Arabi Awwad

Arabi Musa Awwad (1928 – 20 March 2015) (Arabic: عربي موسى عواد), kunya Abu Fahd, was a Palestinian communist politician.[1][2]

Life

Awwad was born in Salfit.[2] He graduated from the Arab College in Jerusalem in 1947.[2]

He became a member of the Central Committee of the Palestinian National Liberation League.[3] As an Arabic Literature teacher in Nablus he was active in student protests.[4]

In 1955 he was included in the Central Committee of the Jordanian Communist Party.[1] After the Six-Day War in 1967, Awwad was designated as secretary of the West Bank section of the Jordanian Communist Party.[1][5] Awwad was the leader of the radical wing of the party.[5]

He emerged as of the key leaders of the Palestinian National Front, which organized mass struggles inside the occupied territories.[6] Israeli authorities charged him with membership in the Communist Party.[4] He spent over a decade in Jordanian and Israeli prisons and detention centres.[2] Awwad was deported to Jordan on 10 December 1973 along with other PNF leaders.[2][7][8]

He was elected to the Palestinian National Council at its tenth session in Cairo in 1974, and included in the Palestinian Central Council.[1][2][2][9][10][11] Awwad represented the PNF in the PLO Unified Information Centre.[11] In 1979 he became a politburo member of the Jordanian Communist Party.[1]

In 1982 Awwad founded the Revolutionary Palestinian Communist Party and became its general secretary.[5] The RPCP took part in the armed resistance against the Israeli invasion in Lebanon, Awwad's son Fahd Awwad was killed during the war.[1]

Awwad died in Amman, Jordan on 20 March 2015.[2]

References

  1. Bayane al-Yaoume. عربي موسى عواد ..ثمانية عقود من النضال الصلب في سبيل حرية واستقلال وطنه وشعبه وأمته
  2. SANA. الحزب الشيوعي الفلسطيني الثوري ينعى أمينه العام عربي موسى عواد
  3. Zachary Lockman; Joel Beinin (January 1989). Intifada: The Palestinian Uprising Against Israeli Occupation. South End Press. p. 144. ISBN 978-0-89608-363-9.
  4. Riyāḍ Najīb Rayyis; Dunia Nahas (1974). Guerrillas for Palestine. St. Martin's Press. p. 278.
  5. Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 29. Institute for Palestine Studies and Kuwait University, 1999. p. 66
  6. Joost R. Hiltermann (January 1993). Behind the Intifada: Labor and Women's Movements in the Occupied Territories. Princeton University Press. p. 45. ISBN 0-691-02480-4.
  7. J. Metzger; M. Orth; C. Sterzing (1980). Das ist unser Land: Westbank und Gaza-Streifen unter israelischer Besatzung. Lamuv-Verlag. p. 289. ISBN 978-3-921521-20-5.
  8. Amal Jamal (2005). The Palestinian National Movement: Politics of Contention, 1967–2005. Indiana University Press. p. 186. ISBN 0-253-34590-1.
  9. Moshe Shemesh (12 November 2012). The Palestinian Entity 1959–1974: Arab Politics and the PLO. Routledge. p. 399. ISBN 978-1-136-28519-6.
  10. International Documents on Palestine. Institute for Palestine Studies. 1979. p. 188.
  11. ARR: Arab Report and Record. Economic Features, Limited. 1977. p. 376.
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