Friday, May 31, 2024

A Liberal Dose, May 30, 2024 "A History of Israel and Palestine, Part 2"


A Liberal Dose

May 30, 2024

Troy D. Smith

“A History of Israel and Palestine, Part 2”

 

Last time I defined The Levant: modern Israel, the Palestinian territories, Jordan, Lebanon, and part of Syria… basically, the lands along the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea. I introduced you to the people of Canaan (basically The Levant), who were part of a larger language group called Semitic. There were several groups living in Canaan in the years between 2000 and 1500 BCE, all with similar culture and language. There were Moabites, Ammonites, Edomites, and other -ites. To the east there were Amorites, Semitic people who founded the original Babylonian Empire (east of The Levant, in modern Iraq).  To the south, in modern Saudi Arabia, there were Arabic tribes, sometimes called Ishmaelites, who were also Semitic. And eventually, there were Hebrews -whose ancestors, according to tradition, had come from the Semitic city-state of Ur.

To the north of Canaan there were two major non-Semitic kingdoms and empires: Assyrians (northeast, their principal cities being Assur and Nineveh) and the Hittites (due north). To the south lay Egypt. By 1500 BCE, Egypt dominated Canaan/The Levant and made it part of their empire. They built a fort near an abandoned city that had been inhabited off and on since 3000 BCE… the fort and the revived city, which became an important stop for Egyptian caravans, became the headquarters for Egyptians in Canaan.

It was called Gaza.

I’m sure you all know the Bible stories. According to them, around 2000 BCE Abram/Abraham and his family left Ur, directed by God to the land of Canaan which was promised to his descendants. Abraham’s great-grandson Joseph was later sold into slavery by his jealous brothers (to a caravan of passing Arabs/Ishmaelites) and ended up in Egypt. He rose to prominence there, and was joined by his father and his whole family. Eventually, though, all the Israelites were made into slaves by the Egyptians. 450 years later, Moses led their descendants -two or three million of them -out of bondage in Egypt (so this would have been roughly 1300 BCE) and back to the Promised Land of Canaan… where they conquered most of the Canaanite peoples, took the land, and eventually established the Kingdom of Israel (circa 1000 BCE) and, later, the breakaway southern Kingdom of Judah. At its height (biblically), the Kingdom of Israel would have covered all of modern Israel and the Palestinian territories, much of modern Jordan, and the southern half of Lebanon. The only unconquered part was a strip of land in the south, along the Mediterranean shore, which included Gaza. That land was Philistia, home of the Philistines.

Except… most historians, archeologists, and Bible scholars don’t think it happened quite that way. There is no historical or archeological evidence of millions of Hebrews living in Egypt at that time, serving as slaves, or appearing suddenly in Canaan. Scholars believe the Israelites never LEFT Canaan. There is plenty of evidence, however, of something else major happening in the region at around the same time the Bible tells us the Israelites were fighting and conquering their Canaanite neighbors… around 1200 BCE.

As we discussed, Egypt had been in control of Canaan for about 300 years at that point -so biblical stories of Egyptian oppression have the ring of truth to them, just not taking place in Egypt itself. In the 12th century BCE, though, Egypt was attacked by a fierce group of “sea people” arriving by ship from the Mediterranean (probably from the Aegean Sea area). In the intense wars that followed, Egypt lost much of their possessions outside their own country, and was greatly weakened. Because of the intricate trade system in place, this caused a chain reaction- and almost all the major players in the region toppled, including Babylon and the Hittites, as well as (farther away) Troy and Mycenae (this is called the Late Bronze Age collapse). This led to a free-for-all in Canaan among the various peoples living there -and that is when the Israelites enter the historical record, eventually establishing their kingdom.

Some of the defeated Sea People settled in the area now known as Gaza, and probably intermarried with the Canaanites already there… and became known as Philistines. The word that we pronounce “Palestine” in English, by the way, is pronounced in Hebrew and Arabic more like fill-is-teen. Much later, in the fifth century BCE, Greek historian Herodotus would call the land Palaestine.

