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Tawfiq Canaan

Tawfiq Canaan (Arabic: توفيق كنعان) (24 September 1882 – 15 January 1964) was a pioneering Palestinian physician, medical researcher, ethnographer, and Palestinian nationalist. Born in Beit Jala during the rule of the Ottoman Empire, he served as a medical officer in the Ottoman army during World War I.[1] During British rule, he served as the first President of the Palestine Arab Medical Association founded in 1944, and as the director of several Jerusalem area hospitals before, during, and after the 1948 war. Over the course of his medical career, he authored more than thirty-seven studies on topics including tropical medicine, bacteriology, malaria, tuberculosis, and health conditions in Palestine, and contributed to research that led to a cure for leprosy.[2][3]

Tawfiq Canaan
Born(1882-09-24)24 September 1882
Died15 January 1964(1964-01-15) (aged 81)
NationalityPalestinian
Occupation(s)Physician, Ethnographer, author
Known forPioneer in the field of medicine in Palestine
Researcher of Palestinian popular heritage
Parent(s)Bechara Canaan and Katharina Khairallah

Deeply interested in Palestinian folklore, popular beliefs, and superstitions, Canaan collected over 1,400 amulets and talismanic objects held to have healing and protective properties. His published analyses of these objects, and other popular folk traditions and practices, brought him recognition as an ethnographer and anthropologist.[4][5][6] The several books and more than 50 articles he wrote in English and German serve as valuable resources to researchers of Palestinian and Middle-Eastern heritage.[2][4] Canaan also published works in Arabic and was fluent in Hebrew.[7]

An outspoken public figure, he also wrote two books on the Palestine problem, reflecting his involvement in confronting British imperialism and Zionism.[2][8] He was arrested by the British authorities in 1939. The last two decades of his life were lived in the shadow of several personal tragedies: the loss of his brilliant son in an accident at Jerash, the loss and destruction of his family home, and of his clinic in Jerusalem during the 1948 war.[9]

Canaan managed to re-establish his life and career in East Jerusalem under Jordanian rule. First taking sanctuary in a convent in the Old City for two years, he was appointed director of the Augusta Victoria Hospital on the Mount of Olives, where he lived with his family through his retirement until his death in 1964.[10]

Early life

 
Looking towards the Mediterranean Sea, a view from within and of the campus of the American University of Beirut (formerly, the Syrian Protestant College) where Canaan studied medicine

Born in the village of Beit Jala in Palestine during the rule of the Ottoman Empire, Canaan studied as a child at the Schneller School, founded by German missionaries in nearby Jerusalem. His father Bechara, who was also schooled there, founded the first Lutheran church, YMCA, and co-ed school in Beit Jala and the first Arab pastor for the German Protestant Palestine Mission.[11][12] His mother, Katharina, was raised in a German orphanage in Beirut and met Bechara while working at a hospital in Jerusalem.[13]

In 1898-9, Canaan went to Beirut to study medicine at the Syrian Protestant College (today the American University of Beirut). Obliged to work while studying as his father died of pneumonia shortly after his arrival, he graduated with distinction in 1905.[14][13] His valedictory speech, "Modern Treatment", was likely his first published piece and broached the use of serums, animal organs and X-rays.[15]

Canaan attributed his love of, interest in, and dedication to the people, culture and land of Palestine to his upbringing and the influence of his father who regularly took the family with him on his trips around the country.[16] In the Jerusalem Quarterly, Khaled Nashef suggests Canaan's knowledge of nature in Palestine as exhibited in writings such as "Plant-lore in Palestinian Superstition" (1928) among others were informed by these trips.[14]

Medical career

 
The Old City of Jerusalem in the 1900s

Returning to Jerusalem from Beirut, Canaan began work in the German Deaconesses Hospital [German], co-administering it with Dr. Adalbert Einsler (1848–1919) during a senior physician’s absence in 1906.[13][17] He was also sought as a manager at the German-Jewish Hospital (Shaare Zedek). His first published medical article as a practicing physician, “Cerebro-Spinal Meningitis in Jerusalem" (1911), was based on studies he conducted with the director there.[15]

