Academic literature on the topic 'Arab Revolt of 1936-1939'

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Journal articles on the topic "Arab Revolt of 1936-1939"

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Arielli, Nir. "Italian Involvement in the Arab Revolt in Palestine, 1936–1939." British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 35, no. 2 (August 2008): 187–204. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13530190802180597.

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Muhareb, Mahmoud. "The Zionist Disinformation Campaign in Syria and Lebanon during the Palestinian Revolt, 1936–1939." Journal of Palestine Studies 42, no. 2 (2013): 6–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jps.2013.42.2.6.

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Based on declassified reports in the Central Zionist Archives, this article brings to light a virtually unknown disinformation project implemented by the Jewish Agency (the governing body of the Yishuv before 1948) in the Arab world during the 1936-39 Palestinian revolt. Operating via a JA front organization—an Arabic-language news agency set up in Cairo—and out of the Jerusalem-based JA Political department’s intelligence services, the project involved inter alia the planting of fabricated articles in the Lebanese and Syrian press with the aim of influencing public opinion. Whatever the project’s impact, the article provides insights into the Zionist leadership’s thinking, internal debates, and operating methods, and shows the degree of corruption that existed in certain segments of the Arab elite.
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Chetrit. "Imperial Footprints: British Military Picquets during the Arab Revolt in Palestine, 1936–1939." Journal of Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology & Heritage Studies 9, no. 1-2 (2021): 187. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/jeasmedarcherstu.9.1-2.0187.

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Anderson, Charles. "When Palestinians Became Human Shields: Counterinsurgency, Racialization, and the Great Revolt (1936–1939)." Comparative Studies in Society and History 63, no. 3 (June 29, 2021): 625–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417521000219.

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AbstractThis article examines the origins of human shielding—the practice of employing hostages on the battlefield—in Arab Palestine during the Great Revolt in the 1930s. The Palestinian rebellion vexed the British for over three years, and during its second phase (1937–1939), lightly armed rebels beat back the colonial authorities from broad stretches of the country, putting continued colonial control of the territory in serious jeopardy. Britain only defeated the insurgency through a harsh repertoire of collective punishments and “dirty war” tactics. British forces used Palestinians as human shields in a systematic fashion during the revolt's second phase, attempting thereby to stave off the insurgents’ consistent and effective attacks on transportation arteries. Beyond its battlefield rationale, this article contends that human shielding was critically tied to two other dynamic processes. The military's adoption of unauthorized tactics like human shielding was part of a broader pattern of rejecting its institutional subordination to civilian authorities and of seeking direct control over the Palestine government in order to assure its unfettered command over the revolt's suppression. At the same time, the conversion of colonized bodies into literal shields bespoke a process of deepening, corporeal racialization that had profound consequences for the Palestinians, stripping them of any figment of legal rights or protections and signaling the utter disposability of Arab life.
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Barnes, Jeff. "Another Sharp Weapon: Gender and Revolt in Arab and Jewish Editorial Cartoons, 1936–1939." Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies 40, no. 2 (2017): 72–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jsa.2017.0012.

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Suwaed, Muhammad. "The role of the Bedouin in the Great Arab Revolt in Palestine, 1936–1939." Middle Eastern Studies 57, no. 1 (October 10, 2020): 72–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2020.1815193.

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Sufian, Sandy. "Anatomy of the 1936––39 Revolt: Images of the Body in Political Cartoons of Mandatory Palestine." Journal of Palestine Studies 37, no. 2 (2008): 23–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jps.2008.37.2.23.

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This article analyzes body images in political cartoons during the 1936––1939 Arab Revolt. By deciphering the visual messages in the political cartoons of two newspapers——the Arabic Filastin and the Hebrew Davar——the article examines how body representations portray stereotypes of rivals and reveal assumptions about and relations between conflicting parties. Visual imagery maintained its impact by illustrating nationalist attitudes, critiques, and goals. In addition to being referents to a period not well documented in images, cartoons are also potent historical sources for reconstructing a sociopolitical history of Palestine.
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Mitter, Sreemati. "Bankrupt: Financial Life in Late Mandate Palestine." International Journal of Middle East Studies 52, no. 2 (May 2020): 289–310. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020743819001120.