Hey, look at us, we covered another thousand years this week! The stage is now fully set. To be continued.

 

--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech and serves on the executive committee of the Tennessee Democratic Party. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.

 

 Buy the book A Liberal Dose: Communiques from the Holler by Troy D. Smith HERE



You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE


 

Thursday, May 30, 2024

A Liberal Dose, May 23, 2024 "A History of Israel and Palestine, Part 1"


A Liberal Dose

May 23, 2024

Troy D. Smith

“A History of Israel and Palestine, Part 1”

 

A history of the conflict between Israel and Palestine, with sufficient context to give you a good idea of the full picture… I don’t even know where to begin.

The other day I saw a quote from a politician who was angry that people were calling Israelis “occupiers” of Palestine. They aren’t occupiers, this person said, they OWN it, because it was promised to them in the Bible (the “Promised Land”, literally). Well, even that is not as simple as it seems. So, I guess the place to start is (at least near) the beginning -between four to five thousand years ago. (I really wish I could include a lot of maps in this! You can find them fairly easily online, though, if you look.)

No, wait, let’s start a couple of thousand years before even THAT… with the ancient people of Sumer. The Sumerians were the first known civilization in the world, and were located in Mesopotamia -specifically, what is now southern Iraq. One of their cities was named Ur (or Uruk) -which should be familiar to you Sunday School scholars out there, for reasons we’ll get to. Ur was one of the cities where writing first developed, around 3000 BCE. The civilization itself had started forming as early as 5500 BCE. A massive ziggurat was built in Ur around 4000 BCE, and a white temple erected atop that by 3500 BCE; it is likely that, a thousand years later, the Egyptians based their pyramids on such Sumerian ziggurats.

By 3000 BCE, the Sumerians had neighbors, who had possibly migrated northward from the Arabian peninsula: the Semitic people. “Semitic” refers to a language group. The word itself was invented in the late 1700s by European scholars, to describe these groups of people who spoke similar languages and thus must have had the same origins. Those scholars used the biblical name Shem (one of the sons of Noah), as in descendants of that branch of humanity as they understood it at the time.

Some Semitic people lived in cities, while many were nomads. They traveled on donkeys and herded sheep, trading with the city-dwelling Semites. One of those cities was called Akkad. ALL cities in Mesopotamia were, more accurately, city-states, each with its own king. Until the arrival of Sargon the Great, king of Akkad, around 2300 BCE. Sargon conquered several nearby Semitic cities, and used his growing army to conquer all the Sumerian cities… building what was probably the first true empire in the world. Those Sumerian cities -including Ur -became Semitic cities. Eventually, the Akkadian language dominated most of Mesopotamia, while a different Semitic language group occupied The Levant, which is northeast of the Arabian Peninsula. The Levant includes modern Israel, the Palestinian territories, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria.

The Semitic cities of the ancient Levant became well known for their purple dye, which was prized by all their neighbors for many centuries and was made from mollusks indigenous to that part of the Mediterranean coast. In fact, the ancient Greeks called those Semites Purple People… or Phoenicians. Akkadians also called them Purple People, but in their own Semitic language:  ka-na-na-um. People of Canaan. Canaanite would branch off into several Central Semitic languages, including Phoenician, Arabic, and Hebrew. Historians refer to the Bronze Age people as Canaanites, then call them Phoenicians in the Iron Age, starting around 1200 BCE.

Most historians and Bible scholars believe the Hebrews were one of several Canaanite groups living in the Levant in the third millennium BCE. Not only the language, but much of the culture, of the ancient Hebrews was very similar to their neighbors. They were certainly all Semitic. According to the traditions of several different religions originating in the area, it was a Semitic man living in the (formerly Sumerian, by then Akkadian) city of Ur around 2000 BCE who took his family and flocks west to the land of Canaan. His name was Abram, or Abraham, and he had two sons (with different mothers): Isaac and Ishmael. Those sons (again, according to tradition) would become the ancestors, respectively, of the Jewish and Arabic people. Whether one chooses (as I’m sure many readers do) to regard those names as historical, or if one chooses to view them as symbolic, the conclusion is the same: Jews and Arabs have the same ancestors.

