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Larbi Ben M'hidi

Larbi Ben M'hidi (Arabic: العربي بن مهيدي; 1923 – 4 March 1957), commonly known as Si Larbi or simply as Ben M'hidi, was a prominent Algerian revolutionary leader during the Algerian war of independence. He is one of the six founding members of the Front de Libération Nationale (FLN; National Liberation Front) that launched an armed revolt throughout Algeria and issued a proclamation calling for a sovereign Algerian state.

Larbi Ben M'hidi
العربي بن مهيدي
Ben M'hidi portrait
Born
Mohamed Larbi Ben M'hidi

1923 (1923)
Died4 March 1957(1957-03-04) (aged 33–34)
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Resting placeMartyrs' Square, El Alia Cemetery, Algiers, Algeria
Other names
Known for
MovementFLN, ALN, CRUA, OS, MTLD

Ben M'hidi initially commanded Wilaya V (the military district in the Oran region) and played an important role at the FLN's Soummam conference in August 1956. He headed FLN operations during the Battle of Algiers where he was the last member of the FLN's Comité de Coordination et d'Exécution (CCE; Committee of Coordination and Implementation). Ben M'hidi was a strong believer in that the revolution should be directed by "internal" rather than "external" revolutionaries.[4]

He was captured by French paratroopers in February 1957. His death was announced in March 1957 by Pierre Gorlin, Robert Lacoste's press officer. The events surrounding his death were disputed, and contended by many that he was in fact tortured before being summarily executed. Many who knew him, have ruled out the possibility of him taking his own life, as was reported in the media, due to his devotion to Islam, which forbids suicide. In 2000, General Aussaresses admitted that Ben M'hidi was executed whilst in his custody, however, the exact truth regarding his death remains a mystery to this day. Ben M'hidi is considered to be a national hero in Algeria and is considered to be a symbol of the revolution that brought an end to French colonialism.

Early life edit

 
Larbi Ben M'hidi in the 1930s with his friends (Larbi is in the middle)

Larbi Ben M'hidi was born sometime in 1923 to a marabout family descended from the Arab tribe of Ouled Derradj[5] in the village of El Kouahi, Ain M'lila, which was part of the Constantine department at the time. At the age of 4 he started studying Quran and became a Hafiz, at his grandfather's religious school and mosque, which was later destroyed by French authorities. He attended a French school in Batna so that he could continue his studies – this is where he received his primary school certificate (Certificat d'études primaires élémentaires). The Ben M'hidi family later moved to Biskra, where Larbi Ben M'hidi began secondary school. In 1939, he joined the Algerian Muslim Scouts, where he became a group leader within a very short period of time and got interested in armed struggle. He applied for a job in supplies section of French barracks as he wanted to get near the army, he was eventually hired. He stole a gun and some notes which had information and then stopped working there and dedicated his life to politics and serving the country.[6]

Rebellion edit

 
The six founders of the National Liberation Front. Larbi Ben M'hidi is sitting on the right. Photograph taken on 24 October 1954.[7]

Ben M'hidi became a follower of Messali Hadj and was a member of Messali's Algerian People's Party (PPA) during World War II, rapidly obtaining significant responsibilities within the movement. Ben M'hidi was arrested the following day[8] after the Sétif uprising against the occupying French forces in May 1945.[9] The uprising was suppressed through what is now known as the Sétif massacre. He was arrested in Biskra and imprisoned in the Coudiat prison in Constantine for four months.[1][10] The massacres committed by the French army in Setif, Guelma and Kherrata had completely shocked him. On 15 March 1946, Ben M'Hidi was released from prison due to an amnesty being granted to the majority of nationalists imprisoned for the 1945 riots.[11] The PPA was disbanded following the 1945 Sétif riots, and was replaced in October 1946 by the Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties (MTLD), also headed by Messali Hadj. In 1950, Ben M'hidi had been convicted in absentia and sentenced to 10 years in prison.[8] Ben M'hidi and eight other members of this movement soon grew impatient with Hadj, and decided to form the Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action (CRUA), on 30 March 1954. During May and June 1954, they decided that Algeria would be split into five areas; Ben M'hidi was assigned Zone 5, Oran.[12] On 10 October, Larbi Ben M'hidi and five other members of the CRUA approved the transformation, thus giving birth to the National Liberation Front (FLN) and the National Liberation Army (ALN). At a meeting at the Climat de France, a house overlooking Bab El Oued, the FLN decided to launch an insurrection, which broke out in the early morning of 1 November 1954, and quickly escalated into the Algerian War. The outbreak soon became known as "Toussaint Rouge" (Red All Saints Day) as it coincided with the Catholic festival.[13] The rebellion was conducted internally by Ben M'hidi, Mourad Didouche, Rabah Bitat, Krim Belkacem, Mohammed Boudiaf, and Mostefa Ben Boulaïd, while three more members (Hocine Ait Ahmed, Ahmed Ben Bella, and Mohammed Khider) were operating externally in Cairo. They later became known as "The Men of November".

