“Palestine” — The Myth
The word “Palestine” as used in modern media, Arab propaganda, and political discourse is not a historical reality — it is a manufactured identity, a political weapon, and a lie told so many times the world has begun to accept it as truth. These articles expose the myth at its roots.
“Palestine” — The Myth
The first installment of Michael Knighton's three-part series exposing the myth of “Palestine” — its origins, its architects, and why the world's acceptance of the lie does not make it true.
“Palestine” — The Myth
Part II continues the examination — tracing how the Palestinian narrative was constructed, weaponized, and exported to the world stage through media, academia, and the United Nations.
“Palestine” — The Myth
The conclusion of the series — what the Bible, history, and archaeology confirm about the Land of Israel, and why no amount of repetition can change the truth of God's everlasting covenant.
“Palestine” — The Myth
Michael Knighton traces the true origin of the word “Palestine” — a Roman emperor’s deliberate insult derived from Israel’s ancient enemies the Philistines, and never intended to name an Arab people or homeland.
“Palestine” — The Myth
Michael Knighton examines the full historical record — from Ottoman rule to the British Mandate to the Arab rejection of UN Resolution 181 in 1947 — and proves conclusively that a sovereign Arab state called Palestine has never existed. No currency. No language. No government. Not once.
“Palestine” — The Myth
Michael Knighton exposes the manufactured life story of Yasser Arafat — born in Cairo, not Jerusalem; architect of a terrorist empire; the man who rejected statehood at Camp David and robbed his own people. The “Palestinian people” was a political construction. Arafat was its most ruthless engineer.
“Palestine” — The Myth
Michael Knighton examines the original PLO Charter — written three years before Israel held the West Bank or Gaza. Article 24 explicitly excluded both territories from PLO claims, proving the movement was never about statehood. It was about elimination. The founding document says so in plain language.
“Palestine” — The Myth
Michael Knighton documents how Emperor Hadrian deliberately erased the name “Judea” in 135 AD, renaming it “Syria Palaestina” after the Philistines — Israel’s ancient enemies, extinct for 700 years — to sever the Jewish people’s connection to their land. That Roman act of ethnic erasure is the foundation of modern Palestinian identity.
“Palestine” — The Myth
Michael Knighton exposes UNRWA — the only UN refugee agency created for a single ethnic group, with a definition of “refugee” that passes to descendants in perpetuity. Under UNHCR rules, there are zero Palestinian refugees. Under UNRWA rules, there are 5.9 million. That gap is not humanitarian. It is a weapon aimed at Israel’s demographic elimination.
“Palestine” — The Myth
Every genuine nation has a language, a currency, and a continuous history. Palestinian national identity has none of these. Michael Knighton documents the absence of each — and quotes Palestinian and Arab leaders who admitted it themselves — exposing the Palestinian national movement as a political construction with no historical foundation.
“Palestine” — The Myth
Michael Knighton exposes how Western universities became the primary engine of Palestinian revisionism — from Edward Said’s Orientalism and post-colonial theory to the BDS movement on campus — documenting the systematic corruption of historical truth in the academy and what Scripture says about those who call evil good.
“Palestine” — The Myth
Michael Knighton walks through the names Scripture actually uses for the land — Eretz Yisrael, Canaan, Judea, Samaria, Galilee, Zion — and the one name the Bible never uses for the Jewish homeland: Palestine. A biblical recovery of the vocabulary God Himself gave to His covenant land.
“Palestine” — The Myth
The closing article of the series. Michael Knighton traces the two-thousand-year confusion between Philistine and Palestine — two words deliberately conflated to build a national identity on the foundation of an extinct Aegean people who were neither Arab, Semitic, nor indigenous to the land they briefly occupied.