The Hundred Years War on Palestine
The Hundred Years War on Palestine However, the war also triggered a resurgence of Palestinian identity. Both in the diaspora and under occupation, efforts to organize a unified national movement intensified. The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) assumed a central role as the representative of the Palestinian people, articulating their right to self-determination and engaging in both diplomatic and armed resistance.
The Six-Day War cemented an occupation regime that redefined the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. For Palestinians, it signified not only the loss of additional land but also the institutionalization of a system designed to dispossess and marginalize them. This war marked the beginning of a new paradigm, where Palestinian resistance and Israeli occupation became the central forces shaping the struggle for justice in the decades to follow.
In June 1967, the Six-Day War drastically altered the political and territorial landscape of the Middle East. In a brief but decisive conflict, Israel occupied the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, East Jerusalem, the Golan Heights, and the Sinai Peninsula. This territorial expansion marked the beginning of an occupation regime that would redefine Palestinian lives, consolidating a new era of control and displacement.