Ben M'hidi was designated Wilaya V (Oran), however, he encountered exceptional difficulties as the area had been recently struck by an earthquake, and arms that were promised had not arrived.[9]

On 2 November 1955, Ben M'hidi took command of the Zone Autonome d'Alger (ZAA) and appointed Yacef Saadi as his aide. On 25 June 1956, an FLN tract authored by Ben M'Hidi and Abane Ramdane declared: "All executions of combatants will be followed by reprisals. For each FLN soldier guillotined, a hundred Frenchmen will be cut down."

Soummam Conference edit

On 20 August 1956, a congress assembled in the Soummam Valley in the Kabyle. Ben M'hidi attended alone from Wilaya V (Oran). He also deputized for the "externals" in absentia, as he was the delegate to have been most recently in contact with their views. The first session was presided over by Ben M'hidi, with Abane Ramdane as secretary.[14] Ben M'hidi had criticized the "uselessly bloody operations" which had given a bad impression on public opinion, specifically citing Zighout's massacre at El-Halia which had occurred exactly one year previously. He had also criticized Amirouche where perhaps over a thousand dissident Muslims had been "liquidated" in a village near Bougie. The conference lasted 20 days ending sometime in September 1956. The French authorities had no knowledge that many of their most important adversaries were assembled in one place.[15]

 
Youcef Zighout, Abane Ramdane, Ben M'hidi, Krim Belkacem and Amar Ouamrane. Photograph taken in August/September 1956.

During the conference, Ben M'hidi was elected along with Abane Ramdane and Krim Belkacem to the Comité de Coordination et d'Exécution (CCE; Committee of Coordination and Implementation) where they were given the responsibility in running the Algerian War of Independence.

Battle of Algiers edit

In August 1956, Ben M'hidi handed over Oran to Abdelhafid Boussouf and assumed command in Algiers, as he was given the responsibility after the election for launching the Battle of Algiers.[9] On 30 September 1956, he began a campaign of bombing attacks targeting Europeans.[16] In January 1957, he suggested the idea of an insurrectional strike. It took place on 28 January 1957. It caught the attention of the world and the United Nations (UN).[17] Ben M'hidi did not stay longer than two days in each hideout in the Casbah with his companions as two thousand paratroopers were searching for FLN members.

Capture and execution edit

 
Ben M'hidi upon his arrest in 1957

Ben M'hidi was captured by Marcel Bigeard and his men on 23 February 1957 after receiving a tip-off provided by Roger Trinquier's network of informers. The details regarding Larbi Ben M'hidi's arrest are controversial, as there are several versions which contradict each other.[18][19] According to French sources, parachutists burst into an apartment on Rue Claude Debussy, in the European quarter, and arrested Larbi Ben M'hidi in his pajamas. Apparently, they thought they were on the trail of Ben Khedda, who was another leader of the Coordinating and Executing Committee (CCE). The other members of the committee had fled to the mountains or abroad (primarily Tunis). The photograph of his arrest was published the following day in all the newspapers in Algiers. The photograph showed Larbi Ben M'hidi with handcuffs on his wrists and ankles, with a cheerful brave face. Ben M'hidi also appeared in video footage released by the French press, alongside Brahim Chergui, the liaison chief of the Zone Autonome d'Alger (ZAA) who was arrested on 24 February 1957. Ben M'hidi was seen to be smiling towards the camera, and exchanging words with the armed paratroopers. He was handcuffed and had his feet shackled on the video footage, unlike Brahim Chergui. The video footage was taken in El Biar at then Colonel Bigeard's command post.[20]