Between 1912-1914, Canaan travelled to Germany several times to further his knowledge of microbiology and tropical diseases. He met his wife, Margot Eilender, in an Esperanto class on his first trip there.[18] Margot's father was a German importer and she was born and raised in Palestine.[19] They were quickly married, having their first child Yasma that same year, and built their family home in the al-Musrarah district of Jerusalem in 1913, where their three other children (Theo, Nada, and Leila) were born. In that home, Canaan also opened the only Arab clinic operating in Jerusalem at the time.[20][1]

One of the physicians Canaan collaborated with in Germany was Hans Müch, head of a mission to Palestine whose 1913 report on tuberculosis included three research papers authored by Canaan.[21] That same year, he was appointed director of the Malaria Branch of the International Health Bureau, a world center for medical research and microscopic examination founded by The German Society for Fighting Malaria, The Jewish Health Bureau, and The Jewish Physicians and Scientists for Improving Health in Palestine.[22] He also served patients at the Arab General Hospital in the hilltop village of Sheikh Badr next to Jerusalem.[1]

World Wars I & II

Canaan was working in the German Hospital in Jerusalem in 1914 when World War I began in October. As a citizen of the Ottoman Empire, which administered Palestine at the time, Canaan was drafted as an officer into the Ottoman army. First assigned as a physician to a contingent in Nazareth, he was transferred that same year to 'Awja al-Hafeer. He was appointed Head of the Laboratories on the Sinai Front by the German chief physician in charge there, a position that allowed Canaan to travel between Bir as-Saba, Beit Hanoun, Gaza, and Shaykh Nouran, as well as Damascus, Amman, and Aleppo. During this period, he collected more than 200 amulets to add to a collection he had begun in the early 20th century.[22] He contracted both cholera and typhus during the war and survived, though his brother Wadia was killed in the fighting and buried at the Zion cemetery in Jerusalem.[1]

Soon after the end of the war, in 1919, Canaan was appointed Director of The Leprosy Hospital (Asylum of the Lepers Jesushilfe, now Hansen House) in Talbiyyah, the only leprosy hospital in Syria, Palestine, and the Transjordan. Considered an incurable disease at the time, Canaan contributed to research in the fields of bacteriology and microscopic examination that resulted in the discovery of a cure using chaulmoogra oil.[22]

With the reopening of the German Hospital in 1923, Canaan was appointed head of the Internal Medicine Division, a position he held until the hospital had to cease operations in 1940.[23] The onset of World War II meant that most German citizens had either left Palestine or been arrested by the British Mandatory authorities as enemy aliens.[22]

Over the course of his medical career, Canaan treated people from all classes and segments of Palestinian and Arab society. He was one of a number of physicians from Jerusalem to examine Sherif Hussein of Mecca in Amman before his death in 1931, and removed a bullet from the thigh of Abu Jildah, a notorious Palestinian rebel, in 1936.[10] An entry on Canaan is included in the book Famous Doctors in Tropical Medicine (1932) by Dr. G. Olpp, director of the tropical medicine center in Tübingen, indicating he was well known & regarded within the medical community.[2]

Research & writings on Palestine

Canaan's interest in Palestinian peasantry (fellaheen) found its first public expression in an Arabic lecture he gave on "Agriculture in Palestine" in 1909. Published in German translation in the geographical journal Globus in 1911, it continues to be recognized as a useful historical reference for basic information on the development of Palestinian agriculture in the early 20th century. In this first article outside the field of medicine, Canaan exhibits his deep familiarity with the field of "Oriental Studies", referencing the work of Schumacher, Bauer, Guthe and Burckhardt, alongside classical sources, like Strabo and Josephus, and Arab sources like Mujir ad-Din.[15] Influenced too by the Old Testament studies of Gustaf Dalman, Albrecht Alt, and Martin Noth, all of whom were personal acquaintances, Canaan used the Bible as a basic source to compare past and present agricultural practices.[10] Canaan and Dalman co-headed The Evangelical German Institute beginning in 1903, and they shared the idea that it is not possible to understand the Old Testament without studying Palestinian folklore.[21]

