Antun
Sa'adeh and the Struggle for Syrian
National Independence (1904-1949)
By Dr Adel Beshara
Antun
Sa'adeh, a nationalist thinker who lived from 1904 to 1949, not only
strongly influenced the development of Syrian nationalism; he was
one of the major intellectual figures of modern Syria. The impact of
his ideas has been felt in politics, literature and philosophy, as
well as in the social sciences. Indeed, the publications for which
he was best known (The Rise of Nations, The Ten Lectures,
Intellectual Struggle in Syrian Literature, and The Folly of
Immortality), have had a broad influence on the
politico-intellectual movement in Syria and throughout the Arab
World.80
Sa'adeh's life was a unique blend of dedicated,
perpetual struggle, righteous idealism, and theoretical pragmatism.
He was not simply an outspoken figure on the political stage, but
attempted the revolutionary treatment of paramount social and
economic ills. Sa'adeh's strength - regarded by some as a weakness -
lay in his ability to confront social reality as a normative thinker
interested in what ought to be rather than in the pragmatic
what is. Some saw his vision as an essential utopian one. If
that is utopian, every critic and reformer is a utopian. A scholar,
who cultivated his friendship, described him as a man of
...
unusually strong character and striking personality. He possessed a
great deal of will power and was extremely intelligent with a deep
insight for politics.81
Sa'adeh passionately desired to achieve a united
society, in which its people understood that their highest duty was
to the nation. The ways and means by which he could achieve this
goal seemed to him as important as the goal itself. He was not an
amateur, attracted by fanciful ideas, whose realization did not
matter; he was a national leader with a unique vision, and struggle,
as we will show in this chapter, was the only means he knew to
achieve this vision.
Childhood
and Family Background
Sa'adeh was born on 1 March, 1904. He attended the
primary school in his native village for his elementary education,
the prestigious Freres Institute in Cairo, where his father
was living at the time, and the Brummana High School in Mount
Lebanon for his secondary education.82From
an early age, Sa'adeh displayed a remarkable degree of enthusiasm
for patriotic ideals. For instance, at a special reception held at
the Brummana High School in the honour of Jamal Pasha, then Supreme
Commander of the Eastern flank of the Ottoman forces in the Near
East, he refused to carry the Ottoman flag in defiance of Jamal's
overlordship. After the Ottomans were defeated and driven out of
Syria, he tore the flag to pieces in front of other children at the
school as an expression of his overwhelming happiness for the
liberation of Syria.83
This behaviour was fairly uncommon among the subdued
children of Syria at the time. That it should appear in Sa'adeh at
such an early age and develop subsequently into an essential
characteristic of his personality was due primarily to his
background and immediate social milieu. First, the atmosphere in the
village where he was born and raised was deeply absorbed in
patriotic and national sentiments. The village had a fairly active
intellectual life and its members were among the best educated
people in Syria. Sa'adeh developed his first insight into the world
in this small village, after witnessing the devastation wrought by
the First World War. Indeed, there was no village in Lebanon where
the events of World War I were debated more keenly than in Shweir.
Weary and demoralised though it was, the political discussion of war
events was no mere academic exercise; debate ran high among its
educated classes.
Equally important was Sa'adeh's upbringing and family
background. Given the pervasive and functional dimensions of the
nuclear family in Syrian life, the impact of paternal upbringing on
the personality and early development of Sa'adeh cannot be
overemphasised. In Syria, as no doubt elsewhere in the Arab World,
the family was, and has remained, one of the most solid and enduring
social bonds.84
In Syria, hardly a dimension of one's life is untouched by the
family.
Sa'adeh came from a stable middle class family. His
parents were highly cultured and intimately connected to the
educated elite of Syria. Like others of their generation, the
Sa'adehs valued the advance of nationalism and were generally
conversant with the ideas and values of the modern age. Sa'adeh's
mother, Nayfi Nassir, was an American-born Syrian educated in
Chicago. Probably no individual with independent influence was
closer to young Sa'adeh than her. She understood his needs better
than any other family member.85
Nayfi's husband, Dr.Khalil Sa'adeh, was a noted
physician and an active scholar. He belonged to a small group of
writers and thinkers whose ideas played a powerful role in the
process of change which occurred after 1850. His life and
intellectual vocation has been described as one of total dedication
to the struggle for national independence.86
Unlike his wife, Dr. Sa'adeh's powerful influence on his
son was a more subtle one. His education and intellectual background
gave Sa'adeh a solid start in life. Dr Sa'adeh also gave his son
fatherly inspiration essential for coping with universal situations.
Furthermore, his active involvement in the political struggle at
home and abroad assured Sa'adeh an early and significant exposure to
the nationalistic and political issues of the day. Ultimately Dr.
Sa'adeh became something akin to a mentor to his son and the pair
held each other in high esteem.87
Thirdly, although Sa'adeh was raised in a wholly secular
lifestyle,88
his enthusiasm for patriotic ideals at such a tender age may have
been derived, in part, from his own personal and communal identity.
By faith, the Sa'adehs were Christian Orthodox. Therefore, like
others in the same community, they lived in the social framework
within which the intellectual activity among the Orthodox took
place. One important feature of this framework was a strong
affiliation to a secular form of nationalism:
Of all
the Western concepts that were being adopted by Syrian Orthodox
intellectuals there was one which bore directly on the community's
political position in the surrounding society. It was the concept of
secular nationalism which evoked old ties, hitherto overlooked, with
groups outside the community.89
The Christian Orthodox of Syria were also permeated by a strong
Pan-Syrian feeling. This feeling arose from either an ethnic or a
territorial attachment, or both. In contrast to the members of other
sectarian communities in Syria, the Orthodox displayed a remarkable
degree of social flexibility.90
They were comparatively moderate, secular, and fairly receptive to
modern ideas. Antun Sa'adeh, who came from a predominantly Orthodox
village, grew up in this progressive open-minded milieu. He learned
a great deal from it and absorbed its ideas and profound spirit
without perhaps realising it.
However, by far the single most important factor in
Sa'adeh's childhood was World War I. He was a mere ten years of age
when it broke out, but the starvation and widespread misery
resulting from the war years left him deeply scarred for the rest of
his life. Indeed, the area where he was living at the time suffered
the worst of the ravages caused by the war. "In the Lebanon," writes
George Antonius, "whole villages perished; others had their
population reduced to less than one half, and cases were known of
villagers tramping the countryside to die out of sight of their
starving womenfolk and children."91It
is estimated that Syria's contribution to the holocaust of the war
was no less than "half a million lives out of a total population of
considerably under four million."92
But whereas the war drove many people to despair, for
Sa'adeh it was an opportunity to reflect upon the sorrows and
ordeals of Syria. Some years later he wrote:
I was
an adolescent when World War I broke out. As the war progressed and
I began to witness the woeful condition in which my people were and
the misery that was rampant among them, the first question that came
to my mind was: What was it that brought all this woes on my people?93
On the eve of the war, Sa'adeh's mother died from a
protracted illness. His father was abroad at the time and barred
from Syria for various political and personal reasons.94
Consequently, Sa'adeh took charge of his parents' domestic affairs.
