Arab Christians in British Mandate Palestine

Arab Christians in British Mandate Palestine

  • Noah Haiduc-Dale
Publisher:Edinburgh University PressISBN 13: 9780748676040ISBN 10: 074867604X

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Know about the book -

Arab Christians in British Mandate Palestine is written by Noah Haiduc-Dale and published by Edinburgh University Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 074867604X (ISBN 10) and 9780748676040 (ISBN 13).

Recent conflict in the Middle East has caused some observers to ask if Muslims and Christians can ever coexist. History suggests that relations between those two groups are not predetermined, but are the product of particular social and political circumstances. This book examines Muslim-Christian relations during an earlier period of political and social upheaval, and explores the process of establishing new forms of national and religious identification. Palestine's Arab Christian minority actively engaged with the Palestinian nationalist movement throughout the period of British rule (1917-1948). Relations between Muslim and Christian Arabs were sometimes strained, yet in Palestine, as in other parts of the world, communalism became a specific response to political circumstances. While Arab Christians first adopted an Arab nationalist identity, a series of outside pressures - including British policies, the rise of a religious conflict between Jews and Muslims, and an increase in Islamic identification among some Arabs - led Christians to adhere to more politicized religious groupings by the 1940s. Yet despite that shift Christians remained fully nationalist, insisting that they could be both Arab and Christian.