In "The Calendar of Palestinian Peasants," published by the Journal of the German Palestine Society (German: Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins) in 1913, Canaan focused on traditional beliefs organizing the agricultural practices of Palestinian fellaheen.[21] A significant observation recorded in this paper was that people in southern Palestine divided the year into 7 periods of 50 days, a type of pentecontad calendar. Subsequent scholars referencing his work traced the origins of this calendar system to Western Mesopotamia circa the 3rd millennium BCE, suggesting it was also used by the Amorites.[24]

Canaan's first book on Palestinian folklore practices was published in 1914 and entitled Superstition and Popular Medicine.[21]

Palestine Oriental Society & its journal

A member of the American School for Oriental Research (established 1900), the Jerusalem branch of which was headed from 1920 to 1929 by the American archaeologist William Foxwell Albright, Canaan was also a member of the Palestine Oriental Society, (established in 1920 by Albert Tobias Clay). Albright was a lifelong friend of Canaan's, and edited his book 'Mohammedan Saints and Sancruaries (1927), as well as several of his articles, the last in 1962.[25]

Canaan played a very active role in the Palestine Oriental Society, serving as a member of the board, as well as secretary and sometime treasurer from early in the 1920s through until 1948, though the last article he published in its journal was in 1937.[26] Other articles Canaan published for the Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society (1920-1948) – such as, "Haunted Springs and Water Demons in Palestine" (1920–1921), "Tasit ar-Radjfeh" ("Fear Cup"; 1923), and "Plant-lore in Palestinian Superstition" (1928) – exhibit his deep interest in superstition.[27]

Salim Tamari, director of the Institute of Jerusalem Studies, describes Canaan as the most prominent member of a school of "nativist" ethnographers who published their works in The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society (JPOS). Their research and contributions were motivated by their belief that the "native culture of Palestine" was best represented in the traditions of the fellaheen, and that this ancient "living heritage" had to be urgently documented as the modern world encroached upon the Palestinian countryside.[28] These Palestinian ethnographers included Omar Saleh al-Barghouti, Stephan Hanna Stephan, Elias Haddad, and Khalil Totah, and all of them (excepting Totah) were Jerusalemites, like Canaan.[29]

Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine

Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine (1927) is identified by Meron Benvenisti as Canaan's "most outstanding contribution to the ethnography of Arab Palestine and to the annals of his country." In the introduction to the book, Canaan makes explicit his urgent motivation to document ancient, still practiced Palestinian traditions & beliefs threatened by Western influence and the spread of European educational models: "The primitive features of Palestine are disappearing so quickly that before long most of them will be forgotten."[6]

The shrines (awlia), sanctuaries (maqamat) and cults that made up popular Islam and popular religion in Palestine, and local Christian, Jewish and Muslim rituals held in common are outlined in Canaan's work. While local saints worshipped in Palestine can be said to be rooted in Muslim traditions, "they are actually ennobled sheikhs, who after their death, have been elevated to sainthood."[30] Local Muslims, many of whom had never stepped into a mosque, honoured these village saints at awlia, often situated by trees or other natural landmarks, some at or nearby ancient sites of worship for the "local Baals of Canaan" given, as John Wilkinson puts it, a 'Muslim disguise'.[31] Canaan saw these practices as evidence that the fellaheen were heirs to the practices of the earlier pre-monotheistic inhabitants of Palestine, "who built the first high places."[30]