This included the arduous task of looking after three of his
siblings. Despite his youthfulness and the horrid conditions of the
war, Sa'adeh remarkably proved equal to the task and emerged from
the war physically unscathed. Towards the end of 1919, he migrated
from Syria and, after a short stopover in the United States, was
reunited with his father who was living in Brazil. He was fifteen at
the time.
The
Beginning of Sa'adeh's Political Consciousness
When Sa'adeh left Syria he was disillusioned by the
social and political outcome of the war. Like most of his
compatriots, he thought that Syria would emerge from its ordeal a
better and stronger country, as a reward for its war effort. But
this was not to be. Instead, it was carved up and stripped entirely
of its national rights. What Sa'adeh did not know was that the fate
of Syria had already been decided behind the closed doors of
European diplomacy in almost total disregard of popular
expectations.
When Sa'adeh arrived in Brazil, the Syrian diaspora
there was significantly large, and growing. A number of political
parties and organisations were founded and those with intellectual
ambitions started their own newspapers and magazines. A recent study
has noted:
What draws our attention in diaspora [Syrian] literature in South
America is that it is a literature of combat, a literature of
bitter struggle against the enemy of the homeland both internally
and externally, a literature of commitment to national issues and
its aspirations. Internally, there was a drive to deal with social
ailments whether sectarian, clannish or provincial. Externally, it
was a literature of erupting volcanos casting out its lava against
the West which had torn the unity of the homeland and destabilised
it.95
Among the earlier and most enduring publications in Brazil were Dr.
Sa'adeh's al-Jaridah and al-Majallah, as well
as al-Istiqlal, Fata Lubnan and al-Ikhlas.96
Their influence spread all over South America, stimulating a major
literary output.
Under the surface, the community was afflicted by
numerous internal quarrels. Some groups, small in number and mainly
Christian, felt a loyalty towards the independence movement in
Lebanon, but they lacked organisation and remained passive and
inarticulate. Opposed to them were Muslim groups which were hardly
enthusiastic about an independent Lebanon. They identified their
political interests with those of the emerging Arab nationalist
movement. Some among them came to regard the idea of Islamic unity
as a viable and useful substitute for Ottoman or nationalist
reforms. A split among the Syrian nationalists, who constituted by
far the largest political bloc in the community, over the emotional
question of foreign protection, came as a crushing blow. The main
point of contention was Syria's political future. While some, like
the Syrian National Association, argued for the placement of Syria,
including Lebanon, under French mandate until the country had gained
a certain degree of political maturity, others like Dr. Sa'adeh's
group regarded the Association's claim not as a legitimate national
aspiration, but as a ploy to deny the Syrians their independence.
Such disagreements and the wider divisions that existed in the
community, closely interwoven with sectarian loyalties and
exacerbated by outside meddling (the French embassy in Brazil was
particularly active in this regard) choked off the political
leverage of the community.
The situation in the "New World" failed to dampen
Sa'adeh's enthusiasm for nationalism. He teamed up with his father
as a co-editor of two newspapers called al-Jaridah and al-Majallah
issued between 1921 and 1925. In their pages, Sa'adeh elucidated his
early political views and engaged his prophetic skills. It is
interesting that while many Christian Lebanese at the time were
moving in the direction of the Lebanon idea, Sa'adeh was asserting
the primacy of Syrian nationalism in the struggle for national
independence. He charged that Lebanese "nationalist" aspirations
were deliberately misguiding the community and turning its attention
away from the benefits of a unified Syria, with Lebanon included in
it.97
Sa'adeh also foresaw, at this early stage in his life, the potential
danger of Zionism and warned against any underestimation of its
strength:
Despite that the Zionist movement is not rotating around a natural
axis, yet, this movement has been able to make significant progress.
If no other systematic movement is organised to counter it, it will
eventually succeed.98
Toward the middle of 1920, Sa'adeh shifted to a broader
revolutionary life. Growing popular discontent in Syria due to
French insensitivity to local needs and Zionist advances in
Palestine aroused his interest in organised collective action.
France's conduct in Syria particularly was a major concern for
Sa'adeh, partly because of the ruthlessness with which it tried to
assert itself in the country, and partly because "many Frenchmen
first sent out to administer France's Mandate for Syria and Lebanon
had previously served in Morocco"99
where they had been instructed to promote the French
Weltanschauung at the expense of native life.
As Syria plunged into deep social disarray and a chain
of rebellions broke out in 1925, Sa'adeh took the first tentative
step toward collective action. With the help of six fellow
intellectuals in the Syrian community, he formed an underground
political movement called the Organisation of Syrian Youth Commandos
(OSYC). Its aim was the creation of an independent secular state in
Syria. But before long the OSYC was ripped apart by internal
quarrels and quickly disintegrated. In view of the limited
opportunities available at the time, Sa'adeh then temporarily joined
the local Masonic lodge.100When
that also failed to quench his political desires, he formed a second
political organisation, called the Party of Free Syrians (PFS).
Though shaped by different circumstances, the constitution, program,
and ideological orientation of this organisation bore many
similarities to the OSYC. Its platform was specifically
Pan-Syrian, consisting of five main principles:101
1.
Establishment of complete national sovereignty in Syria.
2. The
reunification of Syria within its historical-geographical
boundaries.
3.
Separation of religion from the state.
4. The
eradication of sectarianism.5.
5.
The
application of force in national struggle.
During the Great Syrian Rebellion in 1925, the PFS gave
vocal support to the rebels. It handed a protest note to the French
Embassy in Brazil demanding the immediate cessation of the mandate.
Sa'adeh also gave a number of public speeches that aroused community
anger against the French presence in Syria. The French Embassy in
Brazil was deeply irritated to the extent that it notified its
government about Sa'adeh in its monthly summary to the Foreign
Ministry in Paris.102
Through the PFS, Sa'adeh immediately won the admiration
and respect of the local Syrian community. The sudden growth in the
membership of the party further bolstered his popularity. Realising
the limitation of working in a single country, Sa'adeh then pushed
for a merger between the PFS and the US-based Free Syria Party which
coincidently looked to extend its network beyond North America. But
the merger did not eventuate because their disagreements were vast.
