestine
★ Balfour Declaration 1917
★ Napoleon and a Jewish state in Palestine
★ Faisal-Weizmann Agreement
★ Churchill White Paper, 1922
★
★ Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel, May 14, 1948
★ Jewish refugees
★ Palestinian refugees
★ Immigration to Israel
★ 1947 Jerusalem riots
★ 1948 Arab-Israeli War
★ 1949 Armistice Agreements
★ Arab-Israeli conflict
★ Israeli-Palestinian conflict
★ Proposals for a Palestinian state
★ Jewish exodus from Arab lands
★ Palestinian exodus
★
1. Louis, 1986, p. 374.
2. Sicker, 1999, p. 164.
3. Recommendations to the General Assembly, A/364 United Nations Special Committee on Palestine
4. Palestine Partition Map Total net decrease of 15,500 Arabs, not including Jaffa and Beersheba. According to Village Statistics 1945 (Palestine Government, Jerusalem), Jaffa and Beersheba had 66,280 and 5,560 Arabs, respectively.
5. ''Begin, Menachem, The Revolt 1978'', p. 412.
6. MeForum.
★ Bregman, Ahron (2002). ''Israel's Wars: A History Since 1947''. London: Routledge. ISBN
★ Arieh L. Avneri (1984). ''The Claim of Dispossession: Jewish Land Settlement and the Arabs, 1878–1948''. Transaction Publishers. ISBN
★ Fischbach, Michael R. (2003). ''Records of Dispossession: Palestinian Refugee Property and the Arab-Israeli Conflict''. Columbia University Press. ISBN
★ Gelber, Yoav (1997). ''Jewish-Transjordanian Relations: Alliance of Bars Sinister''. London: Routledge. ISBN-X
★ Khalaf, Issa (1991). ''Politics in Palestine: Arab Factionalism and Social Disintegration,''. SUNY University Press. ISBN
★ Louis, Wm. Roger (1986). ''The British Empire in the Middle East,: Arab Nationalism, the United States, and Postwar Imperialism''. Oxford University Press. ISBN
★ "Palestine". Encyclopædia Britannica Online School Edition, 15 May 2006.
★ Sicker, Martin (1999). ''Reshaping Palestine: From Muhammad Ali to the British Mandate, 1831–1922''. Praeger/Greenwood. ISBN
★ Legal Status of West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem
★ Maps of Palestine
★ Ivan Rand and the UNSCOP Papers
★ Official Map prepared by UNSCOP
On 29 November 1947 the United Nations voted on a plan for the partition of the British Mandate territory of Palestine to resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict in the British Mandate of Palestine. The plan came to be called the 'United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine' or 'United Nations General Assembly Resolution 181'. The plan was approved by the United Nations General Assembly by 33 votes to 13, with 10 abstentions.
The plan would have partitioned the territory of Palestine into Jewish and Arab states, with the Greater Jerusalem area, encompassing Bethlehem, coming under international control.
The British proposed a Palestine divided between a Jewish and an Arab State, but in time changed their position and sought to limit Jewish immigration from Europe to a minimum. This was seen by the Zionists and their sympathisers as betrayal of the terms of the mandate, especially in light of the increasing persecution in Europe (leading to the Holocaust). It was met with a popular uprising and guerilla war from Jewish and Arab militant groups, often viewed as one of several factors that forced the British to hand the problem of Palestine over to the United Nations. The failure of the British government and the United Nations to implement this plan, prior agreement between the Jewish Agency and King Abdullah to divide Palestine between them,[1] and rejection of the plan by the Arabs resulted in the War for Independence, also known as the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.
| Contents |
| Context of the plan |
| The Division |
| Reactions to the plan |
| The Vote |
| Consequences |
| Text of the Resolution |
| See also |
| Notes |
| References |
| External links |
Context of the plan
After the First World War and the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the victorious Allied Supreme Council met at the San Remo Conference in April 1920 to confirm the allocation of Ottoman lands under the proposed mandate system. Palestine was placed under British mandate.
The Balfour Declaration of 1917 and increased anti-Semitism in Europe, which had been on the rise since the late 19th century, led to a greater Jewish influx following the war.
