The Dispossession of the Peasantry (ص 121)
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- The Dispossession of the Peasantry (ص 121)
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point to is the fact that most of the cultivable land was held by peasants.!!’ In
Palestine, as in all agricultural societies, land obviously is the primary source of
livelihood, and thus the peasants’ tenacity in holding on to it. This explains the fact
that throughout the period preceding WWI, most of the land was acquired from
large landowners, local and absentee, foreign institutes such as churches, and from
the government, with the first category the source of most land. Nonetheless, as
Owen writes, “Whatever its legal ownership, the land in question had almost
invariably been cultivated by peasants and seminomads who had either to be
evicted or to be employed by the new colonists as laborers.” !"
The impact of the initial Jewish European settlement on the Palestinian
society and economy is dealt with in the conclusion in the context of the overall
changes beginning around the mid-nineteenth century.
2.4 Conclusion
It is obvious from the above outline, that Palestine, during the 1850s-1914
period, underwent a relatively substantial economic growth, which is indicated both
by the population growth and the quantitative increase in the three sectors. As
already noted, what are not clear, given the lack of complete data, are the relative
changes in the structure of production or the relative distribution of the population
among the three sectors.
' The extent of large land holdings and its relationship to land sales are
discussed in Chapter 3.
'8Owen, Middle East, 270.
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- The Dispossession of the Peasantry
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- المنشئ
- Riyad Mousa
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