This failure was to prove the PFS's ultimate undoing. Sa'adeh then
came to realise that the real battle for Syrian nationalism had to
be carried on inside Syria itself, not abroad, where the level of
political action often tapers away to nothing. In the years
following the dissolution of the PFS in 1928, Sa'adeh taught at the
National College for Science and Literature. During that time he
maintained a low profile until he finally returned to Syria at the
end of July, 1930.
Sa'adeh's
Homecoming: Fulfilment and Disappointment
Sa'adeh's homecoming recalls to mind Ewald Banse's
famous saying that "man's greatest works always spring from the
national soil even when they are not actually directed to national
ends."103 It
was a symbolic act of social defiance because, until then, very few
of Syria's educated and intellectual migrants made the journey back
home. Even for those with a record of political commitment, the
thought of immigrating back to Syria probably never crossed their
minds.
At the time of Sa'adeh's return, Syria was going
through a turbulent phase and the future did not hold bright
prospects. Despite the appearance of new forms of political
organisations and the constitutional developments of earlier years,
its life had remained fundamentally unchanged. As Philip S. Khoury
put it:
Indeed, there was a remarkable degree of continuity in the exercise
of local political power in Syria which was not disrupted by the
dissolution of the Ottoman Empire. For the most part, men important
in local affairs under the Ottomans were the same men, or their
sons, who wielded political influence under the French. Political
leaders organised their personal support systems in interwar Syria
as they had in Ottoman Syria.104
Under those circumstances, Sa'adeh had either to join
the established political order, or rebel, and try to bring about
change from without and, if necessary, in opposition to it. The
first option would have entailed his assimilation to institutions
and structures which derived their legitimacy from a traditional
form of political representation in which the workings of sectarian,
clannish, and feudal interests and their competitive interplay
constituted the nucleus of the political process. The second option
involved a great deal of personal risk and danger. In a system in
which there was no room for ambitious plans that went beyond the
common forms, the thought of radical change was a heresy.
Sa'adeh carefully weighed his options for practically
two years. When he finally realised that none of the existing
parties or political organisations suited his needs, he founded a
separate political movement and launched himself into the political
struggle. The Syrian National Party (SNP - or PPS, as the French
mistakenly called it) was an important landmark in the ecumenical
movement of Syrian nationalism. Formed outside the mainstream
thinking, it proposed a program of national action that defied the
enormous political and social odds which heretofore corroded the
possibilities of change. Its format was also unusual by conventional
standards. The party was established primarily from within the ranks
of university students because of their dynamism and receptivity to
new ideas. It was also Sa'adeh's belief that the students were, of
all social classes, the group least infected by the prevailing
social psychology.105Furthermore,
the SNP was formed in complete secrecy, "to protect the nascent
organisation from the dangers of premature confrontations with
reactionary forces and the French mandate before its internal
structure had reached a defensive cohesiveness that will ensure its
withstanding the turmoils of open militancy."106
Except for a minor setback in 1933, this time Sa'adeh
achieved his objective with resounding success. By contrast to the
OSYC and the PFS, the Syrian National Party developed into a
full-fledged organisation with branches in Lebanon, the Syrian
interior and Palestine. Its membership was highly disciplined and
its platform appealed to a wide cross-section of the community.
Sa'adeh emerged as the undisputed leader of the party. His
leadership shielded the party from the competitive interplay of
individual and political interests. On the other hand, there were
some who considered it a vestige of European Fascism with a style
that was alien to the political practise of the day.107
As Sa'adeh was secretly going about his task,
nationalist feelings in Syria once more came to a head. The failure
of the French government to grant the Syrian states their
independence, and the growing unrest in the Eastern Mediterranean,
arising out of the Italo-Abyssinian War and the Palestine conflict,
had led to fresh violence in Syrian and Lebanese cities. Sensing the
need to act before his supporters lost patience, Sa'adeh called a
general meeting to outline the position of the SNP on topical
issues. In the meeting, he was at pains to emphasise the unique
character of the Syrian National Party as "an idea and a movement
embodying the life of a nation in its entirety"108;
he urged his followers to stand firm against Italian propaganda
which he considered an undesirable distraction from the national
cause.109
Shortly after the meeting, the authorities discovered
the SNP and brutally suppressed its leadership.110Sa'adeh
was among the first to be arrested and he was sentenced for six
months imprisonment. The High Commissioner of France to Syria and
Lebanon, Comte Damien de Martel, was infuriated by the discovery
because it came at a time when "the mood among nationalists was
changing from frustration to deep-seated anger"111
due to France's refusal to resume treaty negotiations and to deliver
long overdue social and economic reforms. It is also worth noting
that in the months leading up to the SNP's discovery, Pan-Syrian
nationalism was rejuvenating. This was partly due to various
Lebanese Muslim leaders' refusal to join the predominantly Christian
state in Lebanon, and partly to the annual anniversaries of Faysal's
death which revived memories of the Syrian Kingdom of 1920. The
French High Commissioner often did not take these kinds of outburst
very seriously, but because the SNP was highly organised with
members recruited almost entirely from among the educated elite, his
hand was forced.
In view of this unlikely situation, the Commissioner
attempted to discount the importance of the discovery by withholding
it from the press. Both Le Temps and L'Asie Francaise
remained silent and coverage of the incident in local Arabic and
international newspapers was broad and often inaccurate.112But
Sa'adeh's trial, in particular his self-defence, received a
considerable coverage. One newspaper, which heretofore was a symbol
of early Lebanese hopes, devoted an entire edition to the SNP!113
In prison, Sa'adeh completed nushu' al-umam, a
treatise on nationalism, and wrote a long commentary on the
principles of the party. Both works were written in a rush to
counteract a political terror campaign orchestrated against the SNP
by factions on both sides of the political spectrum. Spearheading
that campaign was Mgr. Arida, Patriarch of Lebanon's Maronites. Mgr.
Arida denounced the SNP, claiming that the organisation opposed
Lebanese independence and that it "profess[ed] beliefs in
destructive principles against religion, country, and good
breeding."114Nor
were the Arab nationalists any more sympathetic. Their attitude was
that the SNP symbolised a new shu'ubist backtrack to
regionalism and was therefore, anathema to Arab unity. As to the
Lebanese Communists, they adopted a policy of provocation and
insults which reflected itself rather vividly in the pages of their
daily periodical, al-Anbaa'.115
Paradoxically, the campaign against the SNP worked to Sa'adeh's own
advantage, because it gave him publicity and greater public
exposure.