So what happened?

Only four thousand more years of history to cover! Stay tuned!

 

--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech and serves on the executive committee of the Tennessee Democratic Party. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.

 Buy the book A Liberal Dose: Communiques from the Holler by Troy D. Smith HERE



You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE



 

Friday, May 10, 2024

A Liberal Dose, May 9, 2024 "A Nation Divided Over a Nation Divided"

 


A Liberal Dose

May 9, 2024

Troy D. Smith

“A Nation Divided over a Nation Divided”

 

An interesting thing happened to me the other day. I was on Youtube, looking for the most recent clip from John Oliver’s Last Week Tonight. The first thing that popped up was a bit showing Anderson Cooper reporting on the conflict between Israel and Palestinians in Gaza. Cooper was telling us that an attack had been launched from Gaza that killed Israelis, and the Israeli government was bombing Gaza in retaliation, killing countless civilians, and saying it was Hamas’s fault for hiding weapons among those civilians. Why was this on a comedy show? Because Oliver showed several more clips of Anderson Cooper -from 2012, 2009, 2006, back to 2002 -saying almost word-for-word the exact same thing. The joke was that there were two constants in the world: Anderson Cooper always looks exactly the same (Oliver made a Dorian Grey reference), and Israelis and Palestinians are always killing each other. I noticed at that point that the clip I was watching wasn’t from a 2024 episode after all, it was from a 2014 episode.

And that’s about the only halfway funny thing that can be said about this whole tragic situation (and even that is far more sad than funny).

Despite the fact the two sides have been fighting each other for what seems like forever, things have ramped up unbelievably since October 7, 2023. On that day, Hamas fighters surged into Israeli territory and killed over 1,100 people and abducted about 250 more, whom they took back to Gaza as hostages. There were reports of incredible atrocities, rape not least among them. Israel responded with overwhelming force, which surprised no one… but many have been surprised, and outraged, by how overwhelming it has been. So far, 34,000 people have been killed by Israeli attacks in Gaza -the vast majority of them civilians (and many of them children). The people of Gaza now have very little, in some cases no, access to food, medical care, fuel, electricity, or, in many cases, drinkable water. The result is widespread starvation. The UN Human Rights Council has cited “clear evidence” of war crimes. A large number of journalists and international aid workers have been killed by Israeli forces, sometimes despite clear markings of their identities.

Everything I said in the above paragraph was fact. However, exactly what those facts mean, or for some people how those facts are framed, depends on perspective. And everyone in the world -including the U.S. -does not have the same perspective. Most come down very firmly, often forcefully, on one side or the other. It seems most on the political right unequivocally side with the Israeli government, but the left is divided -with many on the center-left steadfast in support of the Israeli government, but many farther-left folks supporting the Palestinians, or even Hamas. While not universal, it seems to me there is also an age divide, with most people I know under 35 much more critical of Israel and much more empathetic toward the Palestinians of Gaza. I’ve heard pundits from both parties claiming that is true because young people are uninformed or easily misled, but I don’t think that is the case. I think at least some of it depends on how much one’s thinking was shaped by the Cold War era.

I also think that most Americans in general -young or old, left or right -don’t fully understand the complexities of this situation or the history associated with it. And I think that a lot of people (liberal and conservative) have fallen into the trap of describing any opposition whatsoever to Benjamin Netanyahu or the Israeli government as antisemitism. I admit that is a factor for some, but not for the vast majority of protesters. There are huge numbers of Jewish people IN ISRAEL who oppose Netanyahu and the current actions of his government (I know some). There are large numbers of Jewish people in the U.S. who are part of the pro-Palestinian protests around the country. My own future son-in-law, a devout Jew, was baking bread last week to take to the shabbat observances by the large number of Jewish protesters at one of the campus encampments.

It’s not as simple as many would have you believe. Or maybe it is… just not in the same way.