 
Larbi Ben M'hidi in custody

Marcel Bigeard personally interrogated Ben M'hidi, and according to him would not allow him to be tortured. After two weeks of questioning, Ben M'hidi showed no sign of backing down, and Bigeard grew to like and respect him. During the interrogation, Ben M'hidi constantly stood up to his interrogators, due to the extensive pressure of the interrogation, insisting that Algeria would be victorious in the battle and that the Algerian people would be liberated. Bigeard was impressed with Larbi Ben M'hidi's defiance and dignity, even though defeated, he proved that he was in no way of form broken, mentally, physically or spiritually. When told the war was lost he responded by citing the 'Chant des Partisans' of the French Resistance: 'Another will take my place'.[21]

General Jacques Massu, however, was frustrated with Bigeard's slow progress, and arranged for Ben M'hidi to be transferred into the custody of Major Paul Aussaresses. According to a report to the CCE on 4 March 1957 made by an FLN spy who had been working in the Algiers police headquarters, Bigeard "was unable to prevent Ben M’hidi being handed over to men of a 'special section' of the paratroops. These interrogated him on their own initiative, and killed him last night". Under Aussaresses, Ben M'hidi was tortured, and then driven to an isolated farm 18 kilometres south of Algiers, where he was hanged – "to make it look like suicide".[22][3] On 6 March 1957, Pierre Gorlin (Robert Lacoste's press officer) announced that Ben M'hidi "had committed suicide by hanging himself with strips of material torn from his shirt". His body was later transferred to Maillot hospital in Algiers. On arrival, two French medical officers stated officially after examining him that he was already dead. General Jacques Massu claimed that Ben M'hidi was "still breathing" on his way to hospital after hanging himself with an electric flex during the night.[23] Everyone who knew him insisted that he would never take his own life. They know this because he was a devout Muslim and the religion of Islam forbids suicide.[24]

Post-execution and memorial edit

 
Larbi Ben M'hidi watch at the National Museum of Moujahid in Algiers

General Aussaresses admitted in 2000 that Ben M'hidi had been killed by the state, as had the lawyer Ali Boumendjel.[25] General Bigeard said he had respect for Ben M'Hidi and that he regretted his death.[26][27] Bigeard had declared himself 'sickened' by the news that French troops had assassinated Ben M'hidi.[28]

After Independence Rue d'Isly, one of the two main streets of Algiers was renamed Rue Larbi Ben M'hidi.[29]

He was depicted in the movie The Battle of Algiers by Italian director Gillo Pontecorvo.[26]