Sa'adeh's release in May, 1936 was followed by a period
of party consolidation. But the SNP remained a thorn in the side of
French domestic policy in Lebanon. A physical clash between some of
its members and reporters of Al-Masa' newspaper, which
repeatedly depicted Sa'adeh as a fascist agent despite an official
denial of it,116
gave the French a pretext to distract Sa'adeh's from his daily
routine. Instead of chasing the culprits involved in the clash, they
held Sa'adeh personally responsible for it. He was arrested and
sentenced to another term of six months imprisonment. This time the
Prime Minister of Lebanon stepped in and granted Sa'adeh political
freedom after obtaining from him a written assurance that he would
uphold the existing political entity of the Lebanese state.
The French High Commissioner did not take too kindly to
this arrangement. He encouraged the growth of confessional parties,
like al-Kataib and Najjadah, to counteract the rising
popularity of the SNP, and kept a tight watch on Sa'adeh. In the
last week of February, 1937, government security forces clashed with
the party at a political rally in the Lebanese mountain town of
Bekfeyya. In retaliation, the government arrested Sa'adeh for a
third time on a charge of inciting the people against public order.117
He was released after giving the authorities an undertaking similar
to the one obtained earlier by the Prime Minister.
After the Bekfeyya incident, a general truce was
called, and Sa'adeh was allowed, for the first time, to issue a
newspaper and to speak more openly about his political views. In his
newspaper, an-Nahda, Sa'adeh shifted to a confrontational
style of politics and took a swipe at all the existing parties and
political organizations.118
The following remark about the Syrian National Bloc, the most
powerful organisation at the time, is an ideal example of the style
which he developed:
The National Block consists of a group of individual men who had
come together in suspicious political circumstances to resist the
French mandate [over Syria] nothing more nothing less ... [They are
men] of a reactionary and traditional culture, with an old Turkish
upbringing, and a superficial understanding of international
diplomacy.119
For Sa'adeh, the most important issue was Palestine, judging by the
number of times he wrote about it. Here, the question of what form
his attitude toward Palestine should take was inextricably tied to
his desire to see Syria, including Palestine, as a unified and
independent country. Sa'adeh insisted that Syrian nationalists had
an inherent duty to repel Jewish migration to Palestine. The SNP
responded by offering material and moral support to the General
Strike of 1936. The SNP also rejected both the recommendations of
the King-Crane Report on Palestine and a plan put forward by Nuri
Said of Iraq.120
On both occasions, Sa'adeh urged the international community to
respect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Syrian
nation in Palestine.
Sa'adeh's assertiveness was also evident in the debate
over Alexandretta. As with Palestine, he pushed Syria's national
claim to it to the extreme limit.121In
fact, his persistent hammering of the National Bloc over
Alexandretta aroused considerable resentment against the SNP in
Syrian political circles. When asked if the National Bloc recognised
the SNP as a legitimate political force, Fakhri Berudi replied: "God
Forbid! ... The Bloc recognises in Syria only Arab nationalism, for
we are Arabs, we were born Arabs, we have lived Arabs and we
shall die Arabs."122
The two sides eventually became reconciled, but they remained
ideologically at odds over many issues.
Although poorly staffed, an-Nahda established
Sa'adeh as a prolific writer and a political leader in his own
right. But his uncompromising attitude and provocative style were
often a discomfort to those around him. After the annexation of
Alexandretta by Turkey and the defeat of local forces in the
political battle against French mandate in Syria and Lebanon,
Sa'adeh launched a massive assault on the status quo. In reaction,
the Lebanese government banned an-Nahda and tightened the
noose around Sa'adeh's neck. According to the SNP, the government's
action was part of an elaborate plan to dispose of Sa'adeh, a claim
denied by the Lebanese authorities. As a precaution, the Supreme
Council in the party advised Sa'adeh to leave the country. First,
Sa'adeh hesitated, but when he realised how delicate the situation
was, he left clandestinely. Two days later, government security
forces raided the headquarters of the SNP, confirming what the party
had suspected all along.
The
Exile Years: 1938-1947
Sa'adeh fled Lebanon via Palestine and Europe to
Brazil, where he was eagerly greeted by "a small but active group of
Syrian emigrants."123
On the way, he stopped briefly in Rome and Berlin, but did not
connect with the Fascist leadership in either city. Nevertheless,
the French mandatory authorities judged it as a telltale sign that
the SNP was a Fascist organisation, and rounded up its leadership.
Upon his arrival in Brazil, Sa'adeh was briefly detained
because of his stopover in Berlin. But he was not indicted and was
set free. From Brazil, he set sail for Argentina, where he ran into
more troubled waters. Little did he know that soon after he left
Syria, the French had sentenced him, in absentia, to twenty years in
prison, and a further twenty years in exile. When he tried to renew
his visa at the French consulate in Buenos Ares, which, at the time,
handled consulate and diplomatic affairs for Syrians and Lebanese,
his passport was confiscated. Sa'adeh thus found himself at an
impasse: unable to return to Syria or to continue his trip beyond
Argentina.
The outbreak of World War II added to his woes. Sa'adeh
was immediately cut off from the party and any chance he may have
had of sneaking back into Syria was dashed. Worse still, the
situation abroad did not hold brighter prospects. Up until his death
in 1934, Sa'adeh's father had been a key symbolic figure of Syrian
nationalism in the eyes of the rest of the Syrian community. After
his death, political aspirations had tilted toward other
nationalistic doctrines, and had become more sectarian. Moreover,
the pursuit of personal interest had taken over as the predominant
motive of the individual Syrian in the diaspora. Naturally, this
made Sa'adeh's task all the more difficult. One illustration will
suffice. In 1939, not long after arriving in Argentina, Sa'adeh was
approached by two freelance journalists with an idea to issue a
joint newspaper under the title of suria al-jadidah. In
desparation, he agreed to their request, and with his wealth of
experience in journalism the newspaper quickly established a name
for itself among Arabic readers in South America. But when suddenly
the paper changed direction, and began to emphasise a strong
pro-Nazi tone for profitable purpose, Sa'adeh was infuriated. He
tried hard to maintain the neutrality of the paper but his cries
went unnoticed. At that point, after exhausting all avenues for
common sense, he dissociated himself and the SNP from the paper.124
With the party entirely behind him, Sa'adeh issued
another newspaper called al-Zowba'. In its pages, he
formulated a new theory of literature and provoked a series of
gripping contests with some of the leading poets in the Syrian
diaspora "who once were a source of inspiration to him."125Al-Zowba'
also became a vehicle for Sa'adeh's unique views on religion and
secular thoughts which he elucidated in controversy with the
"Village Poet."126
A recent convert to Islam from Christianity, the "village poet" drew
sharp distinctions between Islam and Christianity, provocatively
judging Islam as a superior religion for human happiness. Such an
attitude promoted sectarian differentiation at the expense of
national solidarity and Sa'adeh stood up to it. His reply remains to
this day the most extensive literary critique ever written in the
history of the Syrian community in South America.
