Book | Chapter
Is there a human right to one's native soil?
pp. 277-281
Abstract
Nowhere, to my knowledge, has the moral impasse of claims and counterclaims in the Palestinian tragedy been summed up as concisely and poignantly as in the still valid report of the American Friends Service Committee, Search for Peace in the Middle East, of 1970.208 The elevent points in this confrontation of the two cases begin with the Israeli claim that their ancestors controlled Palestine more than two thousand years ago matched by the Arab counterclaim that they had held this land for more than 1300 years without interruption.
Publication details
Published in:
Spiegelberg Herbert (1986) Steppingstones toward an ethics for fellow existers: essays 1944–1983. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 277-281
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-4337-7_14
Full citation:
Spiegelberg Herbert (1986) Is there a human right to one's native soil?, In: Steppingstones toward an ethics for fellow existers, Dordrecht, Springer, 277–281.