References edit

  1. ^ a b (in French). Algérie Network. 3 March 2014. Archived from the original on 19 November 2015. Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  2. ^ (in French). Liberte Algerie. 15 February 2012. Archived from the original on 18 October 2017. Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  3. ^ a b "Le général Aussaresses confirme que le chef du FLN à Alger, Larbi Ben M'Hidi, a été pendu". www.lemonde.fr (in French). 5 March 2007.
  4. ^ Naylor, Phillip C. (2006). Historical Dictionary of Algeria. Scarecrow Press. p. 117. ISBN 978-0810853409.
  5. ^ "Larbi ben M'hidi : l'homme des grands rendez -vous - Trouver un livre - Bibliothèque Universitaire Centrale Univ Oran 1". buc.univ-oran1.dz. p. 11. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  6. ^ 🇩🇿 🇫🇷 The Algerian Revolutionary, Larbi Ben Mhidi | Al Jazeera World, retrieved 2 September 2023
  7. ^ "Les fils de la Toussaint". Getty Images. 2 January 2015.
  8. ^ a b Harbi, Mohammed (1998). 1954, la Guerre commence en Algérie (in French). Editions Complexe. p. 190. ISBN 978-9961-892-69-5.
  9. ^ a b c Bidwell, Robin Leonard (1998). Dictionary of Modern Arab History. Routledge. p. 84. ISBN 9780-7103-0505-3.
  10. ^ Adli, Fateh (29 September 2013). (in French). Mémoria. Archived from the original on 18 October 2017. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  11. ^ "Principal Dates and Time Line of Algeria 1945-1957". Marxists Internet Archive. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
  12. ^ . Algerie2012.com. Archived from the original on 7 March 2014.
  13. ^ "Algeria still defined by independence war". The Daily Star. Lebanon. 1 November 2014.
  14. ^ Horne, Alistair (2006). A Savage War of Peace: Algeria 1954-1962. NYRB Classics. pp. 143–144. ISBN 1590172183.
  15. ^ Bidwell, Dictionary of Modern Arab History, p. 390
  16. ^ Martel, Gordon (28 July 2014). Twentieth-Century War and Conflict: A Concise Encyclopedia. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-118-88463-8.
  17. ^ Prenowitz, Eric (2011). Volleys of Humanity: Essays 1972-2009: Essays 1972-2009. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9780748647583.
  18. ^ . Echorouk Online. 13 October 2010. Archived from the original on 24 July 2011.
  19. ^ Mefti, Abderachid (23 January 2013). (in French). Mémoria. Archived from the original on 18 October 2017. Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  20. ^ "Arrestation de dirigeants du FLN". Ina.fr (in French). Institut National de l’Audiovisuel.
  21. ^ Reid, Donald (2009). Germaine Tillion, Lucie Aubrac, and the Politics of Memories of the French Resistance. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 9781443807227.
  22. ^ Boot, Max (5 July 2010). "The Consummate Warrior". The Weekly Standard.
  23. ^ Horne, Alistair (2006). A Savage War of Peace: Algeria 1954-1962. NYRB Classics. pp. 194–195. ISBN 1590172183.
  24. ^ "Ben M'hidi - One Of The Greatest Heroes Of Algeria | I Love Africa". 29 November 2021. Retrieved 2 September 2023.
  25. ^ "L'accablante confession du général Aussaresses sur la torture en Algérie". Le Monde (in French). 3 May 2001. (subscription required)
  26. ^ a b "1957: Larbi Ben M'Hidi, in the Battle of Algiers". ExecutedToday. 4 March 2018. Retrieved 2 September 2023.
  27. ^ . English Speaking Algerians. Archived from the original on 10 July 2011.
  28. ^ Mendelsohn, Richard (2007). Black and White in Colour: African History on Screen. James Currey Publishers. p. 207. ISBN 978-1847015228.
  29. ^ "Rue Larbi Ben M'hidi · El Djazair 16000, Algeria". Rue Larbi Ben M'hidi · El Djazair 16000, Algeria. Retrieved 2 September 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Horne, Alistair (2006). A Savage War of Peace: Algeria 1954-1962 (New York Review Books Classics). NYRB Classics. ISBN 978-1590172186.
  • Aussaresses, Paul (2010). The Battle of the Casbah: Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism in Algeria, 1955–1957. New York: Enigma Books. ISBN 978-1-929631-30-8.
  • Djebar, Assia (2001). Algerian White. Seven Stories Press. ISBN 978-1583220504.
  • Singer, Barnett; Langdon, John (2008). Cultured Force: Makers and Defenders of the French Colonial Empire. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-19904-3.