At the end of the Second World, Sa'adeh began to
question the validity of his exile. Like many intellectual emigres,
he suffered from what Badawi called "a feeling of exile [and] lack
of belonging."127He
tried repeatedly to return to Syria but was turned away on technical
and bureaucratic grounds. After extensive diplomatic and political
bargaining, a breakthrough was finally achieved early in 1947. It is
claimed that in giving assent to Sa'adeh's return, President Khoury
of Lebanon has been expected to draw political capital from the SNP
in the general elections which were scheduled in May of the same
year.128
From
Conspiracy to Revolution
Sa'adeh arrived in Beirut on the second of March to a
monster welcome.129He
immediately projected himself on the political scene with a fiery
speech that rocked the Establishment to its foundations. His remarks
about the independence of Lebanon and Syria were particularly
contentious. Both the government and Lebanese nationalist groups
judged them as distasteful.130
As a result, earlier hopes of a reconciliation between Sa'adeh and
his traditional foes were completely dashed.
Under renewed pressure, the Lebanese government summoned
Sa'adeh to appear before the Surete General. On the advice of
his advisers, Sa'adeh defied the order and instead retreated to an
SNP stronghold in the mountains overlooking Beirut. In the stand-off
that followed, both sides displayed their political muscles, until
the government backed-off for fear of losing the elections scheduled
in May. The SNP took part in those elections but failed to win any
seats. In the light of the rigging that took place, Sa'adeh declared
the next day that the elections were "a mere exercise to maintain a
group of irresponsible and totally individualistic politicians in
power:"131 a
comment not taken lightly by the government. Though weakened by its
mismanagement of the elections, it suddenly renewed its search for
Sa'adeh in the hope of turning public attention away from the
rigging controversy. A large reward was offered to anyone who would
deliver Sa'adeh to it, "dead or alive." But the dispute was diffused
by an SNP-government delegation which persuaded Sa'adeh to pledge,
yet again, to uphold the sanctity of the Lebanese entity within its
existing borders. Although the pledge failed to meet the President's
demand for "unconditional loyalty," it served its purpose, and the
bickering temporarily died down.
With the authorities off his back, Sa'adeh then set out
to overhaul the SNP. The problem inside the SNP was a far-reaching
one and the leadership which steered the party during Sa'adeh's
exile was at the centre of it. As Labib Zuwiyya has pointed out,
under the collective leadership of the war the policy of the SNP was
directed "more toward the domestic problems of independent Lebanon
than to the national problem as defined by Sa'adeh."132A
senior deputy in the party and a long time companion of Sa'adeh gave
the movement for decentralisation an added boost by suggesting that
had Sa'adeh founded in 1932 a Lebanese Reform Party in Lebanon and a
Syrian Reform Party in Syria, and then steered the two parties in
compatible directions, he would have emerged as the undisputed
leader in both countries. Not to be outdone, Sa'adeh immediately
purged the culprits and those who dared to question his authority,
and then embarked on an intensive process of internal
reconstruction. Under his supreme leadership, the SNP switched back
to its original format, and was renamed the Syrian Social
Nationalist Party (SSNP). Sa'adeh also gave the party the first
definitive statement of its social philosophy and principles.133
Sa'adeh's re-emergence as the undisputed leader of the
SSNP in the course of 1948 was an embarrassing outcome for his
political foes who were counting on his demise. In view of the
situation in Palestine, and Sa'adeh's uncompromising attitude toward
the Palestinian question, Arab leaders were discomforted by the
thought of dealing with a revitalised SSNP. Under the banner "No
arms to the Social Nationalists," they stopped all military weapons
from getting to SSNP fighters on the Palestine front for fear that
these weapons might be turned against them in the event of defeat. A
planned SSNP demonstration against the partition of Palestine was
also suspended at the last minute by the Lebanese government much,
to Sa'adeh's disgust. Finally, in a bid to isolate Sa'adeh from
public opinion, his newspaper Jil al-Jadid, issued at the
turn of 1948, was banned. Indeed, it is claimed that "the idea to
get rid of Sa'adeh and the SSNP began to take form about that time,
i.e., toward the end of 1948."134
Matters took another turn for the worse after the
military coup in Syria in March 1949. News that the coup was
masterminded by SSNP officers send cold shivers throughout the
Lebanese Establishment. When Husni al-Zaim, the coup leader and a
one-time member in the SSNP,135announced
his first communique consisting of words taken from Sa'adeh's
writings,136
it seemed that the Lebanese government's worst fears would be
realised. Some independent political observers in Lebanon had even
suggested a potential link between the coup and an earlier
inspection tour of Syrian cities by Sa'adeh.
Sa'adeh, on his part, took a keen interest in Zaim's
coup. He felt "that the new government was trying ... to implement
the principles of the [Syrian] national movement, and [a] reform
program identical to that of the Syrian National Party."137Privately,
however, he reproached military coups as an inadequate last ditch
measure.138
Nonetheless, Sa'adeh held a top level meeting with Zaim, after which
they expressed a mutual desire to work more closely with each other.
As a token of their new friendship, Zaim presented Sa'adeh with his
own private revolver.
The Lebanese government was alerted to the meeting by
Adel Arslan, the then foreign minister of Syria. Fearing the worst,
Prime Minister Riad Solh called an emergency session of the security
council (majlis al-amen) in Lebanon and decided to dissolve
the SSNP. As a warning to Sa'adeh, a new alliance between the
Lebanese Kataib and the Najjadah party was announced under the
patronage of Lebanon's prime minister, Riad al-Solh and the Syrian
foreign minister.139Subsequently,
SSNP offices throughout Lebanon were raided by security forces and
harsh new measures were taken against its members in an attempt to
persuade them to leave the party. On June 9, the printing press of
the party was suddenly attacked by members of the Lebanese Phalange
Party, apparently in secret understanding with the security forces.
