Yesha
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- For the moshav (Israeli communal town) see Yesha, moshav
Yesha (Hebrew: יש"ע) is a Hebrew acronym for " Judea, Samaria Gaza" (Hebrew: יהודה שומרון עזה, "Yehuda Shomron 'Azza", also known as the West Bank and Gaza Strip), and is one of a number of terms used to describe the areas Israel gained control over during the Six-Day War of June 1967. The areas had previously been captured by Egypt and Jordan during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. The term "Yesha" is still commonly used in Israel even though Israel has evacuated the settlements and military bases from the Gush Katif settlement bloc and the other Jewish villages in Gaza and retreated to the Green Line. Other acronyms used by Israelis after the disengagement from Gaza, to refer to the West Bank only, are Shai (ש"י Shomron VeYehuda - Samaria and Judea), and Ayosh (איו"ש Ezor Yehuda VeShomron - Judea and Samaria Area).
The Yesha Council is the umbrella organization of the various municipal councils (local, regional, and cities) which oversees the resettlement of Jews and their revenant rights in the area. The population is predominantly Jewish, although some Bedouin live in the area.
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[edit] Terminology
The West Bank and Gaza Strip are referred to by the United Nations and from the Palestinian perspective as the "occupied Palestinian territories." Some Israelis refer to them as the "disputed territories," and many others call them simply "Judea and Samaria" and "Gaza."
After 1967, the UN used the term "occupied Palestinian territories," but the United Nations General Assembly Resolution 181 passed on November 29, 1947 used "the boundary of the hill country of Samaria and Judea" as part of the description of the border between the proposed Jewish and Arab states. [1]
Various Israelis and their supporters (particularly Orthodox Jews, who believe that the Land of Israel is an eternal Divine Gift) argue that acquisition of these territories during the War of 1967 was a legitimate liberation of land that rightfully belongs to the Jewish people, while others favor the establishment of an independent Arab state in parts or all of the territories.