Ruhi Khalidi

In the current context, Ruhi Khalidi is a topic of great relevance and interest to a wide variety of people. The importance of Ruhi Khalidi has become increasingly evident over time, as its impact covers different aspects of daily life. From its influence in society to its relevance in the professional field, Ruhi Khalidi has played a prominent role in various areas. Therefore, it is crucial to delve deeper into the analysis of Ruhi Khalidi to better understand its scope and implications today. In this article, different perspectives on Ruhi Khalidi will be explored, addressing its many facets and its impact in different contexts.

Ruhi al-Khalidi

Ruhi al-Khalidi (1864–1913) was a writer, teacher, activist and politician in the Ottoman Empire at the turn of the twentieth century. He was the nephew of Yousef al-Khalidi, who was mayor of Jerusalem from 1899 to 1907. In 1908, he was one of three delegates elected to represent Jerusalem in the new Ottoman government run by the Young Turks and later become the deputy to the head of parliament (1911).

Biography

The family that Ruhi Khalidi was born into was and still is a very prominent Palestinian family in Jerusalem. The family still runs the Khalidi Library in the Old City of Jerusalem. When the library was first established, Khalidi had a hand in making sure the library was more available to the wider public. His interest in French writers contributed to the collection's literature by Montesquieu and Victor Hugo.

Khalidi studied Islamic sciences and philosophy in Paris, was a lecturer at Sorbonne University, Paris, was a scholar and teacher at the Institute for Foreign Languages in Paris and was appointed Counsel General of the Ottoman Empire in Bordeaux, France, from 1898 to 1908.

Ruhi was a high-profile critic of the earliest stages of Zionism, although he made a sincere effort to better understand the movement by attending Yiddish plays, briefly studying at the Alliance Israelite School in Jerusalem and also owning Hebrew texts. He was one of the first Palestinians to study modern Hebrew, and he left behind a workbook in which he transliterated a whole host of Hebrew-Arabic cognates and other basic vocabulary.

He also visited Zionist settlements and wrote extensively about them in his unpublished book titled "Zionism and the Zionist Question". While writing the book he kept it secret in fear of "political repercussions involved with even writing about a nationalistic movement". The book was a wide-ranging analysis that drew on his reading of the Hebrew Bible and his encounters with the Zionist settlers. These visits were an attempt to build a case against the Zionist movement. Khalidi wanted to restrict Jewish immigration to Palestine and opposed land sales to Jews. His sentiments were based on the fear that Zionists wanted to create their own state with an exclusive social and political system. He understood that the Zionists were attempting to create a nation where they would no longer be second class citizens or outsiders, but he felt their goals would be detrimental to the Ottoman Empire and all the people in it as a whole. Khalidi was criticized by Zionists and non-Zionists for wanting to make illegal the purchase of land not only by unregistered Jewish immigrants, but also Jews that were natural citizens of the Ottoman Empire.

When Zionist Leader, Jacobus Kann, published a book calling for the establishment of a Jewish army in the name of the Zionist movement, Khalidi had the book translated to French and distributed to other Palestinian nationalists in order to call attention to the militant side of the Zionist movement. He also signed petitions and helped lobby the governor's and sultan's offices to enact stronger restrictions on Jewish immigration.

Khalidi saw his destiny as firmly tied to the Ottoman Empire and was not an Arab Nationalist. He had ties to the Young Turks and even wrote one of the first copies of their political manifesto.

Khalidi died of typhoid in 1913 while working as deputy to the head of Parliament in Istanbul (Constantinople). Some members of his family believed he had actually been poisoned because his beliefs. His unfinished book was never published and was inherited by his older brother. Toward the end of his life, he expressed anger at the Ottoman government for not recognizing the threat that the Zionist movement posed against Palestine.

Notes

  1. ^ Kasmieh, Khairieh. "Ruhi al-Khalidi, 1864-1913: A Symbol of the Cultural Movement in Palestine Towards the End of Ottoman Rule", 1992
  2. ^ Palestinian Academic Society for the Study of International Affairs
  3. ^ Beška, Emanuel. "The Anti-Zionist Attitudes and Activities of Ruhi al-Khalidi". In GAŽÁKOVÁ, Zuzana, DROBNÝ, Jaroslav (Eds.) Arabic and Islamic Studies in Honour of Ján Pauliny. Bratislava: Univerzita Komenského v Bratislave, 2016, pp. 181–203.
  4. ^ Zachary Foster, "The Untold Story of Palestinians Who Learned Hebrew, 'Palestine Studies Blog,' 28 October 2015. Archived 29 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine (
  5. ^ Marcus, Amy Docker "Jerusalem 1913", 2007

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