Book contents
- The Legality of a Jewish State
- The Legality of a Jewish State
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface
- United Nations Entities
- Abbreviations
- Frontispiece
- Part I Battalions or Barristers
- Part II A Pair of Godfathers
- Part III A Flight from Justice
- Part IV From the Ashes of War
- 11 Did the League of Nations Covenant Violate Rights?
- 12 Were the Wishes of the Palestine Population Considered?
- 13 Did a National Home Violate the League Covenant?
- 14 Was Jewish Statehood Endorsed by the League of Nations?
- 15 Did the Palestine Mandate Carry the Force of Law?
- 16 Was Palestine a State?
- Part V Whose State?
- Part VI Jewish Statehood on the Ground
- Part VII Legitimacy in the New Century
- Notes
- Select Bibliography
- Index
14 - Was Jewish Statehood Endorsed by the League of Nations?
from Part IV - From the Ashes of War
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 December 2021
- The Legality of a Jewish State
- The Legality of a Jewish State
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface
- United Nations Entities
- Abbreviations
- Frontispiece
- Part I Battalions or Barristers
- Part II A Pair of Godfathers
- Part III A Flight from Justice
- Part IV From the Ashes of War
- 11 Did the League of Nations Covenant Violate Rights?
- 12 Were the Wishes of the Palestine Population Considered?
- 13 Did a National Home Violate the League Covenant?
- 14 Was Jewish Statehood Endorsed by the League of Nations?
- 15 Did the Palestine Mandate Carry the Force of Law?
- 16 Was Palestine a State?
- Part V Whose State?
- Part VI Jewish Statehood on the Ground
- Part VII Legitimacy in the New Century
- Notes
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
A reason given by the United Nations for recommending a partition of Palestine was that Jewish statehood had been endorsed by the League of Nations. The rationale was that the League of Nations had endorsed the commitment by Britain to promote a Jewish national home, and that Jewish national home meant a Jewish state. Britain wrote up a document for its governance of Palestine that included the fostering of a Jewish national home. Britain sought approval from the Council of the League of Nations for that document. The Council did approve the document. Britain took that approval as an endorsement of a Jewish national home. The Council, however, was not given an opportunity to influence the content of the document. As a result, the commitment for a Jewish national home was that of Britain alone. Britain denied that Jewish national home meant a Jewish state. The Palestine Mandate recited that the Balfour Declaration was endorsed by Britain’s allies, but the Allies did not do so.
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- Information
- The Legality of a Jewish StateA Century of Debate over Rights in Palestine, pp. 106 - 119Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021