April 30, 2020 <Back to Index>
PAGE SPONSOR |
Faisal Abdel Qader Al-Husseini (Arabic: فيصل عبدالقادر الحسيني) (July 17, 1940 – May 31, 2001) was a Palestinian politician who was considered a possible future leader of the Palestinian people. Husseini was born in Baghdad son of Abd al-Qadir al-Husayni, commander of local Arab forces during the siege of 1948, grandson of Musa Kazim Pasha Al-Husseini, Mayor of Jerusalem, and a relative of Haj Mohammad Amin al-Husayni, the former Grand Mufti of Jerusalem. He studied in Cairo, Baghdad and Damascus. He was a founding member of the General Union of Palestinian Students (GUPS) in 1959. Husseini went to work for the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) upon its establishment in Jerusalem as deputy manager of the Public Organization Dept, a post he filled from 1964 to 1965. He later received military training at the Damascus Military College after which he joined the Palestinian Liberation Army in 1967. In 1979, Husseini founded and became chairman of the Arab Studies Society. Israel, from 1982 – 1987, repeatedly placed him under house and city arrest. He was imprisoned several times from April 1987 – January 1989, but remained active in the Intifada. In 1982, he became a member of the Supreme Muslim Council in Jerusalem. Subsequently he served as a Palestinian spokesperson, head of the Jerusalem National Council / Palestine, member and later head of the Palestinian delegation to the Madrid Middle East Peace Conference and subsequent talks, head of the Fatah faction in the West Bank, and Palestinian Authority Minister without Portfolio. His last post was Palestinian Authority Minister for Jerusalem Affairs for which he was based in East Jerusalem. He died while trying to mend relations between the Kuwaiti government and PLO which were broken at the time of the 1991 Gulf War. Husseini was considered a pragmatist by journalists. He taught himself to speak Hebrew and regularly appeared in radio and television shows in Israel to explain the Palestinians' point of view. Husseini died of a seeming heart attack in Kuwait on May
31, 2001. Following Husseini's death, Israeli police
seized his headquarters, the Orient House.
Husseini was buried in a family tomb near the Dome of the
Rock, in a funeral attended by thousands. Haidar Abdel-Shafi (Haidar Abdul Shaffi) (Arabic: حيدر عبد الشافي June 10, 1919 – September 25, 2007) was a Palestinian physician, community leader and political leader who was the head of the Palestinian delegation to the Madrid Conference of 1991. Abdel-Shafi was born in Gaza, one of six children of Sheikh Muheiddin Abdel - Shafi, head of the Higher Islamic Council Waqf and custodian of the holy places in Gaza and Hebron (from 1925 - 27). He attended primary school in Gaza; secondary education as a boarder at the Arab College in Jerusalem and graduated in 1936. He graduated in 1943 from the American University of Beirut College of Medicine in Beirut. At the University he joined George Habash's Arab Nationalist Movement dedicated to Arab nationalism and the "liberation of Palestine". Abdel - Shafi worked at the British Mandate of Palestine's Municipal Hospital in Jaffa. In 1944 - 1945 he joined the Desert Army of the British Jordanian Army, then part of a new British Ninth Army intended to open a second front - which never materialized - in the Balkans. Spent the war instead in various locations in Palestine: Al-Azraq, Ashona, Jericho, Gaza, and resigned his commission at the war's end. He returned to Gaza and entered private medical practice. He then co-founded a branch of the Palestine Medical Society in 1945, and participated in the first Palestine Medical Congress in 1946. In 1947 and during the Arab - Israeli clashes following
the UN partition plan, he provided medical support for the
Palestinian fighters. During the 1948 Arab Israeli war, he
ran a clinic in Gaza to serve the refugees who flooded
into Gaza in large numbers. During this period he worked
closely with the Quakers, who provided humanitarian relief
for the refugees until UNRWA was established in 1951. In 1951 he began his studying medicine at Miami Valley Hospital in Dayton, Ohio. He returned to Gaza in 1954, by which time it was under Egyptian rule. He worked as a surgeon at the Tal Zahur Hospital. In 1956, as the Gaza strip came under the control of Israel, a municipal council with Abdel - Shafi as one of its ten (10) members was installed. In 1957 Dr. Abdel - Shafi married Hoda Khalidi, from a prominent Jerusalemite family. Dr. Abdel-Shafi was appointed as Head of medical services in the Gaza Strip from 1957 until 1960. During this period, he became a strong admirer and personal friend of Gamal Abdel Nasser. In 1960, he returned to his private medical practice. He held a two year term as chairman of the first Palestinian Legislative Council
in Gaza beginning in 1962. He was also a delegate to the
first all - Palestinian conference (Palestinian National
Council) which convened in Jerusalem in 1964 and helped
establish the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). He
served as a member of the first PLO Executive Committee
(1964 - 1965). By 1966 he was a leading PLO figure in the
Gaza Strip. In June 1967, Israel controlled Gaza after the Six Day War. During and shortly after the war, Dr. Abdel - Shafi volunteered at al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza. He was later temporarily detained by Israel, suspected of support for the military activities of George Habash's new guerilla faction, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), an offshoot of the Arab Nationalist Movement. Abdel - Shafi denied membership, but expressed his sympathy for the group's goals. Upon his release, he refused all co-operation with Israel's plans to tie Gaza to Israel through the development of a common infrastructure. Moshe Dayan expelled him for three months to the isolated Sinai village of Nekhl in 1969. Deported again on September 12, 1970, this time to Lebanon for two months, along with five other prominent members of the Gazan leadership, in retaliation for a PFLP hijacking. He was the founder and director of the Palestinian Red Crescent Society in the Gaza Strip in 1972, his own rallying organization for Palestinian improvement. He was attacked by Islamists, who, in 1981 burned down his clinic. During the First Intifada in May 1988 he was one of three
Palestinians (the others were Saeb Erekat and Hanan
Ashrawi) to participate in Nightline's
Town Hall meeting from
Jerusalem. It was the first time that Palestinians and
high ranking PLO members had directly addressed Israeli
and Western audiences. In 1991, he led the Palestinian delegation to the Madrid Peace Conference and subsequently led the Palestinian negotiation team for 22 months in the Washington talks (1992 - 93). He broke with the Palestinian negotiating team over the Oslo peace agreement over the question of the Israeli settlements. He was one of the first to predict that the Oslo process would collapse because it failed to tackle the issue of settlements. In 1996, he was elected to the Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) with the highest number of votes as member for Gaza. He took up leadership of the PLC's political committee. He resigned as a deputy in the PLC in late 1997 to protest what he described at the time as the failure to deal with corruption in the Palestinian Authority. Two years later he initiated unity talks for all factions in Gaza. Following the outbreak of the second Intifada, he urged the Palestinian Authority (PA) to organize the Intifada rather than distance itself from it, and to widen its democratic base by forming a government of national unity. He co-founded the Palestinian National Initiative in 2002 along with Edward Said, Mustafa Barghouti and Ibrahim Dakkak s a national platform for combining the struggle for national liberation and the return of refugees with the values of national unity, democracy and social justice. On April 8, 2007 he was presented with the Palestinian Star of Honor by President Mahmoud Abbas largely for his role as founding member and President of the Palestinian National Initiative. He died from cancer in Gaza aged 88. His funeral rally was attended by various political factions in Gaza in a rare show of unity. He was survived by his wife, four children (Hind, Khaled, Tareq, Salah) and seven grandchildren. |