On 24 July, in Europe, which had terms of the British Mandate over Palestine and Transjordan. On 16 September 1922 the League of Nations formally approved a memorandum from Lord Balfour confirming the exemption of Transjordan from the clauses of the mandate concerning the creation of a Jewish national home and is from the mandate's responsibility to ''facilitate'' Jewish immigration and land settlement.[2]
The British proposed a Palestine divided between a Jewish and an Arab State, but in time changed their position and sought to limit Jewish immigration from Europe to a minimum. This was seen by the Zionists and their sympathisers as betrayal of the terms of the mandate, especially in light of the increasing persecution in Europe. It was met with a popular uprising and guerilla war from Jewish militant groups, often viewed as one of several factors that forced the British to hand the problem of Palestine over to the United Nations.
The United Nations, the successor to the League of Nations, attempted to solve the dispute between the Jews and Arabs in Palestine. On May 15 1947 the UN appointed a committee, the UNSCOP, composed of representatives from eleven states. To make the committee more neutral, none of the Great Powers were represented. After spending three months conducting hearings and general survey of the situation in Palestine, UNSCOP officially released its report on August 31. A majority of nations (Canada, Czechoslovakia, Guatemala, Netherlands, Peru, Sweden, Uruguay) recommended the creation of independent Arab and Jewish states, with Jerusalem to be placed under international administration. A minority (India, Iran, Yugoslavia) supported the creation of a single federal state containing both Jewish and Arab constituent states. Australia abstained.
The Division
) for the and the eventual .
★ Blue = area assigned to a Jewish state in the original UN partition plan, and within the 1949 Israel armistice lines.
★ Green = area assigned to an Arab state in the original UN partition plan, and controlled by Egypt or Jordan from 1949-1967.
★ Light red = area assigned to an Arab state in the original UN partition plan, but within the 1949 Israel armistice lines.
★ Magenta = area assigned to the "Corpus Separatum" of Jerusalem/Bethlehem (neither Jewish nor Arab) by the plan, but controlled by Jordan from 1949-1967.
★ Greyish = area assigned to the "Corpus Separatum" of Jerusalem/Bethlehem (neither Jewish nor Arab) by the plan, but within the 1949 Israel armistice lines.]]
The Jewish population was concentrated in settlement areas in 1947. The borders were drawn to encompass them, placing most of the Jewish population in the Jewish state. (Map reflects Jewish owned land not the size and number of settlements. It does not imply that only Jews lived here or that all other land was owned or exclusively populated by Arabs.)
Palestine's land surface was approximately 26,320,505 dunums (26,320 km²), of which about one third was cultivable. By comparison, the size of modern day Israel (as of 2006) is 20,770,000 dunums (20,770 km²) (Israel#Geography Geography of Israel). The land in Jewish possession had risen from 456,000 dunums (456 km²) in 1920 to 1,393,000 dunums (1,393 km²) in 1945Khalaf, 1991, pp. 26–27. and 1,850,000 dunums (1,850 km²) by 1947 (Avneri p. 224). Israel
No figures of land ownership by Arabs were available, due to difficulties that were due to the incomplete transition from the unreliable Ottoman Land Code to a modern land registration system.
''See also: Land ownership of the British Mandate of Palestine''
The front page of Yedioth Ahronoth the day after the UN vote. The headline is "Jewish State". It lists the 33 countries that voted in favor of the partition, 13 against, and 10 that abstained.
The UN General Assembly made a non-binding recommendation for a three-way partition Israeli History at RepresentativePress. of Palestine into a Jewish State, an Arab State and a small internationally administered zone including the religiously significant towns Jerusalem and Bethlehem. The two states envisioned in the plan were each composed of three major sections, linked by extraterritorial crossroads. The Jewish state would receive the Coastal Plain, stretching from Haifa to Rehovot, the Eastern Galilee (surrounding the Sea of Galilee and including the Galilee panhandle) and the Negev, including the southern outpost of Umm Rashrash (now Eilat). The Arab state would receive the Western Galilee, with the town of Acre, the Samarian highlands and the Judean highlands, and the southern coast stretching from north of Isdud (now Ashdod) and encompassing what is now the Gaza Strip, with a section of desert along the Egyptian border.