Bibliography edit

  • Horne, Alistair (2006). A Savage War of Peace: Algeria 1954-1962 (New York Review Books Classics). NYRB Classics. ISBN 978-1-59017-218-6
  • Aussaresses, Paul (2010). The Battle of the Casbah: Terrorism and Counter-Terrorism in Algeria, 1955–1957. New York: Enigma Books. ISBN 978-1-929631-30-8
  • Djebar, Assia (2001). Algerian White. Seven Stories Press. ISBN 978-1-58322-050-4
  • Singer, Barnett; Langdon, John (2008). Cultured Force: Makers and Defenders of the French Colonial Empire. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0-299-19904-3

larbi, hidi, arabic, العربي, بن, مهيدي, 1923, march, 1957, commonly, known, larbi, simply, hidi, prominent, algerian, revolutionary, leader, during, algerian, independence, founding, members, front, libération, nationale, national, liberation, front, that, lau. Larbi Ben M hidi Arabic العربي بن مهيدي 1923 4 March 1957 commonly known as Si Larbi or simply as Ben M hidi was a prominent Algerian revolutionary leader during the Algerian war of independence He is one of the six founding members of the Front de Liberation Nationale FLN National Liberation Front that launched an armed revolt throughout Algeria and issued a proclamation calling for a sovereign Algerian state Larbi Ben M hidiالعربي بن مهيديBen M hidi portraitBornMohamed Larbi Ben M hidi1923 1923 Ain M lila French AlgeriaDied4 March 1957 1957 03 04 aged 33 34 Algiers French Algeria now Algeria Cause of deathExecution by hangingResting placeMartyrs Square El Alia Cemetery Algiers AlgeriaOther namesEl Hakim 1 2 Algerian Jean Moulin 3 Known forNational Liberation FrontNational Liberation ArmyToussaint RougeAlgerian WarSoummam conferenceBattle of AlgiersMovementFLN ALN CRUA OS MTLD Ben M hidi initially commanded Wilaya V the military district in the Oran region and played an important role at the FLN s Soummam conference in August 1956 He headed FLN operations during the Battle of Algiers where he was the last member of the FLN s Comite de Coordination et d Execution CCE Committee of Coordination and Implementation Ben M hidi was a strong believer in that the revolution should be directed by internal rather than external revolutionaries 4 He was captured by French paratroopers in February 1957 His death was announced in March 1957 by Pierre Gorlin Robert Lacoste s press officer The events surrounding his death were disputed and contended by many that he was in fact tortured before being summarily executed Many who knew him have ruled out the possibility of him taking his own life as was reported in the media due to his devotion to Islam which forbids suicide In 2000 General Aussaresses admitted that Ben M hidi was executed whilst in his custody however the exact truth regarding his death remains a mystery to this day Ben M hidi is considered to be a national hero in Algeria and is considered to be a symbol of the revolution that brought an end to French colonialism Contents 1 Early life 2 Rebellion 2 1 Soummam Conference 2 2 Battle of Algiers 2 3 Capture and execution 3 Post execution and memorial 4 References 5 Further reading 6 BibliographyEarly life edit nbsp Larbi Ben M hidi in the 1930s with his friends Larbi is in the middle Larbi Ben M hidi was born sometime in 1923 to a marabout family descended from the Arab tribe of Ouled Derradj 5 in the village of El Kouahi Ain M lila which was part of the Constantine department at the time At the age of 4 he started studying Quran and became a Hafiz at his grandfather s religious school and mosque which was later destroyed by French authorities He attended a French school in Batna so that he could continue his studies this is where he received his primary school certificate Certificat d etudes primaires elementaires The Ben M hidi family later moved to Biskra where Larbi Ben M hidi began secondary school In 1939 he joined the Algerian Muslim Scouts where he became a group leader within a very short period of time and got interested in armed struggle He applied for a job in supplies section of French barracks as he wanted to get near the army he was eventually hired He stole a gun and some notes which had information and then stopped working there and dedicated his life to politics and serving the country 6 Rebellion edit nbsp The six founders of the National Liberation Front Larbi Ben M hidi is sitting on the right Photograph taken on 24 October 1954 7 Main article Declaration