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Mosad Encyclopaedia Judaica with interpretation

Gaza Strip and Moses Fantasy Jews in Gaza city



Mosad Encyclopaedia Judaica with interpretation

Gaza Strip

Creation of the Muhammad Fantasy Gaza Strip in 1949 - civil war in the 1950s - Muhammad Fantasy Muslim refugees and highest population density in the world - water, harvests, handicrafts

from: [Muhammad Fantasy] Gaza Strip, state of; In: Mosad Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971, vol. 7

presented by Michael Palomino (2008 / 2019)

3 fantasies: Moses is a fantasy - Jesus is a fantasy - and also Muhammad is a fantasy - but Mother Earth is REAL
Moses is a fantasy - nothing could be found of him. The proofs are in the book: The Bible unearthed - link. So, Jewry is a fantasy, and also the Jewish calendar is a fantasy. Also Jesus is a fantasy: nothing could be found, but it's a code fantasy with the numbers 3,12,13 and 33 - link. Therefore, Christiandom is a fantasy, and also the Christian calendar is a fantasy - and the Vatican is a criminal pedophile satanic drug money laundering bank mafia - link with videos - link with news. Also Muhammad is a fantasy: nothing could be found, and the name "Muhammad" was used only since 850, not in 600 - link. Therefore also the Muslim calendar is a fantasy. Peace and healings and instructions how to handle the planet are with Mother Earth - Mother Earth is REAL and everybody can learn it: http://www.med-etc.com - have a good day. - Michael Palomino, May 12, 2019

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[Geographic data]

[[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip, area in the southern Coastal plain of Erez [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel, covering 140 sq. mi. (362 sq. km.), between 3 and 4.5 mi. (5-7 km.) wide from west to east and 28 mi. (45 km.) long from the vicinity of Yad Mordekhai in the northeast to Rafiah (rafa) in the southwest.

The [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip is not a separate geographical unit, as the part south of Nahal Besor belongs to the Negev Coastal Plain and the rest forms part of the southern (Philistine) Coastal Plain (see Land of *[[Moses Fantasy]] Israel, Physiography). The [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip came into being as a separate administrative unit in the final stages of the War of Independence (1948), when it was the only part of the territory under the former British Mandate over Palestine still held by [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Egyptian forces.

[[Encyclopaedia Judaica is concealing the following horrors for Muhammad Fantasy Muslims by Moses Fantasy Herzl imperialism::
1) horrors of war, 2) expulsion, 3) violations of Muhammad Fantasy Muslim women, 4) ghettoization of the Muhammad Fantasy Muslim population. In fact, the Moses Fantasy regime of Mr. Ben Gurion is partly repeating in the desert strip of Palestine what the Rothschild Hitler regime had done to the Moses Fantasy Jews 1941-1945]].

[Feb. 1949: "Armistice Agreement" - Civil war 1950-1955 with Muhammad Fantasy Palestinian terror attacks and Moses Fantasy Jewish military attacks]

In the Armistice Agreement between [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel and [[Muhammad Fantasy]] (February 1949), it was placed under [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Egyptian administration, but it was never incorporated into [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Egypt. The border of the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip drawn in 1949 generally mirrors military positions occupied by both sides when the War of Independence battles came to a halt in that region in December 1948, but [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel consented to evacuate two small areas it then held - Beit Hanun at the Strip's northern end and 'Abasan and vicinity at its southern extremity - and to permit them to be added to the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Strip's territory.

Contrary to the wording and spirit of the Armistice Agreement, in the first half of the 1950s, [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Egypt placed considerable armed forced in the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip, which it made the principal base of the Fedayeen terrorists. From 1954 onward, the terrorists infiltrated into [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel, perpetrating (col. 343)

murderous attacks on civilians in villages and towns, which drew retaliatory attacks by [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel on military objects inside the Strip.

[Sinai Campaign 1956 - UN control]

In the spring of 1956, increased terrorist attacks from the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Strip became one of the causes provoking the *Sinai Campaign. The [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip was in [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel's hands between its occupation on Nov. 2, 1956, and the withdrawal of [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel forces on March 8, 1957. The withdrawal was effected on the assumption that neither the Strip nor Sinai would be remilitarized by [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Egypt.

Thereafter U.N. troops were posted to watch the border and a comparatively quiet era ensued.
[[For Moses Fantasy Jewish racism against Muhammad Fantasy Muslims was never found any human rights which is never mentioned in Encyclopaedia Judaica]].
[1967: Military occupation]

However in 1967 aggression against [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel was again launched from there in the weeks preceding the [[Satanic]] Six-Day War, when [[mostly corrupt and pedophile]] U.N. forces were asked by [[Egyptian President]] Nasser to leave their border observation posts. The occupation of the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip by the [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel army was completed on June 6, 1967, and the area was put under [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel military administration.

