
How Did We Get Here? Israel and the Palestinians: 5. From WWII to the First Arab-Israeli war
Feb 9, 2026
Gudrun Kraemer, Islamic Studies professor with expertise on Palestinian society; Jeremy Bowen, BBC international editor and Middle East analyst; Simon Sebag Montefiore, historian of Jerusalem and modern history. They trace 1945–49: wartime Palestine, British immigration limits and Jewish armed campaign, the UN partition vote, civil war and Deir Yassin, Britain’s withdrawal, Israel’s declaration, Arab invasion and the creation of massive Palestinian displacement.
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Immigration Ban Fueled Jewish Rebellion
- Britain restricted Jewish immigration during the Holocaust, provoking deep resentment among Jews in Palestine.
- That policy helped turn many Jewish groups toward armed rebellion against British rule.
King David Hotel Bombing Changed British Resolve
- Menachem Begin's Irgun bombed the King David Hotel to break British will to rule Palestine.
- The attack killed British officials and intensified calls in Britain to withdraw from the mandate.
UN Partition Arrived As Britain Exited
- Britain handed the Palestine question to the UN in 1947 after wartime exhaustion and political pressure.
- The UN partition plan apportioned 55% to Jews despite their smaller population and left implementation responsibility unclear.