of 1 November 1954 Ben M hidi became a follower of Messali Hadj and was a member of Messali s Algerian People s Party PPA during World War II rapidly obtaining significant responsibilities within the movement Ben M hidi was arrested the following day 8 after the Setif uprising against the occupying French forces in May 1945 9 The uprising was suppressed through what is now known as the Setif massacre He was arrested in Biskra and imprisoned in the Coudiat prison in Constantine for four months 1 10 The massacres committed by the French army in Setif Guelma and Kherrata had completely shocked him On 15 March 1946 Ben M Hidi was released from prison due to an amnesty being granted to the majority of nationalists imprisoned for the 1945 riots 11 The PPA was disbanded following the 1945 Setif riots and was replaced in October 1946 by the Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties MTLD also headed by Messali Hadj In 1950 Ben M hidi had been convicted in absentia and sentenced to 10 years in prison 8 Ben M hidi and eight other members of this movement soon grew impatient with Hadj and decided to form the Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action CRUA on 30 March 1954 During May and June 1954 they decided that Algeria would be split into five areas Ben M hidi was assigned Zone 5 Oran 12 On 10 October Larbi Ben M hidi and five other members of the CRUA approved the transformation thus giving birth to the National Liberation Front FLN and the National Liberation Army ALN At a meeting at the Climat de France a house overlooking Bab El Oued the FLN decided to launch an insurrection which broke out in the early morning of 1 November 1954 and quickly escalated into the Algerian War The outbreak soon became known as Toussaint Rouge Red All Saints Day as it coincided with the Catholic festival 13 The rebellion was conducted internally by Ben M hidi Mourad Didouche Rabah Bitat Krim Belkacem Mohammed Boudiaf and Mostefa Ben Boulaid while three more members Hocine Ait Ahmed Ahmed Ben Bella and Mohammed Khider were operating externally in Cairo They later became known as The Men of November Ben M hidi was designated Wilaya V Oran however he encountered exceptional difficulties as the area had been recently struck by an earthquake and arms that were promised had not arrived 9 On 2 November 1955 Ben M hidi took command of the Zone Autonome d Alger ZAA and appointed Yacef Saadi as his aide On 25 June 1956 an FLN tract authored by Ben M Hidi and Abane Ramdane declared All executions of combatants will be followed by reprisals For each FLN soldier guillotined a hundred Frenchmen will be cut down Soummam Conference edit On 20 August 1956 a congress assembled in the Soummam Valley in the Kabyle Ben M hidi attended alone from Wilaya V Oran He also deputized for the externals in absentia as he was the delegate to have been most recently in contact with their views The first session was presided over by Ben M hidi with Abane Ramdane as secretary 14 Ben M hidi had criticized the uselessly bloody operations which had given a bad impression on public opinion specifically citing Zighout s massacre at El Halia which had occurred exactly one year previously He had also criticized Amirouche where perhaps over a thousand dissident Muslims had been liquidated in a village near Bougie The conference lasted 20 days ending sometime in September 1956 The French authorities had no knowledge that many of their most important adversaries were assembled in one place 15 nbsp Youcef Zighout Abane Ramdane Ben M hidi Krim Belkacem and Amar Ouamrane Photograph taken in August September 1956 During the conference Ben M hidi was elected along with Abane Ramdane and Krim Belkacem to the Comite de Coordination et d Execution CCE Committee of Coordination and Implementation where they were given the responsibility in running the Algerian War of Independence Battle of Algiers edit In August 1956 Ben M hidi handed over Oran to Abdelhafid Boussouf and assumed command in Algiers as he was given the responsibility after the election for launching the Battle of Algiers 9 On 30 September 1956 he began a campaign of bombing attacks targeting Europeans 16 In January 1957 he suggested the idea of an insurrectional strike It took place on 28 January 1957 It caught the attention of the world and the United Nations UN 17 Ben M hidi did not stay longer than two days in each hideout in