Also covered in this work are therapeutic bathing rituals people undertook to cure diseases and ailments, with descriptions of the specific water sources perceived to be especially holy or effective. Canaan noted how people with fevers, many from malaria, would drink from al-Suhada cistern in Hebron and bathe in springs in Silwan, Kolonia (Ein al-Samiya) and Nebi Ayyub (Ein al-Nebi Ayyub) and a well in Beit Jibrin for al-Sheikh Ibrahim. Specific swamps were also considered to be sacred healing places. Al-Matbaa at Tel al-Sammam in the Plain of Esdraelon, associated with the wali ("saint") al-Sheik Ibrek, was widely renowned for curing sterility, rheumatism and nervous pains. Canaan noted that after washing in its water, women seeking to conceive would offer a present to al-Sheikh Ibrek.[32]

Archaeology & ethnography

Among Canaan's acquaintances were a number of specialists in the field of Palestinian archaeology, including William Foxwell Albright, Nelson Glueck, and Kathleen Kenyon, and his interest in the history of the region naturally extended to the field of archaeology.[14][33] In 1929, he participated in an archaeological expedition in Petra organized by George Horsfield, and discovered at its northern boundary a Kebaran shelter that he named Wadi Madamagh.[34][33] That same year he published a five chapter article, "Studies in the Topography and Folklore of Petra", in the JPOS that included topographical maps with Arabic names for the features and sites that he collected from the local Bedouin population, along with oral histories associated with them. He also devoted a chapter to an ethnographic study of the Lijatne tribe, and politely dispelled their erroneous identification as "Simeonites or other Beni-Israel" by non-Arabic speaking authors, due to their sidelocks, noting it just happened to be a recent fashion among them at the time.[33]

Nationalist writings

Canaan's politics and strong sense of nationalism find clear expression in two of his published works: The Palestine Arab Cause (1936) and Conflict in the Land of Peace (1936).

Published in English, Arabic, and French, The Palestine Arab Cause was a 48-page booklet that collated a series of articles Canaan authored for the local and foreign press following the outbreak of the 1936 Arab revolt. Canaan described British policy in Palestine as, "a destructive campaign against the Arabs with the ultimate aim of exterminating them from their country."[35] He questioned the nationality laws enacted by the Mandatory authorities which prevented Palestinian immigrants in the Americas, who had been citizens of the Ottoman Empire, from obtaining Palestinian citizenship in Mandate Palestine.[36] Directed at influencing British public opinion, the writings were seen by the Mandatory authorities as subversive.[35]

Conflict in the Land of Peace was penned to respond to an anonymous rebuttal of "The Palestine Arab Cause" that claimed European Jewish immigration to Palestine brought benefits, such as improvements in agriculture and the general health of the peasantry. Canaan delves more deeply into the Palestine problem and deconstructs the alleged benefits. For example, he concedes that Zionist settlers did contribute to controlling the malaria epidemic in Palestine through the draining of swamps, but notes that the workers who performed the actual task were Arabs, who thus transformed lands purchased by Zionist owners at very low prices into more valuable agricultural lands for their exclusive benefit. Recalling that dozens of the Egyptian labourers employed to dig the drainage channels died in the process, Canaan writes: "Baron De Rothschild supplied the money and the Egyptians gave their lives."[36] Canaan further notes that the anonymous pamphleteer ignores that Palestinians and Arabs drained swamps in dozens of sites throughout Palestine, under the supervision of the Department of Health, with Arab financial support and volunteer labour, caring for and improving their own lands and lives.[36]

Canaan was also co-signatory to a document sent to the Higher Arab Committee on 6 August 1936, and there is reason to believe that he supported Arab armed resistance.[36] From 1936 onward, Canaan, clearly expressed his rejection of British policies, in particular the policy of Zionist immigration to Palestine.[36]

Published works

(Partial list)