The partition defined by the General Assembly resolution differed somewhat from the UNSCOP report partition. Most notably, Jaffa was constituted as an enclave of the Arab State and the boundaries were modified to include Beersheba and a large section of the Negev desert within the Arab State and a section of the Dead Sea shore within the Jewish State.
The land allocated to the Arab state (about 43% of Mandatory Palestine UN Partition Plan at Merip.) consisted of all of the highlands, except for Jerusalem, plus one third of the coastline. The Jewish state was to receive 56% of Mandatory Palestine, a slightly larger area to accommodate the increasing numbers of Jews who would immigrate there. The state included three fertile lowland plains — the Sharon on the coast, the Jezreel Valley and the upper Jordan Valley.
The bulk of the proposed Jewish State's territory, however, consisted of the Negev Desert. The desert was not suitable for agriculture, nor for urban development at that time. The Jewish state was also given sole access to the Red Sea and the Sea of Galilee (the largest source of fresh water in Palestine). The land allocated to the Jewish state was largely made up of areas in which there was a significant Jewish population. Map of population distribution at Passia.
The plan tried its best to accommodate as many Jews as possible into the Jewish state. In many specific cases, this meant including areas of Arab majority (but with a significant Jewish minority) in the Jewish state. Thus the Jewish State would have an overall large Arab minority. Areas that were sparsely populated (like the Negev), were also included in the Jewish state to create room for immigration in order to relieve the "Jewish Problem". The Jewish Problem at MidEastWeb.
The UNSCOP boundaries divided the population such that the Arab State would have a population of 735,000, including 10,000 (1%) Jews, and the Jewish State would have a population of 905,000, including 498,000 (55%) Jews.[3] Due to boundary adjustments the Arab population of the Jewish State decreased by approximately 85,000, so the Jewish State would have had a 61% Jewish majority.[4] The UNSCOP report noted that in the Jewish State there would be "about 90,000 Bedouins, cultivators and stock owners who seek grazing further afield in dry seasons." All population figures are based on 1945 statistics.
Reactions to the plan
The majority of the Jews and Jewish groups accepted the proposal, in particular the Jewish Agency, which was the Jewish state-in-formation. A minority of extreme nationalist Jewish groups like Menachem Begin's Irgun Tsvai Leumi and Yitzhak Shamir's Lehi, (known as the Stern Gang) which had been fighting the British, rejected it. Begin warned that the partition would not bring peace because the Arabs would also attack the small state and that "in the war ahead we'll have to stand on our own, it will be a war on our existence and future".[5] Numerous records indicate the joy of Palestine's Jewish inhabitants as they attended to the U.N. session voting for the division proposal. Up to this day, Israeli history books mention November 29th (the date of this session) as the most important date in Israel's acquisition of independence, and many Israeli cities commemorate the date in their streets' names. However, Jews did criticise the lack of territorial continuity for the Jewish state.
The Arab leadership (in and out of Palestine) opposed the plan, arguing that it violated the rights of the majority of the people in Palestine, which at the time was 67% non-Jewish (1,237,000) and 33% Jewish (608,000). Arab leaders also argued a large number of Arabs would be trapped in the Jewish State as a minority. While some Arab leaders opposed the right of the Zionists to establish a state in the region, others criticized the amount and quality of land given to Israel.
The Vote
On 29 November 1947, the United Nations General Assembly voted 33 to 13, with 10 abstentions, in favour of the Partition Plan, while making some adjustments to the boundaries between the two states proposed by it.
The division was to take effect on the date of British withdrawal from the Mandate Territory of Palestine. Both the United States and Soviet Union supported the resolution.
The 33 countries that voted in favour of the partition were: Australia, Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, Byelorussian SSR, Canada, Costa Rica, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, France, Guatemala, Haiti, Iceland, Liberia, Luxembourg, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Sweden, South Africa, Ukrainian SSR, United States of America, Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Uruguay, Venezuela.
The 13 countries that voted against resolution were: Afghanistan, Cuba, Egypt, Greece, India, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Turkey, Yemen.
The ten countries that abstained were: Argentina, Chile, Republic of China, Colombia, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Honduras, Mexico, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Yugoslavia.
One state (Thailand) was absent.
