There is no moral equivalence between Jews who left Arab countries in the run-up to the Israeli War of Independence in 1948 and afterward and the Arabs who departed at that time from what was to become the Jewish state.

Around 1947–1948, two populations – Jews and Arabs – each experienced mass displacement, with approximately 900,000 people migrating.

The Arabs who were dispossessed from their homes and vineyards maintain rightful ownership over these properties, it is widely contended. They have lived there for decades, if not centuries. They departed from this fledgling country, Israel, and were not allowed to return. Instead, they were consigned to massive refugee camps, where they have lived ever since, unto several generations by the present date. These people experienced a dire plight. Virtually all commentators blame this situation on the supposed cruelty of the Israelis. They, obdurately, will not allow them to implement their so-called “right of return.” In point of fact, they were treated shabbily by other Arabs in order to demonstrate this supposed Israeli cruelty.

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