the Casbah with his companions as two thousand paratroopers were searching for FLN members Capture and execution edit nbsp Ben M hidi upon his arrest in 1957 Ben M hidi was captured by Marcel Bigeard and his men on 23 February 1957 after receiving a tip off provided by Roger Trinquier s network of informers The details regarding Larbi Ben M hidi s arrest are controversial as there are several versions which contradict each other 18 19 According to French sources parachutists burst into an apartment on Rue Claude Debussy in the European quarter and arrested Larbi Ben M hidi in his pajamas Apparently they thought they were on the trail of Ben Khedda who was another leader of the Coordinating and Executing Committee CCE The other members of the committee had fled to the mountains or abroad primarily Tunis The photograph of his arrest was published the following day in all the newspapers in Algiers The photograph showed Larbi Ben M hidi with handcuffs on his wrists and ankles with a cheerful brave face Ben M hidi also appeared in video footage released by the French press alongside Brahim Chergui the liaison chief of the Zone Autonome d Alger ZAA who was arrested on 24 February 1957 Ben M hidi was seen to be smiling towards the camera and exchanging words with the armed paratroopers He was handcuffed and had his feet shackled on the video footage unlike Brahim Chergui The video footage was taken in El Biar at then Colonel Bigeard s command post 20 nbsp Larbi Ben M hidi in custody Marcel Bigeard personally interrogated Ben M hidi and according to him would not allow him to be tortured After two weeks of questioning Ben M hidi showed no sign of backing down and Bigeard grew to like and respect him During the interrogation Ben M hidi constantly stood up to his interrogators due to the extensive pressure of the interrogation insisting that Algeria would be victorious in the battle and that the Algerian people would be liberated Bigeard was impressed with Larbi Ben M hidi s defiance and dignity even though defeated he proved that he was in no way of form broken mentally physically or spiritually When told the war was lost he responded by citing the Chant des Partisans of the French Resistance Another will take my place 21 General Jacques Massu however was frustrated with Bigeard s slow progress and arranged for Ben M hidi to be transferred into the custody of Major Paul Aussaresses According to a report to the CCE on 4 March 1957 made by an FLN spy who had been working in the Algiers police headquarters Bigeard was unable to prevent Ben M hidi being handed over to men of a special section of the paratroops These interrogated him on their own initiative and killed him last night Under Aussaresses Ben M hidi was tortured and then driven to an isolated farm 18 kilometres south of Algiers where he was hanged to make it look like suicide 22 3 On 6 March 1957 Pierre Gorlin Robert Lacoste s press officer announced that Ben M hidi had committed suicide by hanging himself with strips of material torn from his shirt His body was later transferred to Maillot hospital in Algiers On arrival two French medical officers stated officially after examining him that he was already dead General Jacques Massu claimed that Ben M hidi was still breathing on his way to hospital after hanging himself with an electric flex during the night 23 Everyone who knew him insisted that he would never take his own life They know this because he was a devout Muslim and the religion of Islam forbids suicide 24 Post execution and memorial edit nbsp Larbi Ben M hidi watch at the National Museum of Moujahid in Algiers General Aussaresses admitted in 2000 that Ben M hidi had been killed by the state as had the lawyer Ali Boumendjel 25 General Bigeard said he had respect for Ben M Hidi and that he regretted his death 26 27 Bigeard had declared himself sickened by the news that French troops had assassinated Ben M hidi 28 After Independence Rue d Isly one of the two main streets of Algiers was renamed Rue Larbi Ben M hidi 29 He was depicted in the movie The Battle of Algiers by Italian director Gillo Pontecorvo 26 References edit a b Mohamed Larbi Ben M hidi L homme qui a fait trembler l etat major francais in French Algerie Network 3 March 2014 Archived from the original on 19 November 2015 Retrieved 8 November 2015 Yacef Saadi Ben M hidi a ete tue par balles in French Liberte Algerie 15 February 