Armed with machine guns and hand grenades, the attackers forced
their way into the building and set it alight. In the confusion that
followed, several members of the SSNP were injured, but Sa'adeh, who
was in the building at the time, escaped unharmed. According to
Hisham Sharabi, the Lebanese Gendarmerie arrived belatedly on the
scene and arrested the SSNP members instead of the attackers!140
Once the government's complicity in the incident came
to light, Sa'adeh took the offensive. Unaware that Zaim was using
him as a bargaining tool with Lebanon, a country with which he had
been in frequent quarrels since he came to power, he fled under
cover of night to Damascus and from there began to plot for the
overthrow of the Lebanese government. The Syrian leader offered him
political asylum and financial aid, as did King Abdullah of Jordan,
who cherished the dream of a United Syria with himself at the helm.141
The next day, Riad Solh announced that "the government had made all
the preparations to dissolve this party [SSNP] and had fixed the
deadline for the previous saturday. But the Jumaizzah incident
[burning of the press] which took place the previous Thursday - that
is 48 hours before the deadline - forced us to bring the dissolution
order foward and to promptly begin the process of purging."142
The
First Social Nationalist Uprising
When Sa'adeh arrived in Damascus, President Zaim was
busy consolidating his position and combating union movements. To
his south was King Abdullah of Jordan, waving the banner of "Greater
Syria" and threatening to destroy his new political foundations. To
the east was Nuri's Iraq which "was hesitant, and apparently ... not
ready to accept a non-commital agreement."143
Further away was Egypt and Saudi Arabia, neither of whom cared very
much to see the Hashemites grow stronger, and readily extended
recognition and financial aid. Finally, to the west was Lebanon, a
country in a no less precarious situation, trying to head-off the
Jordanian union scheme. Sa'adeh understood the political enigma
which faced the Syrian leader, but underestimated its volatility.
In the next two weeks, events unfolded rather quickly.
The unpredictable Zaim, bowing to pressure from Egypt and France,
"both of whom were friends of Lebanon and opposed to the Greater
Syria scheme advocated by the SSNP, "144suddenly
switched positions and began to show less interest in Sa'adeh.145By
siding with Sa'adeh, he was in fact driving the Lebanese Government
into the arms of his arch-rival, the Hashemites. According to a
British report, Lebanon was willing "to cooperate with Iraq, even to
the extent of acquiescing in the Fertile Crescent scheme provided
that Iraq was prepared to guarantee the integrity of the Lebanon."146
Moreover, in supporting Sa'adeh against the confessional political
system in Lebanon, Zaim placed the interest of his own internal
government under threat in the event of an SSNP victory. As a reward
for switching positions, Zaim was granted a new deal: better
economic terms and official recognition by Lebanon.
Sa'adeh had become a bit doubtful of Zaim soon after the
latter's election to the presidency of the Syrian Republic on June
25. He had asked Zaim's political adviser, Subri Qubani, to arrange
a meeting between them after the elections, but was bluntly turned
down on the ground that the President did not want to create a new
crisis with Lebanon after it had released of Akram Tabarra (a Syrian
officer who shot an Israeli agent inside its territory) and after
Lebanon's recognition of his government.147By
now, Zaim was beseiged on all fronts: by Riad Solh of Lebanon,
tempting him with an economic treaty in exchange for Sa'adeh; by
King Farouk of Egypt, who was opposed to any sort of unity in the
Fertile Crescent; by various Western powers fearful of any change in
the political status of Syria; and by his own prime minister Muhsin
al-Barazi, whose hatred of Sa'adeh was well-known. So great was the
pressure on Zaim that he asked one of his aides to have Sa'adeh
discreetly disposed of, much to Qubani's disgust.148
Despite the volatility of the situation, in early July,
1949 Sa'adeh proclaimed the revolution against the regime in
Lebanon. Armed units of the SSNP attacked a number of gendarmerie
posts near the Syrian-Lebanese frontiers, in southern Biqa' (Rachaya
and Mashghara) and in the mountains over Beirut. Their mission was
to seize weapons before the main contingent, led by Lieutenant Assaf
Karam,149
moved in to occupy those areas. Hisham Sharabi, who was at Sa'adeh's
side, described the mood as follows:
Although Sa'adeh was speaking about the revolution as though it was
certain to succeed, still in the statement which he issued just
before the proclamation of the revolution he indicated that it was
the "first social nationalist revolution". Was he expecting that the
uprising might fail and that it would be followed by a second
revolution in the future? Was he discretly grasping that the
revolution was a mere adventure set off by despair and that it was
very unlikely to succeed? I believe that he did indeed understand
all of that. But, nonetheless, he did not reveal any worry. He kept
on speaking in a very confident way and laughing merrily, as though
he did not have a worry in the world.150
However, things quickly went horribly wrong. The SSNP units that
engaged Gendarmerie posts seized only a few weapons and were
outnumbered by a larger and better-equipped force. In view of the
large number of SSNP members thought to be hiding in the Lebanese
village of Bshamoun, a special task force was sent there to prevent
them from linking up with the rebels. "In the ensuing engagement,
the officer commanding the force, Captain Tewfik Chamoun, was
killed. Several members of the SSNP were injured and considerable
numbers arrested."151It
soon became apparent that the Lebanese Government was being alerted
in advance of SSNP movements through Muhsin al-Barazzi, who passed
the information to his brother-in-law Riad Solh in Lebanon.152
Within less than forty eight hours, the uprising was
put down. Sa'adeh, who was scheduled to meet Zaim in the
Presidential palace at the request of the latter, instead headed
toward Jordan by car. At the halfway mark, he ordered his driver to
turn back to Damascus. "He judged that escape was useless and
decided to make one last stand. When the car got to Damascus, he
told Sobhi [his driver] to go straight to the Presidential Palace
and ordered Samir [his bodyguard] to take off on foot, and
affectionately farewelled him."153
When the car entered the Presidential Palace, Sa'adeh was
immediately arrested. He was handcuffed and driven in an armored car
to the Syrian-Lebanese borders and handed over to the Lebanese
security.
Sa'adeh was not given a fair trial or allowed to defend
himself.154In
less than forty eight hours, he was summarily tried by a military
tribunal and condemned to death. He was executed in the early hours
of July 8 "in a moment of panic"155along
with six members of the SSNP selected on a confessional basis. The
government's decision to waive normal judicial procedure and the
swiftness of Sa'adeh's execution aroused considerable anger in
Lebanon and hinterland Syria, most notably in the pages of their
leading newspapers. It would suffice to quote Ghassan Tweiny of
An-Nahar: "...by its rash action," wrote Tweiny, "it [i.e., the
Lebanese government] has created a great giant, stronger than
Sa'adeh ever was, and has made of him a martyr, not only to his
followers but to those who never wished him better than death."156
80
See
Mohammad Maatouk, A Critical Study of Antun Sa'ada and
his impact on Politics: The History of Ideas and Literature
in the
Middle East,
Unpub. Ph.D. Diss., University of London, 1992. Also Georges
Sassine, Societes et Religions Dans la Pensee Arabe
Contemporaine: Etude de Cas, Unpub. Ph.D. Dissertation,
University De Paris, 1983. Sassine's work contains an
impressive list of individual intellectuals who came under
the influence of Sa'adeh.