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AbstractIn the late 1930s, the first independent Arab banks in Palestine, the Arab Bank and the Arab Agricultural Bank, sued customers who had defaulted on loans in an attempt to maintain solvency. Their indebted customers, unable to pay, fought back to prevent their lands from being foreclosed and sold to Zionist buyers. Each party claimed that its position was consistent with, indeed essential to, the anti-Zionist nationalist cause. The story of these pioneering Arab banks and their legal battles with their customers in the wake of the 1936-1939 revolt provides insight into Arab financial life in Mandate Palestine. It reveals the banks’ struggles to survive; complicates notions of Arab-Palestinian landlessness and indebtedness; and argues that political and economic exigencies, not reductive notions of collaboration or patriotism, produced the banks’ antagonistic relationship with their customers, whereby the survival of one came at the expense of the other.
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Chazan, Meir. "The struggle of kibbutz women to participate in guard duties during the Arab Revolt, 1936–1939." Journal of Israeli History 31, no. 1 (March 2012): 83–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13531042.2012.660380.

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Hardy, Roger. "Britain's pacification of Palestine: the British Army, the colonial state, and the Arab revolt, 1936–1939." International Affairs 95, no. 3 (May 1, 2019): 737–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ia/iiz068.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Arab Revolt of 1936-1939"

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el-Nimr, Sonia Fathi. "The Arab revolt of 1936-1939 in Palestine : a study based on oral sources." Thesis, University of Exeter, 1990. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.293625.

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El-nimr, Sonia Fathi. "The Arab revolt of 1936-1939 in Palestine a study based on oral sources /." Online version, 1990. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?did=1&uin=uk.bl.ethos.293625.

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Brown, Gabriel Healey. "Contested Land, Contested Representations: Re-visiting the Arab Revolt of 1936-1939 in Palestine." Oberlin College Honors Theses / OhioLINK, 2016. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=oberlin1463510311.

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Karas, Esin. "Socio-economic And Socio-political Developments In Palestine Under The British Mandate: 1917-1939." Master's thesis, METU, 2009. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/12610358/index.pdf.

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This thesis analyzes the origins of the Arab-Jewish conflict and the historical evolvement of the Palestinian issue by focusing on the practices during the British mandate period. First and foremost, the factors which transformed the Jewish question into the Palestinian question are elaborated. In this context, the emergence of modern political Zionism is presented as the landmark incident in arousing the interest of the Jews dispersed all around the world in the colonization of their promised lands. Although the motive in initiating the colonizing activities in Palestine came with the advent of political Zionist thought, Jewish settlement in Palestine was materialized as a result of the development of British interests in the Middle East. The contradictory promises given to the Arabs and Jews by the British in the course of World War I are treated as the source of the conflict between them. It is stated that the Balfour Declaration, which is the manifestation of the British-Zionist alliance, is the preliminary step of the project of a Jewish state on Palestinian territories. In order to shed light on the implications of Zionist colonization on the Palestinian Arab society, first the socio-economic and socio-political circumstances in the Ottoman era are discussed. Later, the impact of the exclusivist policies of the Jews on communal relations is handled in detail. Moreover, the ways in which the pro-Zionist stance of the British mandate administration contributed to the nation-building efforts of the Jews are argued. Lastly, the causes and consequences of the sporadic Arab tensions, which broke out in 1920, 1921, 1929 and 1936 as a reaction against the British and Zionist policies, are analyzed.
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Shindler, Colin. "Stephan E. C. Wendehorst: British Jewry, Zionism and the Jewish State 1936–1956." HATiKVA e.V. – Die Hoffnung Bildungs- und Begegnungsstätte für Jüdische Geschichte und Kultur Sachsen, 2014. https://slub.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A35097.

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Smith, Charles Michael. "Two revolts in Palestine : an examination of the British response to Arab and Jewish rebellion, 1936 to 1948." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1990. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/250967.

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Gheziel, Abla. "L’éveil politique de la société algérienne à travers révoltes, soumission, assimilation et nationalisme, 1830-1936." Thesis, Toulouse 2, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015TOU20064.