[Demography: Muhammad Fantasy Muslim refugees 1947-1949 - Kefar Darom - 1967: 356,261 persons - highest density worldwide]

The [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip's demographic structure underwent radical changes during and after the War of Independence. [[Muhammad Fantasy]] [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Arab refugees, practically all of them [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Muslims, swelled the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Strip's population from an estimated 50,000-60,000 in 1947 to about 180,000-200,000 in 1949. Kefar Darom, the only [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish settlement within the Strip's area, was evacuated in June 1948 (but resettled in 1970).

According to the census on Sept. 10-14, 1967 - the first reliable count in contrast to [[Jesus Fantasy]] British Mandate statistics and the grossly exaggerated figures of the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Egyptian administration - the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Strip's total population numbered 356,261 persons (22% less than the 1966 [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Egyptian estimate of 454,960). Even these figures, however, show the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip as having one of the highest population densities in the world (2,560 inhabitants per sq. mi. or 973 per sq. km. in 1967). In contrast with other [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Arab countries, the urban population is in the majority in the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip with 79.4% in 1967; without counting the refugee camps, there were 149,489 urban inhabitants against 31,368 villagers, 1,105 nomads, and 1,778 people living outside settlements.

These figures, however, do not reflect the occupational structure, as many inhabitants of towns and camps - in fact, the great majority of wage earners - derive most of their livelihood from farming, either on their own holdings or as hired laborers. (col. 344)

[Refugees in the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip: 207,250 inhabitants of 356,261 are refugees]

In 1967, the number of persons described as refugees was 207,250 or 58.9% of the total population. Of these, 149,396 lived in camps, which also accommodated 23,000 persons who were not refugees. [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Muslims accounted for 99% of the 1967 population. Approximately 20% of the population in 1967 were under four years old, and 50.6% below the age of 14, indicating a very high birthrate.

[[These Muhammad Fantasy Muslim refugees are all willing to take revenge against Herzl Free Mason [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel "[[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish state", and violations and murders of the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish army, desert concentration camps for Palestinians, racist law and discriminations for Palestinians are not mentioned in Encyclopaedia Judaica]].

The high population density makes great demands on the available land and water resources. In 1967, 103.1 sq. mi. 267 sq. km.) - 73% of the area - were under cultivation. This included even sand dunes (as long as a more fertile layer of earth was shallowly concealed beneath), roadsides, and lots in built-up areas.

[Water problems: salty water from the sea]

Excessive exploitation of groundwater is a serious problem: in 1967 there were about 1,200 wells, from which some 17,000,000,000 gal. (about 65,000,000 cu. m.) of water were extracted annually. The proximity of the sea caused the intrusion of seawater into the water table, and there was an imminent danger of salination of the well water. Steps were taken after 1967 to reduce pumping and local irrigation considerably all allocate some water from [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel sources.

[Harvests]

Of the cultivated area, 52.9 sq. mi. (137 sq. km.) were irrigated in 1967, of which 35.5 sq. mi. (92 sq. km.) were citrus groves producing an average of between two and four million cases of export fruit annually; 3.9 sq. mi. (10 sq. km.) were planted with olives, vines, and deciduous fruit trees; and about 13.5 sq. mi. (35 sq. km.) with vegetables and field crops. The main unirrigated crops were wheat, date palms (mainly near Deir al-Balah), and ricinus bushes (in the south).

After the Six-Day War, growing terrorist attempts were made to disrupt normal conditions. At the same time guidance by the [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel authorities, provision of seed, fertilizers, pesticides, and machinery, and aid in marketing and export brought about noticeable progress in farming.

[Handicrafts and industrialization]

In manufacturing, the region made its first steps toward modernization. Pottery, domestic weaving and clothmaking, and food processing (milling, baking) are traditional trades. Beginning in 1968, a number of industrial enterprises, primarily based on local farm produce, were set up in cooperation with the [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel authorities and private individuals, alleviating local unemployment.

From 1967, thousands of laborers from the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip found work in building, farming, industry, and development projects in various parts of [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel. In 1969 work started on an industrial zone, with the cooperation of [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel and local [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Arab investors, on the northern border of the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Strip.

See also *[[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza; *[[Moses Fantasy]] Israel, State of, Frontiers, [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Arab Refugees, [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Arab Population.