Folklore and ethnography

 
The cover of Haunted Springs and Water Demons in Palestine, published in 1922
  • "Der Ackerbau in Palästina (Agriculture in Palestine)". Globus; illustrierte Zeitschrift für Länder- und Völkerkunde (in German). 96: 268-272, 283-286. 1909.[15]
  • "Demons as an Aetiological Factor in Popular Medicine". Al-Kulliyeh. Beirut. 1912.
  • "Der Kalender des palästinensischen Fellachen (The Calendar of Palestinian Peasants)". Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins (in German). 36 (4): 266–300. 1913.[21]
  • Scragg, D. G. (1914). Superstition and Popular Medicine. ISBN 1-871034-01-9.[21]
  • Canaan, Tawfiq (1921). "Haunted Springs and Water Demons in Palestine". The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society. Jerusalem: The Palestine Oriental Society. 1: 153–170.
    • Alternative: Haunted Springs and Water Demons in Palestine. Jerusalem: Palestine Oriental Society. 1922. OCLC 187062829.[27] See also Jumana Emil Abboud
  • Canaan, Tawfiq (1922). "Byzantine Caravan Routes in the Negev". The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society. Jerusalem: The Palestine Oriental Society. 2: 139–144.
  • Canaan, Tawfiq (1923). "Folklore of the seasons in Palestine". The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society. Jerusalem: The Palestine Oriental Society. 3: 21–35.
  • Canaan, Tawfiq (1923). "Tasit ar-Radjfeh ("Fear Cup")". The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society. Jerusalem: The Palestine Oriental Society. 3: 122–131.[27]
  • Canaan, Tawfiq (1927). Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine. London: Luzac & Co.[37]
    • Alt:Canaan, Tawfiq (1927). Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine. London: Luzac & Co.
  • "Plant-lore in Palestinian Superstition". The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society. VIII. 1928.[27]
  • Belief in Demons in the Holy Land (in German). 1929.[27]
  • "Studies in the Topography and Folklore of Petra". The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society. IX. 1932.[38]
  • "Light and Darkness in Palestine Folklore". Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society (JPOS). 1931.[37]
  • (PDF). Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society (JPOS). 1931. Archived from the original on 2 October 2011.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  • "The Palestinian Arab House, Its Architecture and Folklore". Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society (JPOS). Jerusalem: The Syrian Orphanage Press. XIII. 1933.[37]
  • "Arabic Magic Bowls". Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society. 1936.[39]
  • "The Saqr Bedouin of Bisan". Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society (JPOS). 16: 21–32. 1936.
  • "Review of Dalman's Arbeit und Sitte in Palästina". Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society (JPOS). 1934.[37]
  • "Review of Granquist's Marriage Conditions in a Palestinian Village". Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society (JPOS). 1933–1937.[37]
  • "The Decipherment of Arabic Talismans". Berytus Archaeological Studies. 4: 69–110. 1937.[40]
  • "The Decipherment of Arabic Talismans". Berytus Archaeological Studies. 5: 141–151. 1938.[40]
  • Canaan, T (October 1962). "Superstition and Folklore about Bread". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. The American Schools of Oriental Research. 167 (167): 36–47. doi:10.2307/1355686. ISSN 0003-097X. JSTOR 1355686. S2CID 163293237.
  • "The 'Azazme Bedouin and Their Region". Arab World Geographer. 2 (4). Winter 1999. (translated from German by William Templer)
    • orig: "Die 'Azazme-Beduinen and ihr Gegiet". Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins (in German). 51.

Politics

  • The Palestine Arab Cause. 1936. (48-page booklet)[35]
  • Conflict in the Land of Peace. 1936. (Published in English, Arabic, and French)[35]

Medical

  • "Modern Treatment". Al-Muqtataf. Beirut. 1905.[14]
  • "Cerebro-Spinal Meningitis in Jerusalem". Al-Kulliyeh. Beirut. 1911.[21]
  • "Beobachtungen bei einer Denguefieberepidemie in Jerusalem ("Observations on an epidemic of dengue fever in Jerusalem")". Archiv für Schiff- und Tropenhygiene (in German). 17: 20–25. 1912.[41]
  • "Die Jerichobeule". Archiv für Schiff- und Tropenhygiene (in German). 20: 109–119. 1916.[42]
  • Canaan, T (1929). "The Oriental Boil: An Epidemiological Study in Palestine". Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 23: 89–94. doi:10.1016/S0035-9203(29)90903-2.[43]
  • "Zur Epidemiologie der Orientbeule in Palästina". Dermatologische Wochenschrift (in German). 29 (91): 1779. 1930.
  • "Kalazar in Palestine". Festschrift Bernhard Nocht (in German). 80: 67–71. 1937.
  • "Topographical studies in leishmaniasis in Palestine". Journal of the Palestinian Arab Medical Association. 1: 4–12. 1945.[44]
  • CANAAN T (1951). "Intestinal parasites in Palestine". J. Med. Liban. 4 (3): 163–69. PMID 14898190.[45]