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Plus de cinquante ans après son indépendance, l’histoire de l’Algérie coloniale est et, demeure toujours un sujet aussi douloureux et sensible des deux côtés de la Méditerranée. Au fur et à mesure de l’expansion coloniale française, les membres de la société de l’ex-régence d’Alger voient le mode de vie et leur statut changer. Et, ce en fonction des réformes et des dispositions de l’administration coloniale qui à la fois dut conduire une politique à deux niveaux: une politique pour les colons , les nouveaux habitants de l’Algérie, et une autre pour les indigènes qui malgré le fait que le Senatus consulte de 1865 leur ait accordé la citoyenneté, ils n’en restaient pas moins des sujets de seconde zone. A travers cette étude, nous proposons de suivre l’évolution et les facteurs qui ont contribué à l’éveil populaire des masses musulmanes durant la période qui s’étend de 1830 à 1936. Un champs d’études ayant pour cadre les révoltes populaires ; symbole de la résistance populaire des milieux ruraux, la notion de soumission qui reflète une position mitigée de la part des population qui vacille entre résistance et cohabitation face à l’administration militaire puis face à l’administration coloniale civile, Également la perception de la question de l’assimilation chez les Algériens musulmans et les Européens qui revêtit diverses interprétations à partir de la question du royaume arabe et du problème de la naturalisation. La question du nationalisme et la problématique de son existence ou non avant le débarquement des Français. Notre théorie est que tous ces facteurs ont aidé à l’éclosion du nationalisme, processus qui n’a pas suivi un développement linaire mais fut le résultat d’un cheminement complexe compte tenu des différents facteurs tels que le panislamisme, les retombées de la Première guerre mondiale et l’engagement des indigènes dans ce conflit qui à la base ne les concernait pas. Puis, entre les années 1920 et 1930, les formations politiques font leur apparition, intellectuels et réformistes musulmans s’affirment sur la scène politique et engage la confrontation avec l’administration coloniale et le gouvernement de la Métropole. Ainsi , la prise de conscience des masses musulmanes allaient se manifester et s’imposer en dépassant les différences des uns et des autres ; c’est à dire passer d’une pensée particulariste, d’un régionalisme à une pensée collective nationale : se reconnaitre dans une seule et unique identité nationale
The political awakening of Algerian society through revolts, submission, assimilation and nationalism.1830-1936. More than fifteen years after his independence, Algerian colonial history is and stills always a painful and sensitive subject for the two sides of the Mediterranean Sea. As the French colonial expansion took place, members of society of former regency of Algiers see their way of living changing. And, this in function of reforms and measures of colonial administration which drive a two level policy: toward settlers’ policy; the new inhabitants of Algeria. And another one for indigenous whom still second zone citizen even if the ײSenatus consultײ of 1865 gives them citizenship. Throughout this study, we suggest to follow the evolution of these factors which contribute to the popular awakening of Muslim masses during the period between 1830 and 1936. It is a field of study which includes not only popular revolts, the symbol of rural resistance. But also the notion of submission reflecting à mixed position of populations between resistance and cohabitation with military administration first, then with civil colonial one after, thus the assimilation issue of Algerian Muslims and Europeans, which clothed various interpretations starting by the Arab Kingdom of Napoleon III and the problem of naturalization, and finally, the nationalism issue and the issue of its existence or not before the landing of French. Our theory is that all these features helped the hatching of nationalism, a process which did not follow a linear development but was the result of a complex path according to different factors such as Pan Islamism, the consequences of the WWI and the participation of the indigenous in this conflict which was not their conflict. Then, from 1920 and 1930, political groups appear; Muslim reformers and intellectuals assert themselves in political scene and engage the confrontation with the colonial administration and metropolitan government. Thus, the awareness of Muslim masses will appear and lead up on differences between people; in other move from individual or regional thinking towards a collective national thinking
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Ross, Jared S. "British foreign policy and the Arab Rebellion in Palestine the transformation of Middle East politics, 1936-1939 /." Tallahassee, Florida : Florida State University, 2009. http://etd.lib.fsu.edu/theses/available/etd-07022009-145501.

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Thesis (M.A.)--Florida State University, 2009.
Advisor: Charles Upchurch, Florida State University, College of Arts and Sciences, Dept. of History. Title and description from dissertation home page (viewed on Nov. 5, 2009). Document formatted into pages; contains vi, 94 pages. Includes bibliographical references.
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Books on the topic "Arab Revolt of 1936-1939"

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Memories of revolt: The 1936-1939 rebellion and the Palestinian national past. Minneapolis, Minn: University of Minnesota Press, 1995.