[E.O.]> (col. 345)

[[The Muhammad Fantasy Muslim refugees are not allowed to return to Moses Fantasy Israel and are not allowed to circulates to the Muhammad Fantasy West Bank. They have no nationality and they are in a big prison in Muhammad Fantasy Gaza Strip. This is not mentioned in Encyclopaedia Judaica.
According to the new arqueology with the book of Silberman / Finkelstein "The Bible Unearthed" (link) there was never living any Moses Fantasy Jew at the coast of the sea but they were only living in the today's West Bank. And Moses is just a FANTASY - so there is no reason to be "Jewish" any more - link. The same counts for Muslims: Muhammad is a FANTASY - and there is no reason to be "Muslim" any more - link. The same counts for Christians: Jesus is just a code FANTASY with 3,12,13 and 33 - so there is no reason to be Christian any more - link. And all wars between these fantasies will stop, when the whole world sees these frauds. Mother Earth counts with healings and handling the planet - on http://www.med-etc.com/index-ENGL.html]].

Sources
Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971: Gaza Strip,
                          vol. 7, col. 343-344
Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971: [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip, vol. 7, col. 343-344
Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971: Gaza Strip,
                          vol. 7, col. 345
Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971: [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip, vol. 7, col. 345



Mosad Encyclopaedia Judaica with interpretation

Moses Fantasy Jews in Muhammad Fantasy Gaza city

Muhammad Fantasy Arab rule - Jesus Fantasy Crusaders - Muhammad Fantasy Mamluk rule - Muhammad Fantasy Ottoman rule - Jesus Fantasy Napoleon - Moses Fantasy Jewish decline until 1929

from: [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip, state of; In: Mosad Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971, vol. 7

presented by Michael Palomino (2008)


[Muhammad Fantasy Gaza under Muhammad Fantasy Arab rule since 635 - horrible Crusades times - Mamluk rule]

<In a great battle fought near [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza in 635, the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Arabs vanquished the [[Greek]] Byzantines; the city itself fell soon afterward. It remained the seat of the governor of the Negev, as is known from the Nessana Papyri.

The [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish and Samaritan communities flourished under [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Arab rule; in the eighth century, R. Moses, one of the masoretes, lived there. In the 11th century R. Ephraim of [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza was head of the community of Fostat (old Cairo).

[[Jesus Fantasy]] King Baldwin I of Jerusalem occupied the city which was known in [[Jesus Fantasy]] Crusader times as Gadres; from the time of [[Jesus Fantasy]] Baldwin III (1152) it was a [[Jesus Fantasy]] Templar stronghold. In 1170 it fell to [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Saladin [[because the Jesus Fantasy Templars were too corrupt]].

Under [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Mamluk rule, [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza was the capital of a district (mamlaka) embracing the whole coastal plain up to Athlit.

[No Moses Fantasy Jewish community in Crusade times - new Moses Fantasy Jewish community recorded since 1481]

After the (col. 341)

destruction of [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza by the [[Fantasy Jesus]] Crusaders the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish community ceased to exist. Nothing more was heard of it until the 14th century. Meshullam of Volterra in 1481 found 60 [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish householders there and four Samaritans. All the wine of [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza was produced by the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews (A. M. Luncz, in Yerushalayim, 1918). Obadiah of Bertinoro records that when he was there in 1488, [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza's rabbi was a certain Moses of Prague who had come from Jerusalem (Zwei Briefe, ed. by A. Neubauer(1863), 19).
[[Such reports can also be a fake of the cr.ped.gay Satanic Vatican who "arranged" centuries of world history with inventions]].
[Muhammad Fantasy Gaza under Ottoman rule]

Gaza Town in 1568, miniature as "City
                        of Samson", from the manuscript of the
                        Casale Pilgrim, Casale Monferrato, Italy, 1568,
                        fol. 9v. Cecil Roth Collection; from: Gaza; In:
                        Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971, vol. 7, col. 342
Muhammad Fantasy Gaza Town in 1568, miniature as "City of Samson", from the manuscript of the Casale Pilgrim, Casale Monferrato, Italy, 1568, fol. 9v. Cecil Roth Collection; from: [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza; In: Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971, vol. 7, col. 342

[[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza flourished under [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Ottoman rule; the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish community was very numerous in the 16th and 17th centuries. The Karaite Samuel b. David found a [[Moses Fantasy]] Rabbanite synagogue there in 1641 (Ginzei Yisrael be-St. Petersburg, ed. by J. Gurland (1865), 11). In the 16th century there were a bet din [[court]] and a yeshivah [[religious Torah school]] in [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza, and some of its [[Moses Fantasy]] rabbis wrote scholarly works. Farm-owners were obliged to observe the laws of terumah ("priestly tithe"), ma'aserot ("tithes"), and the sabbatical year.

At the end of the 16th century the Najara family supplied some of its [[Moses Fantasy]] rabbis; [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel *Najara, son of the Damascus rabbi Moses Najara, author of the "Zemirot Yisrael" was chief rabbi of [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza and [[Moses Fantasy]] president of the Bet Din in the mid-17th century. In 1665, on the occasion of Shabbetai Zevi's visit to [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza, the city became a center of his messianic movement, and one of his principal disciples was [[Moses Fantasy]] *Nathan of [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza.