I said last week it was going to take a while for me to address this subject. This week’s whole column has been composed of me just setting the stage. Next week we’ll start delving into the history.

 

--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech and serves on the executive committee of the Tennessee Democratic Party. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.

 Buy the book A Liberal Dose: Communiques from the Holler by Troy D. Smith HERE



You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE


Sunday, May 5, 2024

A Liberal Dose, May 2, 2024 "Notice Who the Money Keeps Trickling to"

 


A Liberal Dose

May 2, 2024

Troy D. Smith

“Notice Who the Money Keeps Trickling to”

 

First, the situation with Israel and Palestine continues to spiral further and further out of hand and is starting to do so in this country as well. I have been putting off discussing it on here until the semester was over, because doing the subject justice will take deep thought, time, and will require more than one 700-ish word column. I hope to get started on it with next week’s piece, because it can’t be put off any longer. I will say, for now, how ridiculous it was last week to read Marsha Blackburn’s column about how disruptive and wrong protests are and how they (and pretty much anything Republicans don’t like nowadays) should be felonies. Coming from people who continue to excuse, justify, deny, and/or support the insurrection at the Capitol on January 6, 2021, this -much like cries of outrage over the border when they dropped their own bill on it -is rankest hypocrisy. Protesting in a peaceful yet “disruptive” way (which is the whole point of protest) should apparently be a felony when it is on a topic they don’t support- but wreaking havoc on the Capitol, assaulting policemen with dangerous weapons, and smearing feces on the walls of Congress are all just fine when it’s YOUR side that does it.

For this week, I’ll spend the rest of my time discussing rank hypocrisy on a state level.

Did you know that Tennessee is one of only 13 states in the country that imposes sales tax on food? Did you further know that, food tax aside, Tennessee has the highest sales tax in the nation? Relying on sales tax instead of state income tax is generally known as a “regressive” tax system… because it places a higher burden on the poorest people (including working people) than on the richest people. Taxing food is just adding insult to injury (while also compounding the injury). Democrats in the General Assembly tried to end the tax on food this year… but Republicans blocked those efforts. However, Republicans have ONCE AGAIN lowered the business tax, to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars a year and billions over the next few years, including over 1.5 billion dollars in refunds to big businesses this year alone. And they are doing their level best to do it in such a way none of us will know just which businesses are getting these breaks, and how much… but it is estimated more than half of that money is going to be going to businesses outside Tennessee. A lot of it will be staying in the state, though, including those tax savings going to Governor Lee’s multi-million-dollar company.

So… we can’t afford to give working people a break on basic necessities like food -even when so many are suffering -but we can give up billions of dollars in tax revenue for big business. A couple of weeks ago I mentioned several bills that Republicans shot down -higher minimum wage, free breakfast and lunch for school kids, paid time off for new foster parents -in most cases, without even listening to the arguments in favor of them. One particular legislator, though, argued with us (my union) that the state government can’t afford to do things like that. Yet we have a surplus. And yet we keep handing tax breaks out to the large companies and the wealthiest individuals. Clearly, we CAN afford it, they just don’t want to do it… not because it would take money away from taxpayers, but because it would give them less money to hand out to their cronies.

I have a friend who loves to say “Has a poor person ever given you a job?” as a way to defend trickle-down economics. I always reply, yes, all the time. Because when a working person has more money on hand to spend, THEY SPEND IT -because they have to, to get what they need (or maybe just things they want but usually go without). And the more they do that, the more goods are sold in this country, the more goods need to be made, the more money flows through the hands of the most people. Heck, the more money people at the top make in the long run (as Will Rogers pointed out, money trickles UP). But they’d much rather have it NOW. And their Republican friends keep making sure they get it, don’t they… by taking it away from YOU. All this other stuff is just smoke and mirrors to keep you from noticing.

--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech and serves on the executive committee of the Tennessee Democratic Party. His words do not necessarily represent TTU.

 

Buy the book A Liberal Dose: Communiques from the Holler by Troy D. Smith HERE



You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE

A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE

Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com

The author's historical lectures on youtube can be found HERE