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A soldier's story: From Ottoman rule to independent Iraq : the memoirs of Jafar Pasha Al-Askari (1885-1936). London: Arabian Pub., 2003.

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Ian Black. Zionism and the Arabs, 1936-1939. New York: Garland, 1986.

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Arnon-Oḥanah, Yuval. Mered ʻArvi be-Erets Yiśraʼel 1936-1939. Yerushalayim: Ariʼel, 2013.

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Ḥallah, Muḥammad ʻAlī. Filastīn wa-al-ṣirāʻ al-dawlī, 1936-1939. [Cairo]: Dār al-Ḥaḍārah, 1987.

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Ṭarabayh, Ṣāliḥ. Mudhakkirātī maʻa al-thawrah al-Filasṭīnīyah: Sanawāt 1936-1939. Ḥayfā: Maṭbaʻat al-Karmah, 1992.

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Bashīr Ibrāhīm, al-qāḍī wa-al-thāʾir fī Thawrat 1936-1939, Zītā, Ṭūlkaram. Rām Allāh: N.M. Sirḥān, 2000.

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Orde Wingate and the British internal security strategy during the Arab rebellion in Palestine, 1936-1939. Fort Leavenworth, Kan: Combat Studies Institute, 2012.

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Barea, Arturo. La llama: Tercera parte de La forja de un rebelde. 3rd ed. Barcelona: Plaza & Janes, 1990.

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Barea, Arturo. La ruta: Segunda parte de La forja de un rebelde. 3rd ed. Barcelona: Plaza & Janes, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Arab Revolt of 1936-1939"

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Arielli, Nir. "Italy and the Arab Revolt in Palestine, 1936–9." In Fascist Italy and the Middle East, 1933–40, 109–32. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230281684_5.

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Meiton, Fredrik. "Industrialization and Revolt." In Electrical Palestine, 150–87. University of California Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520295889.003.0006.

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Chapter 5 charts the effects of these developments as the power system, upon completion in 1932, gained technological momentum, cementing the worldview and power relations it had participated in producing. The 1930s saw rapid industrial growth in the Jewish community and simultaneous economic decline and political realignment in the Palestinian Arab community, especially during the years of the Great Arab Revolt, 1936–1939.
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Haiduc-Dale, Noah. "1936–1939: Standing Aloof? Arab Christians and the Great Revolt." In Arab Christians in British Mandate Palestine, 130–56. Edinburgh University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9780748676033.003.0005.

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Dawisha, Adeed. "Arab Nationalism and Competing Loyalties: From the 1920s to the Arab Revolt in Palestine." In Arab Nationalism in the Twentieth Century. Princeton University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691169156.003.0004.

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This chapter looks at a growing number of voices in the three most important Arab domains of the time—Iraq, Greater Syria, and Egypt—who were declaring themselves to be Arabs, sometimes in conjunction with, at other times to the exclusion of, other identities. Beyond the claims of historical validity, Iraq in the 1920s and 1930s was one of only four countries with a measure of independence, at least in matters of domestic policy. It was in Iraq that the intellectual headquarters of Arab nationalism resided in the person of Sati‘ al-Husri, whose ideas were eliciting a receptive echo among the country’s political elites. Indeed, Husri and other Arab nationalists, many of whom were his disciples, set out to make Iraq the beacon from which Arab nationalist ideas would spread to the rest of the Arab world. The chapter also studies the 1936–1939 Arab revolt in Palestine.
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Kelly, Matthew Kraig. "The End of the Revolt, 1939." In Crime of Nationalism. University of California Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520291485.003.0009.

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This chapter discusses the collapse of the Palestinian Great Revolt in 1939. It focuses on the civil war that wracked the Arab community of Palestine in 1938–39, including the Husayni-Nashashibi and other rivalries, the anti-rebel "peace bands," and the British implication in both. It also details the intensive British military effort to crush the rebel court system and to expel or exterminate the various rebel leaders. The chapter goes on to analyze the St. James Conference and the British effort to give a democratic cast to what was, in fact, a planned reversal on the Balfour Declaration. Finally, the chapter explores the consequences of that reversal for Arabs, Britons, and Jews in Palestine.
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Heller, Daniel Kupfert. "Terror." In Jabotinsky's Children. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691174754.003.0007.