Following the adoption of the plan, Arab countries proposed to query the International Court of Justice on the competence of the General Assembly to partition a country against the wishes of the majority of its inhabitants (it would place 36% of the Arabs inside the Jewish state). This was narrowly defeated.
Consequences
On the day after the vote, a spate of Arab attacks left seven Jews dead and scores more wounded. Shooting, stoning, and rioting continued apace in the following days. The consulates of Poland and Sweden, both of whose governments had voted for partition, were attacked. Bombs were thrown into cafes, Molotov cocktails were hurled at shops, a synagogue was set on fire. On December 3, at the instigation of the Palestinian leadership, a large mob ransacked the new Jewish commercial center in Jerusalem, looting and burning shops and stabbing and stoning whomever they happened upon. The next day, some 120–150 armed Arabs attacked Kibbutz Efal, on the outskirts of Tel Aviv, in the first large-scale attempt to storm a Jewish village.[6]
The United Kingdom refused to implement the plan arguing it was unacceptable to both sides. It also refused to share the administration of Palestine with the UN Palestine Commission during the transitional period. It terminated the British mandate of Palestine on May 15, 1948.
Fighting began almost as soon as the plan was approved, beginning with the Arab Jerusalem Riots of 1947. The fighting would have an effect on the Arab population of Palestine, as well the Jewish populations of neighboring Arab countries.
Meeting in Cairo in November and December of 1947, the Arab League adopted a series of resolutions aimed at a military solution to the conflict.
Text of the Resolution
★ from the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs
★ from the Yale Law School
★ Information on UN 181 from The Jerusalem Fund/Palestine Center
★ United Nations Information System on the Question of Palestine
See also
★ Arab revolt
★ Hussein-McMahon Correspondence
★ Sykes-Picot Agreement
★ Mandate for Palestine
★ Balfour Declaration 1917
★ Napoleon and a Jewish state in Palestine
★ Faisal-Weizmann Agreement
★ Churchill White Paper, 1922
★
★ Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Israel, May 14, 1948
★ Jewish refugees
★ Palestinian refugees
★ Immigration to Israel
★ 1947 Jerusalem riots
★ 1948 Arab-Israeli War
★ 1949 Armistice Agreements
★ Arab-Israeli conflict
★ Israeli-Palestinian conflict
★ Proposals for a Palestinian state
★ Jewish exodus from Arab lands
★ Palestinian exodus
★
Notes
1. Louis, 1986, p. 374.
2. Sicker, 1999, p. 164.
3. Recommendations to the General Assembly, A/364 United Nations Special Committee on Palestine
4. Palestine Partition Map Total net decrease of 15,500 Arabs, not including Jaffa and Beersheba. According to Village Statistics 1945 (Palestine Government, Jerusalem), Jaffa and Beersheba had 66,280 and 5,560 Arabs, respectively.
5. ''Begin, Menachem, The Revolt 1978'', p. 412.
6. MeForum.
References
★ Bregman, Ahron (2002). ''Israel's Wars: A History Since 1947''. London: Routledge. ISBN
★ Arieh L. Avneri (1984). ''The Claim of Dispossession: Jewish Land Settlement and the Arabs, 1878–1948''. Transaction Publishers. ISBN
★ Fischbach, Michael R. (2003). ''Records of Dispossession: Palestinian Refugee Property and the Arab-Israeli Conflict''. Columbia University Press. ISBN
★ Gelber, Yoav (1997). ''Jewish-Transjordanian Relations: Alliance of Bars Sinister''. London: Routledge. ISBN-X
★ Khalaf, Issa (1991). ''Politics in Palestine: Arab Factionalism and Social Disintegration,''. SUNY University Press. ISBN
★ Louis, Wm. Roger (1986). ''The British Empire in the Middle East,: Arab Nationalism, the United States, and Postwar Imperialism''. Oxford University Press. ISBN
★ "Palestine". Encyclopædia Britannica Online School Edition, 15 May 2006.
★ Sicker, Martin (1999). ''Reshaping Palestine: From Muhammad Ali to the British Mandate, 1831–1922''. Praeger/Greenwood. ISBN
External links
★ Legal Status of West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem
★ Maps of Palestine
★ Ivan Rand and the UNSCOP Papers
★ Official Map prepared by UNSCOP
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