Meengla
Elite Member
The desire to take southern Lebanon is old and unstoppable. A rich land very close to Israel's north. Just put a historic claim, Put the military behind it. And you got some very fertile land which would also serve as a huge strategic depth. Any idiot Lebanese here who thinks without Hezbollah they could hold onto southern Lebanon is an idiot!!
www.jpost.com
But the truth is that the current border between Israel and Lebanon is little more than a century old and is entirely artificial, a relic of a time when European colonialists whimsically drew lines on maps over a bottle of brandy in smoke-filled rooms.
Historically speaking, southern Lebanon is in fact northern Israel, and the roots of the Jewish people in the area run deep. Whether or not this can or should be translated now into a political reality is a far more complex question, but there is simply no denying our connection to the land.
Indeed, back in biblical times, southern Lebanon was clearly part of the Land of Israel. In the Book of Genesis (10:19) it says, “and the borders of Canaan reached from Sidon toward Gerar as far as Gaza, and then toward Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, and Tsevoyim as far as Lasha.” Sidon, a city in Lebanon, is about halfway between the current Israeli border and Beirut.
Michael Freund on southern Lebanon's history of belonging to the Jews | The Jerusalem Post
Historically speaking, southern Lebanon is in fact northern Israel, and the roots of the Jewish people in the area run deep.
Southern Lebanon is actually northern Israel - opinion
Historically speaking, southern Lebanon is in fact northern Israel, and the roots of the Jewish people in the area run deep.
But the truth is that the current border between Israel and Lebanon is little more than a century old and is entirely artificial, a relic of a time when European colonialists whimsically drew lines on maps over a bottle of brandy in smoke-filled rooms.
Historically speaking, southern Lebanon is in fact northern Israel, and the roots of the Jewish people in the area run deep. Whether or not this can or should be translated now into a political reality is a far more complex question, but there is simply no denying our connection to the land.
Indeed, back in biblical times, southern Lebanon was clearly part of the Land of Israel. In the Book of Genesis (10:19) it says, “and the borders of Canaan reached from Sidon toward Gerar as far as Gaza, and then toward Sodom, Gomorrah, Admah, and Tsevoyim as far as Lasha.” Sidon, a city in Lebanon, is about halfway between the current Israeli border and Beirut.