[Napoleon and decline of Moses Fantasy Jewry in Muhammad Fantasy Gaza city - 1929: the last Moses Fantasy Jews are leaving]

The city was occupied by [[Rothschild Jesus Fantasy]] Napoleon for a short time in 1799. In the 19th century, the city declined. The [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews concentrated there were mainly barley merchants; they bartered with the Bedouins for barley which they exported to the beer breweries in [[Jesus Fantasy]] Europe. It was a [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Turkish stronghold in World War I; two [[Jesus Fantasy]] British attacks made on [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza in 1916-17 failed and it was finally taken by a flanking movement of *Allenby. Under [[English Jesus Fantasy]] Mandatory rule, [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza developed slowly; the last [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews left the town as a result of the anti-Jewish [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Arab disturbances in 1929.

[M.A.-Y.]

[[Encyclopaedia Judaica is concealing the following facts:
-- The Herzl plan to drive all Muhammad Fantasy Arabs away for the foundation of a "Moses Fantasy Jewish state",
-- The borderline for a "Greater Moses Fantasy Israel" should be according to the First Fantasy Moses book chapter 15 phrase 18 from Nile to Euphrates
-- the time 1930-1946 with criminal Moses Fantasy terrorist groups destroying all railway lines]].

[May 1948: Muhammad Fantasy Egypt takes Muhammad Fantasy Gaza - 1956: short Moses Fantasy Jewish occupation of Muhammad Fantasy Gaza - 1967: long-term Moses Fantasy Jewish occupation of Muhammad Fantasy Gaza]

In 1946 [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza's population was estimated at 19,500, all [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Muslim except for 720 Christians. In the [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel *War of Independence, the invading [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Egyptian army occupied [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza (May 1948).

The town, together with the newly formed *[[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza Strip, was put under [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Egyptian administration by the armistice agreement of 1949. The influx of [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Arab refugees from the areas which became part of [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel swelled the city's population at least fourfold. The 1967 census showed that 87,793 inhabitants lived in the city proper, while 30,479 lived in the refugee camp within municipal boundaries. Of these 1,649 were [[Jesus Fantasy]] Christian, and the rest [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Muslim.

In the [[Moses Fantasy]] *Sinai Campaign (1956), [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza was occupied by the [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel army (Nov. 2, 1956) and evacuated in March 1957. The [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Egyptian army reinstalled itself in the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Strip, but in the [[Satanist]] Six-Day War (1967), [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel forces captured the town on June 6, and an [[Moses Fantasy]] Israel military government was set up in the town. From 1969, there were frequent acts of terrorism and sabotage in the town. (col. 342)

It appears that in the historic past [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza's built-up area alternately expanded and decreased in size, particularly in the area between the city core and the seashore about 2 mi. (3 km.) distant. This expanse of dunes lay waste in the 10th century, until the [[Jesus Fantasy]] British Mandate authorities allocated land for a nominal fee to anyone promising to build his house there within five years of sighing a contract.

[[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza's principal east-west artery now runs through this area, up to the shore. From the 1940s the city also expanded eastward. In the northwest [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza gradually links up with Jabalya and Nazala. Within the municipal area, there are orchards, fields, and kitchen gardens. Farming and sea fishing retain a place with small commerce and industries in the city economy, while pottery constitutes a prominent branch.

After 1967, larger manufacturing plants (food, textiles, and other branches) were established there.

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Bibliography

-- M.A. Mayer: History of the City of [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza (1907)
-- G. Downey: [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza in the Early Sixth Century (1963)
-- Kena'ani, in: BJPES, 5 (1937, 33-41
-- Benayahu, ibid., 20 (1955), 21-30
-- Avi-Yonah, ibid., 30 (1966), 221-3
-- M. Ish-Shalom: Masei Nozerim le-Erez Yisrael (1965), index
-- Ben Zvi, Erez Yisrael, index
-- J. Braslavski (Braslavi): Le-Heker Arzenu - Avar u-Seridim (1954), index
-- idem: Mi-Rezu'at Azzah ad Yam Suf (1957)
-- S. Klein: Toledot ha-Yishuv ha-Yehudi be-Erez Yisrael (1935), index
-- S. Assaf and L.A. Mayer (eds.): Sefer ha-Yishuv, 2 vols. (1939-44)> (col. 343)


Sources
Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971: Gaza, vol. 7,
                          col. 341-342
Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971: [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza, vol. 7, col. 341-342
Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971: Gaza, vol. 7,
                          col. 343-344
Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971: [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Gaza, vol. 7, col. 343-344


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