The word “occupation” has been accepted, foolishly, by too many in the
West. It does not adequately describe Israel’s taking possession,
because of its victory in the Six-Day War thrust upon it by Nasser and
a runaway Egyptian military, of Gaza and “the West Bank.” (An aside:
curious, isn’t it, that the topoynms “Judea” and “Samaria,” though they
have been in use all over the Western world since Roman times, and
certainly were used by Jesus and the first Christians, suddenly dropped
out of use, and the vague placename invented by the Jordanians in 1949,
“the West Bank,” was accepted and “Judea” and “Samaria” mocked as
“Biblical names used only by Israel’s right-wing” — yet at the same
time “Gaza,” a Biblical term for which the Egyptians did not find a
replacement, continues to be unembarrassedly used by those in the West
who, having no sense of history or logic, who would not be caught dead
referring to “Judea” and “Samaria”?)
The Israeli “Occupation”