Tbh the jews have made their mind for a while before ww2 that europe was not in their future. The thing is they picked a fight with the second most populous religion in the world, the way they are going, either they kill off all muslims or they will never be really at peace.
Partly agree because it varied by region.
The pogroms were in Eastern Europe (Russian Empire mostly) in the late 1800s. You are right folks there likely saw they have no future early on and lots of migration happened before fascism took hold in Western Europe and even prior to WW1 (back when Palestine was under Ottomans). Eastern Europe didnt have strong national identities in that era anyway we are even seeing the identities of Ukraine, Belarus etc.. getting crystallized just now. You know something is seriously wrong if a jewish person is seeking refuge in an Islamic empire. Reminds me of this:
Western Europe is where national identities were much more mature and should have fully included jewish folks as equal citizens. It kinda did "on paper" until the going got rough.
I don't know if the leadership back then consciously picked this fight. If you think Palestinian suffering, lives, quality of life etc.. is invisible and under-valued today, it was 10x less visible in the past. They just get overlooked. They were largely invisible to the brits and every major power back then.
To this day you'll see narratives that implicitly assume it was empty land, or that the people that were there are some generic arabs that can move elsewhere without issue.
Observing whats happening these past few days, its very clear to me that the life on one side counts much less than another in many analyses. I am talking about analyses from well-intentioned people who are trying to be objective. They don't notice that they're doing it.