A popular uprising by Palestinian Arabs in Mandatory Palestine against the British administration, known as the Great Revolt, and later the Great Palestinian Revolt or the Palestinian Revolution, lasted from 1936 until 1939. The movement sought independence from British colonial rule and the end of British support for Zionism, including Jewish immigration and land sales to Jews.
The uprising occurred during a peak in the influx of European Jewish immigrants, and with the growing plight of the rural fellahin rendered landless, who as they moved to metropolitan centres to escape their abject poverty found themselves socially marginalized. Since the Battle of Tel Hai in 1920, Jews and Arabs had been involved in a cycle of attacks and counter-attacks, and the immediate spark for the uprising was the murder of two Jews by a Qassamite band, and the retaliatory killing by Jewish gunmen of two Arab labourers, incidents which triggered a flare-up of violence across Palestine. A month into the disturbances, Amin al-Husseini, president of the Arab Higher Committee and Mufti of Jerusalem, declared 16 May 1936 as "Palestine Day" and called for a general strike. David Ben-Gurion, leader of the Yishuv, described Arab causes as fear of growing Jewish economic power, opposition to mass Jewish immigration and fear of the British identification with Zionism.
The general strike lasted from April to October 1936. The revolt is often analysed in terms of two distinct phases. The first phase began as spontaneous popular resistance, which was seized on by the urban bourgeois Arab Higher Committee, giving the movement an organized shape that was focused mainly on strikes and other forms of political protest, in order to secure a political result. By October 1936, this phase had been defeated by the British civil administration using a combination of political concessions, international diplomacy (involving the rulers of Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Transjordan and Yemen) and the threat of martial law. The second phase, which began late in 1937, was a peasant-led resistance movement provoked by British repression in 1936 in which increasingly British forces were targeted as the army itself increasingly targeted the villages it thought supportive of the revolt. During this phase, the rebellion was brutally suppressed by the British Army and the Palestine Police Force using repressive measures that were intended to intimidate the whole population and undermine popular support for the revolt. A more dominant role on the Arab side was taken by the Nashashibi clan, whose NDP party quickly withdrew from the rebel Arab Higher Committee, led by the radical faction of Amin al-Husseini, and instead sided with the British β dispatching "Fasail al-Salam" (the "Peace Bands") in coordination with the British Army against nationalist and Jihadist Arab "Fasail" units (literally "bands").
According to official British figures covering the whole revolt, the army and police killed more than 2,000 Arabs in combat, 108 were hanged, and 961 died because of what they described as "gang and terrorist activities". In an analysis of the British statistics, Walid Khalidi estimates 19,792 casualties for the Arabs, with 5,032 dead: 3,832 killed by the British and 1,200 dead due to intracommunal terrorism, and 14,760 wounded. By one estimate, ten percent of the adult male Palestinian Arab population between 20 and 60 was killed, wounded, imprisoned or exiled. Estimates of the number of Palestinian Jews killed are up to several hundred.
The road to the 1936 revolt https://palmuseum.org/en/museum-from-home/stories-from-palestine/road-1936-revolt
THE 1936-39 REVOLT IN PALESTINE, GHASSAN KANAFANI https://pflp-documents.org/documents/PFLP-Kanafani3639.pdf
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Finally swapped my desktop over to Linux! Found out Hyprland dev is shit, so trying to figure out if I want Sway, Niri, or just Plasma. CachyOS is cool but I also feel the pull of Arch... Decisions decisions decisions.
Mainly a gaming PC but I also want to use it for basic productivity, libreoffice and the like + relearning to program, primarily interested in Rust and Clojure based on the buzz I see around them. Not serious dev work, just messing around on the side.
CachyOS is based on Arch, so unless you want to do the meme and install it the manual way, you'd still get all the benefits of Arch on Cachy, or any other Arch-based distro like Endevour (except Manjaro, which has some problems). Also seconding the recommendation for Plasma. It's endlessly customizable and has completely spoiled me on what to expect from a desktop enviroment. Using Windows and MacOS at work drives me mad now with how many little features I expect to be present and then somehow just aren't there in OSes made by billion dollar companies.
Editting to add that I believe there's window tiling plugins you can add to Plasma if you want both Plasma and a tiling window manager experience. The old one was called kwin-bismuth but I think there's a couple of successors for the current version of plasma.
Yep, I've used Arch with Plasma on my laptop for a couple years at this point, but mostly use it for tinkering. I'm mostly questioning if I want the tinkering on my main gaming machine or not. Logically I don't, but I keep hearing my gut say I do, lol
Just a heads up but the archinstall script is pretty much the de facto way to install it now and it's really simple. People who do it manually are doing it for nerd points. I would still recommend something like Cachy or Endeavour for most people, but if someone wants a really clean and unopinionated system, then the install script is great.
I'm a little annoyed at the Cachy devs because they refused to join the Open Gaming Collective after significantly misunderstanding a situation where the Bazzite team banned a transphobic core dev from the project. They said the OGC was an attempt to pass work onto other people after they "alienated their core members" or something. It's not enough to not recommend them, but I wish they'd play ball with the rest of the Linux community trying to standardize some stuff like Proton/Wine prefixes.
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If you want a more woke version of Hyprland, I recommend Zirconium, which is part of the Fedora atomic offshoots. It uses Niri and DankMaterialShell (bad name) to create a really nice and smooth experience. Many of the devs are trans and have a strict "no cash software" policy, as far as you can take that.
I personally just use KDE though cuz window managers are missing too much stuff for me still.
If you don't like Zirconium, you can rebase to Bazzite, Bluefin, Aurora or plain Fedora Atomic.
You gotta be willing to use containers for development though in the atomic setup.
Oh, another rabbit hole! Thanks for the recs!
Most GNU/Linux distributions are 95% the same software. The question is organization politics, influence, and expertise. I've been enjoying Debian: it's international, woke (they are not beholden to any capitalist org or leadership personality), has a huge community of talented volunteers and is the gold standard for other distributions.
Arch is the same, I generally try to keep myself as close to the source as possible and it's possible to use the software packaged by the CachyOS folks in Arch itself (most people just want their tuned-up G@mer kernel), so Arch could be the better choice.
Thanks for the input! I tend to agree, I like going with the base and tweaking it to my own.