| Résumé: | The study examines the basic problem behind how the Palestinian Cause has grown in
Islamic, Arab, and humanitarian political and cultural consciousness. The study attempts
to confirm that Islamic constants have a real continuing impact on maintaining support
for the Cause through Islamic nature, especially after the decline of the leftist, Arab
nationalist, Palestinian nationalist, and international components. The study seeks to
determine the level of Arab, Islamic and humanitarian sympathy for the Palestinian
Cause, both official and popular. It builds on the Cause’s development from the
intellectual, doctrinal, and historical aspects from its inception until its formation in 1948,
to 1967 with the occupation of the rest of Palestine, through the peace process, global
transformations, and then the recent years that witnessed a decline in the Palestinian
Cause. The study asks how the Cause can’t be affected by the challenges it faces. It also
analyzes the stages of development of the Cause internationally, while studying the
motives and dimensions of its Islamic constants. It also raises the importance of the
emergence of these constants and their impact on the Cause from different angles,
especially in light of the political circumstances of the emergence and emergence of these
constants. The study uses a historical approach that includes analysis to trace the
relationship between historical Palestine and Islam in the Middle East. It is also based on
an analytical and legal investigative approach. The study aims to cover the most
prominent challenges facing Islamic constants that prevent them from fulfilling their
duty, and how to address these challenges in light of the regional and international reality
of the Palestinian Cause. It has become clear that the Palestinian Cause is facing a
conceptual conflict aimed at hollowing out its Islamic constants and changing its traditional terminology in order to marginalize its human rights dimension and turn it into
a regional crisis that can be overcome with an economic deal.
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