81
Nadim K.
Mikdisi, The Syrian National Party, Unpub. Ph.D Diss.
American University of Beirut, 1960, p15.
82
See Daniel
Pipes, "Radical Politics and the Syrian Social Nationalist
Party," (International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies,
20 (1988), p306), for a discussion on the impact of the
Syrian community in Egypt on Sa'adeh.
83
SSNP,
Information Bureau. Antun Sa'adeh: Leadership and
Testimony, Beirut, 1981.
84
See Samir
Khalaf,
Lebanon's
Predicament,
Columbia University Press, New York, 1987, Ch.8.
85
Gibran
Jreige, Antun Sa'adeh Munz al-Wilada Hatta al-Ta'ssiss:
1904-1932 (Antun Sa'adeh From Birth Until the Formation
[of the SSNP]: 1904-1932) Beirut, 1982.
86
Dr.
Sa'adeh played an important role in the Lewis Affair at the
Syrian Protestant College in 1882. He was a prominent
organiser in the Medical school faculty's opposition to the
dismissal of Dr. Edwin Lewis for his views on Darwinism. For
more details see Donald M. Leavitt, "Darwinism in the Arab
World: The Lewis Affair at the Syrian Protestant College,"
The Muslim World, Vol. LXXI, No. 2, April 1981,
pp85-98.
87
Antun
Sa'adeh, Complete Works, Vol. 2, p149.
88
See John
Beshara, "al-Ilmaniyya" (Secularism), An-Nahar,
Sydney, 11 November, 1993.
89
Arnon
Groiss, Religious Particularism and National Integration:
Changing Perceptions of the Political Self-Identity Among
the Greek-Orthodox Christians, Unpub. Ph.D.
Diss,Princeton University, 1986, p18.
91
George
Antonius, The Arab Awakening: The Story of the Arab
National Movement, p241.
93
Anutun
Sa'adeh, The Ten Lectures, p47.
94
See Badr
Hage, Silsalat al-Aamal al-Majhula: al-Daktur Khalil
Sa'adeh (The Unknown Works of Dr. Khalil Sa'adeh), Riad
El-Rayes Books Ltd, London, 1987, pp7-17.
95
Youssef
Haddad, Filistin fi al-Adab al-Mahjari (Palestine in
the Literature of the Diaspora), Beirut, 1982.
96
For a full
list of the Arabic newspapers and magazines that appeared in
South America at the time, see Nawaf Hardan, Sa'adeh fi
al-Mahjar: 1921-1930 (Sa'adeh Abroad: 1921-1930),
Beirut, 1989.
97
Antun
Sa'adeh, Complete Works, Vol.1, pp8-25.
98
Ibid.
Numerous
Arab leaders have toyed with this idea though without
success. The last of them was Hafiz al-Asad of Syria. See
Patrick Seale, Asad: The Struggle for the Middle East,
for an assessment of Asad's foreign policy vis-a-vis Israel.
99
Philip
Khoury,
Syria and the
French Mandate,
pp55-56.
100
During the reign
of Abdulhamid II, the Freemasonary movement attracted some
of the leading thinkers in Syria like Maroun Aboud, Ya'qub
Sarrouf, Jirgi Zaydan, Amin Rihani, and Sa'adeh's father,
Dr. Khalil Sa'adeh. The movement was perceived as an
embodiment of the new-age principles of the French
Revolution and, by some, as a temporary refuge for political
and national agitation. See Souhail Suleiman, Athar al-Banna'een
al-Ahrar fi al-Adab al-lubnani (The Impact of the
Freemasonary on Lebanese Literature: 1860-1950) Noufal
Press, Beirut, 1993.
103
Ewald
Banse,
Germany Prepares for War,
New York, 1934, p21.
104
Philip
Khoury , Ibid, p3.
105
A few
months before, Sa'adeh had landed himself a job as a private
tutor of German at the American University of Beirut which
gave him direct access to the students.
106
Haythem A.
Kader, The Syrian Social Nationalist Party: Its Ideology
and Early History, Beirut, 1990, p87.
107
Al-Anbaa',
1936-1937.
108
Full text
of his speech can be found in The Ten Lectures, Ch.3.
110
See
Abdullah Qubarsi, Ta'assiss al-Hizb al-Suri al-Qawmi al-Ijtima
wa Bidayit Nidaluhu (The Formation of the Syrian Social
Nationalist Party and the Beginning of its Struggle),
Beirut, 1982.
111
Philip
Khoury, Ibid, p453.
112
Robert D.
Sethian, The Syrian National Party, Unpub. Ph.D.
Diss. University of Michigan, 1946, pp9-10.
In the
"Report of the Mandatory" for 1935 which appeared in the
London
times,
French delegate Robert de Caix described the SNP "as another
manifestation of the restlessness of university students."
He did not refer to the party by its right name, but as
Jeunesse Syrienne. See Permanent Mandates Commission,
Minutes 29th Session, p103.
113
Al-Maarad,
No. 1094, 25, February, 1936. The independent newspaper of
Michel Abu-Shahla, al-Jumhur, was another newspaper
which gave Sa'adeh favourable coverage, though at a later
date on June 17, 1937.
114
Robert D.
Sethian , Ibid, p21.
See also
Salim Mouja'eece, Antun Sa'adeh wa al-Aklyrious al-Mourani
(Antun Sa'adeh and the Maronite Clergy), USA, 1993.
115
In its issue of
June 17, 1936, al-Anbaa' published an false report
about the SNP in which it claimed that "Representatives of
Fascist Italy in Beirut approached a number of prominent
Lebanese in 1933 and 1934 with the idea of forming a
political party which would follow a pro-Italian policy ...
However, after being rejected by well-known leaders, the
Italians accepted Antun Sa'adeh as a second choice ... He
was then supplied with funds to form a poltical party along
Fascist lines." The paper did not name the "prominent
Lebanese" who were approached by Italy, and subsequently the
report was shown to be totally inaccurate. See Nadim Makdisi,
The Syrian National Party, pp92-97.
116
At the request of
the German Embassy in Beirut, the French Commissioner to
Lebanon and Syria issued a statement denying any association
between Sa'adeh and the Third Reich. The statement was
published in Lebanese and Syrian newspapers to quell
previous reports implicating Sa'adeh with Nazi Germany. It
is worth noting also that in its issue of Nov. 18, 1935,
al-Masa' published negatives notes on the SNP taken from
Sa'adeh's first trial, including the following comment by a
prominent officer of the Mandatory Power (France): "If we
must eliminate the Syrian National Party we must then
eliminate its leader Anutn Sa'adeh, for Sa'adeh is the
Syrian National Party, and the Syrian National Party is
Sa'adeh."