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This chapter details Betar's activities in the twilight years of the Second Polish Republic. With Hitler's rise to power, a surge in anti-Jewish riots across Poland, and the escalating conflict between Palestinian Arabs and Jews in Mandate Palestine, numerous Betar leaders were calling for Zionist youth, no matter their location, to turn to acts of revolutionary violence to defend Jews from attack. Some of them wondered aloud whether their potential targets could include their Jewish rivals. The chapter follows Betar's overlapping conversations about their use of violence in Poland and in Palestine. Ultimately, it reveals how right-wing Zionist debates about violence in Poland and elsewhere in Europe helped lay the groundwork for justifying acts of terrorism during the Arab Revolt in Mandate Palestine (1936–1939).
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Kelly, Matthew Kraig. "British Causal Primacy and the Origins of the Palestinian Great Revolt." In Crime of Nationalism. University of California Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520291485.003.0002.

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This chapter discusses the political and economic background of the strike and revolt of April 1936 and the months following. It addresses both the contemporaneous Arab, British, and Jewish understandings of that background and the subsequent scholarly evaluation of those understandings. It argues that much of the literature on the rebellion has repeated an analytic error that is endemic to the British and Zionist archives: namely, the failure to reckon with the causal primacy of British violence in bringing about the rebellion. This oversight has entailed the marginalization of the Arab Palestinian voices that have sought to draw attention to the role of British violence in bringing about and sustaining the rebellion. A crimino-national reading of the British and Zionist archival materials relating to 1936–39 unearths evidence that bolsters the traditional Arab view of the revolt's underlying causes.
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Dawisha, Adeed. "The Path to Nationalist Ascent: From the Palestinian Revolt to the Egyptian Revolution." In Arab Nationalism in the Twentieth Century. Princeton University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691169156.003.0005.

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This chapter describes the popular support for Palestinians in Iraq, Syria, and Egypt, and the consequent policies and pronouncements of the respective governments. In Iraq, widespread demonstrations erupted in support of the 1936 Palestinian general strike, which became so widespread that the Iraqi government hastened to impose a ban on all demonstrations. Popular support for the Palestinian cause was no less fierce in Syria. Strikes and demonstrations occurred frequently, accompanied by violently anti-Zionist and anti-British pamphlets and petitions. In its popular reaction to the Palestinian revolt, Egypt was not different from Iraq or Syria. The convening of the Congress in Cairo, and the anti-British undercurrents which it displayed at a time when the British held an unquestionable position of influence in the country, is a testimony to the strength of the pro-Palestinian sentiments sweeping Egypt in the wake of the Arab revolt.
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"Diplomacy During The Arab Revolt: The British, Abdullah and the Jewish Agency, 1931–1939." In Britain and Jordan. I.B.Tauris, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755610815.ch-003.

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Banko, Lauren. "Whose Rights to Citizenship? Expressions and Variations of Palestinian Mandate Citizenship, 1926–1935." In The Invention of Palestinian Citizenship, 1918-1947. Edinburgh University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474415507.003.0006.

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By the latter half of the 1920s and the early 1930s, British and Arab misunderstandings of each other's intentions with respect to identity and citizenship status encouraged even stronger claims by the Arabs to the bundle of rights that they felt entitled to in accordance with their own particular understandings of nationality and citizenship. This chapter ties the discussions of citizenship that circulated in the territory from 1918 through the mid-1930s to the projects of belonging that the nationalists, populists, and the Arabic press attended to and actively worked towards. The active engagement of the press and social groups in political actions with the aim of changing mandate institutions fostered a new vocabulary of rights, political, and civic identity and citizenship belonging in the years just before the start of the Palestine Revolt in 1936. The chapter frames certain discourses on citizenship and national identity as more dominant and others as more subaltern during the latter half of the 1920s and 1930s. The chapter includes a case study of the Palestinian Arab Istiqlal (Independence) Party, whose policies aimed to redefine citizenship and access to rights under the mandate.
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