2012 Archived from the original on 18 October 2017 Retrieved 8 November 2015 a b Le general Aussaresses confirme que le chef du FLN a Alger Larbi Ben M Hidi a ete pendu www lemonde fr in French 5 March 2007 Naylor Phillip C 2006 Historical Dictionary of Algeria Scarecrow Press p 117 ISBN 978 0810853409 Larbi ben M hidi l homme des grands rendez vous Trouver un livre Bibliotheque Universitaire Centrale Univ Oran 1 buc univ oran1 dz p 11 Retrieved 26 November 2022 The Algerian Revolutionary Larbi Ben Mhidi Al Jazeera World retrieved 2 September 2023 Les fils de la Toussaint Getty Images 2 January 2015 a b Harbi Mohammed 1998 1954 la Guerre commence en Algerie in French Editions Complexe p 190 ISBN 978 9961 892 69 5 a b c Bidwell Robin Leonard 1998 Dictionary of Modern Arab History Routledge p 84 ISBN 9780 7103 0505 3 Adli Fateh 29 September 2013 Suicide en prison par Aussaresses in French Memoria Archived from the original on 18 October 2017 Retrieved 4 June 2015 Principal Dates and Time Line of Algeria 1945 1957 Marxists Internet Archive Retrieved 7 December 2015 Algeria must remain French beginning of the insurrection Algerie2012 com Archived from the original on 7 March 2014 Algeria still defined by independence war The Daily Star Lebanon 1 November 2014 Horne Alistair 2006 A Savage War of Peace Algeria 1954 1962 NYRB Classics pp 143 144 ISBN 1590172183 Bidwell Dictionary of Modern Arab History p 390 Martel Gordon 28 July 2014 Twentieth Century War and Conflict A Concise Encyclopedia John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 118 88463 8 Prenowitz Eric 2011 Volleys of Humanity Essays 1972 2009 Essays 1972 2009 Edinburgh University Press ISBN 9780748647583 Former revolutionary figure Abdelkrim Hassani to Echourok I m ready to testify over the case of Amirouche Echorouk Online 13 October 2010 Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Mefti Abderachid 23 January 2013 55 ans apres le mystere persiste in French Memoria Archived from the original on 18 October 2017 Retrieved 8 November 2015 Arrestation de dirigeants du FLN Ina fr in French Institut National de l Audiovisuel Reid Donald 2009 Germaine Tillion Lucie Aubrac and the Politics of Memories of the French Resistance Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 9781443807227 Boot Max 5 July 2010 The Consummate Warrior The Weekly Standard Horne Alistair 2006 A Savage War of Peace Algeria 1954 1962 NYRB Classics pp 194 195 ISBN 1590172183 Ben M hidi One Of The Greatest Heroes Of Algeria I Love Africa 29 November 2021 Retrieved 2 September 2023 L accablante confession du general Aussaresses sur la torture en Algerie Le Monde in French 3 May 2001 subscription required a b 1957 Larbi Ben M Hidi in the Battle of Algiers ExecutedToday 4 March 2018 Retrieved 2 September 2023 Larbi Ben M hidi English Speaking Algerians Archived from the original on 10 July 2011 Mendelsohn Richard 2007 Black and White in Colour African History on Screen James Currey Publishers p 207 ISBN 978 1847015228 Rue Larbi Ben M hidi El Djazair 16000 Algeria Rue Larbi Ben M hidi El Djazair 16000 Algeria Retrieved 2 September 2023 Further reading editHorne Alistair 2006 A Savage War of Peace Algeria 1954 1962 New York Review Books Classics NYRB Classics ISBN 978 1590172186 Aussaresses Paul 2010 The Battle of the Casbah Terrorism and Counter Terrorism in Algeria 1955 1957 New York Enigma Books ISBN 978 1 929631 30 8 Djebar Assia 2001 Algerian White Seven Stories Press ISBN 978 1583220504 Singer Barnett Langdon John 2008 Cultured Force Makers and Defenders of the French Colonial Empire University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 19904 3 Bibliography editHorne Alistair 2006 A Savage War of Peace Algeria 1954 1962 New York Review Books Classics NYRB Classics ISBN 978 1 59017 218 6 Aussaresses Paul 2010 The Battle of the Casbah Terrorism and Counter Terrorism in Algeria 1955 1957 New York Enigma Books ISBN 978 1 929631 30 8 Djebar Assia 2001 Algerian White Seven Stories Press ISBN 978 1 58322 050 4 Singer Barnett Langdon John 2008 Cultured Force Makers and Defenders of the French Colonial Empire University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 0 299 19904 3 Portal nbsp Algeria Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Larbi Ben M 27hidi amp oldid 1222553482, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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