117
After the arrest
of Sa'adeh, the SNP addressed a letter to the President of
Lebanon seeking protection from the law.It stated, in part,
that "the arrests were unconstitutional because they
violated that part of the Constitution which guaranteed
freedom of opinion." See Oriente Moderno, Vol. XVII,
1937, p231.
118
See his
review of the Lebanese and Syrian political parties at the
time, in Complete Works, Vol .3, pp262-280.
119
Antun
Sa'adeh, Complete Works, Vol.3, p272.
120
Details of
the plan are outlined in the forth volume of Sa'adeh's
Complete Works, pp404-406.
121
Sa'adeh's
position on Alexandretta was stated in a memorandum
addressed to the League of Nations on December 14, 1936. It
read: "The Syrian National Party regards any plan that aims
to sever the Sanjak of Alexandretta from the main body of
Syria, or to annul the sovereignty of the Syrian nation over
this area, as a violation of the sanctity of its national
sovereignty and territorial integrity and a breach of
article twenty two of the covenant of the League of Nations.
The Syrian National Party protests strongly against the
[latest] Turkish manoeuvers aiming at the severance of a
portion of Syrian territory from Syria with the pretext that
a small number of Turks live in it. The Syrian National
Party requests the League of Nations, in particular the
civilised and amicable nations, to support the Syrian claims
and to avoid an anomalous solution to the Alexandretta
question which could lead to a stand-off situation in the
Near East and lead sooner or later to a real conflict."
Ibid, Vol 2, p233.
122
Robert D.
Sethian, Ibid, p27.
123
Labib
Zuwiyya Yamak, The Syrian Social Nationalist Party: An
Ideological Analysis, Harvard University Press, 1966,
p59.
124
Full
details of this incident can be found in Antun Sa'adeh,
Complete Works, Vol. 14, p21.
125
Mohammad
Maatouk, A Critical Study of Antun Sa'ada and his impact
on Politics: The History of Ideas and Literature in the
Middle
East,
p1992, p208.
See also Antun
Sa'adeh, Folly of Immortality; Rabee' Abifadel,
Antun Sa'adeh: al-Naqid wa al-Adib al-Mahjari, Centre
for Higher Studies, Beirut, 1992;
Edmond
Melhem, The Contribution of Antun Sa'adeh and Others to
Arabic Literature, Unpub Honour thesis, University of
Melbourne, 1988.
126
For a
comprehensive review of this controversy see Rabee' Abifadel,
Ibid.
127
Muhammad
M. Badawi, Modern Arabic Literature and the West,
Ithaca Press, London, 1985.
128
Walter L.
Brown, (Ed.), Lebanon's Struggle for Independence,
Part II, 1944-1947, Documentary Publications, North
Carolina, 1980, p142.
129
Shawki
Khairallah, Autobiography, Beirut, 1990, pp
130
Sa'adeh
was of the opinion that the newly acquired independence was
inadequate and represented only a nominal step toward real
independence. See Vol. 14 of his Complete Works, p34.
131
Antun
Sa'adeh, Complete Works, Vol.14, p112.
132
Labib
Zuwiyya Yamak, Ibid, p61.
133
See The
Ten Lectures and Complete Works, Vol. 14.
134
Labib
Zuwiyya Yamak, Ibid.
135
Asad
Sharfan, "Who is Husni Zaim?" Sout al-Mughtareb,
Sydney, April 7, 1991.
136
The
communique was drafted by an SSNP member.
137
The Social
Nationalist Reform Committee, al-Thamin min Tammouz:
Wathaiq al-Thawra wa al-Istishhad (The Eighth of July:
Documents on the Revolution and the Martyrdom [of Sa'adeh]),
USA, 1992, p56.
138
See
Abdullah Qubarsi, Ta'ssis al-Hizb al-Suri al-Qawmi al-Ijtimae':
Bidayat Nudalahu (The Formation of the Syrian Social
Nationalist Party and the Beginning of its Struggle), Vol.
2, Fikr, Beirut, 1982, pp221-223.
140
Hisham Sharabi,
al-Jamr wa al-Rimad, Tali'a Publications, Beirut, 1978,
p208.
The Lebanese
Gendermerie also raided Sa'adeh's house the following night
and arrested whoever was there.
141
Sharabi
H, Ibid, p227.
142
The Social
Nationalist Reform Committe, Ibid, pp63-64.
143
Nicola A.
Ziadeh , Syria and Lebanon, Librairie Du Liban,
Beirut, 1968, p104.
144
George M.
Haddad, Revolution and Military Rule in the Middle East,
University of California, NY, 1971, p399.
145
Zaim might
have also been tempted by a 25,000 pounds reward for
Sa'adeh's capture.
146
Quoted in
see Edmond Melhem, "Betrayal and Intrigue in Lebanon's First
Armed Revolution," Middle East Quarterly, Autumn
1994, Vol.1, No.4, pp10-12.
147
Sa'adeh was also
warned of Zaim's unpredictability by Sami Kabbarah, a
well-known Syrian politician who he met on July 6.
148
Nazir
Fansah, Ayyam Husni Zaim (The Days of Husni Zaim),
Afaq Publications, Beirut, 1983, p79.
Soon
after, Sabri Qubani was dispatched on a diplomatic mission
to Egypt to stop him from exercising his influence on Zaim.
149
He was a
Syrian-born Lieutenant in the French Army stationed in Syria
and fought on the Egyptian front. According to those who
knew him, Assaf was a man of untitlting will and a capable
military strategist. See Hisham Sharabi, Ibid, p226.
151
British
Government Records, Political Summary No.7, for the month of
July, E 10339/1013/88.
152
During the
rebellion, the chief of the Lebanese security forces was
allowed into Syria more frequently to gather intelligence
reports about the SSNP.
153
Hisham
Sharabi, Ibid, p229.
154
Sa'adeh's defence
lawyer, Emil Lahoud quit the court in protest against
debarring him from sufficient time to peruse the court
record saying: "I smell the scent of gunpowder." See Edmond
Melhem, "Betrayal and Intrigue in Lebanon's First Armed
Revolution," Ibid, p11. See Appendix V for an
eye-witness account of the final hours of Sa'adeh's life.
155
Patrick Seale,
The Struggle for Syria, p71.
156
An-Nahar,
July 9, 1949.
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