Had the British never stuck their nose in the region in the first place, we'd likely have a democratic Palestinian state today. According to all historical records, Jews were well-treated in Palestine prior to the rise of Zionism.
Note the place was also run by Turks who hated Arabs (the Arabs kept rebelling). That's why the Turks asked Jews to settle there, to counterbalance the Arabs.
Today most of the fight is over Zionists saying 'God gave it to us' and the Palestinians saying 'You didn't even exist up to a few decades ago. Now give us our ancestors land back.'
I inserted a word in your statement in red that better conveys the nature of the matter. Its one group saying our ancestors had the land first, then your ancestors took it, then our ancestors took it back.
The other is saying our ancestors had it then your ancestors took it from us. Either taking land from someone because of their ancestors actions is wrong or it isn't. Either way Palestinians are hosed by simple logic. Ya, the 19th century was a bad time for colonists taking land, deal with it like everyone else, because thats when the majority of the "Land theft" occurred. The talk of 1948 as some kind of magic date is absurd, thats the date when it came to a head. It like pretending all the colonization of Canada happened in 1867 and in 1866 it was still entirely occupied by first nations.
As for Israel being a democracy, yes it is. So is Palestine. Maybe we have prejudices against them because their culture is different, but we can't say that because they didn't vote our way that they're not democratic. That's just not how democracy works. In fact, if we interfere in their democracy, they're likely to vote in even more extreme politicians.
1.) Just because you are a democracy does not mean other democracies have to like you or treat you nice or not be your enemy. The way
you vote doesn't get to dictate how
others treat you. They get to have their own elections thank you.
2.) Palestine MAY be a democracy, having on election does not a democracy make. Having
TWO elections is a good start, and when there is the first handover of power when someone loses, thats a better example. The Soviet Union still had regular elections after all.