War & Nakba

Imprisonment of Canaan, his wife, and his sister

Canaan was arrested by the British Mandate authorities the same day that Britain and France declared war on Germany on 3 September 1939. Ordered released at his second court session, the Criminal Investigation Department intervened and had him imprisoned for nine weeks in Acre.[22] His wife Margot and his sister Badra were also arrested, and imprisoned at a women's facility for criminal prisoners in Bethlehem; Margot for nine months, and Badra for four years.[35] They were then held in Wilhelma, a German colony turned British detention camp for German Palestinians until their release in 1943.[46] Though Margot's arrest was primarily because of her German ancestry, both women were politically active, having helped found the Arab Women's Committee in Jerusalem in 1934.[46] This charitable society took strong political stances, calling for civil disobedience and the continuation of the general strike that kicked off the 1936 revolt.[22] Badra also served as the assistant secretary in the Palestinian delegation to The Eastern Women's Conference that was held in support of Palestine in Cairo in October 1938. These arrests of the Canaan family were part of the general British policy of suppressing Palestinian resistance to Zionism & British rule.[35]

Arab Medical Society of Palestine

The Arab Medical Society of Palestine was established in August 1944, based on a decision taken at the Arab Medical Conference in Haifa ten years earlier. A coordinating body for medical associations in cities throughout Palestine, Canaan was its first president. He was also a member of the editorial board for the Society's journal, al-Majallah at-Tibbiyyah al-'Arabiyyah al-Filastiniyyah ("The Palestinian Arab Medical Journal"), the first issue of which was published in Arabic and English in December 1945. The Society also organized medical conferences, the first of which was in July 1945.[47]

As the situation in Palestinian cities and villages became increasingly insecure, the Society trained and organized relief units and centers to provide medical aid to civilians and the Palestinian and Arab militants fighting to defend them. Contacting and coordinating with the Red Cross to protect hospitals and other humanitarian institutions, the Society also made appeals to medical associations to send help, and limited medical aid was sent by some in the Arab world. Canaan was also a founding member of the Higher Arab Relief Committee, established on 24 January 1948, to receive aid coming to the country and supervise its distribution.[47]

The Nakba

Bombs and mortar shells hit Arab houses in al-Musrarah quarter of Jerusalem where the Canaan family home was located on 22 February 1948. Shortly thereafter, the children were moved to a safer location, but Tawfiq, Margot, Badra, and Nora (his sister-in-law) stayed, until the house sustained a direct hit on 9 May 1948. The extended family all then went to stay at a convent in the Old City in a room given to them by the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem, where they lived for two and a half years. Canaan's daughter Leila Mantoura wrote of this time:

"Mother and father would go daily to the top of the Wall of Jerusalem to look at their home. They witnessed it being ransacked, together with the wonderful priceless library and manuscripts, which mother guarded jealously and with great pride. They saw mother's Biedermeyer furniture being loaded into trucks and then their home being set on fire."[48]

Canaan's family home, library, and three manuscripts ready for publication were destroyed in the process. His collection of amulets and icons was spared, as it had already been entrusted to an international organization in the western part of Jerusalem earlier that same year for safekeeping.[48]

Awards

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Mershen, 2006, p. 252.
  2. ^ a b c d Nashef, 2002, p. 13.
  3. ^ El-Eini, 2006, p. 88.
  4. ^ a b Jubeh, Fall-Winter 2005, p. 103.
  5. ^ Davis, 2004.
  6. ^ a b Benvenisti, 2000, p. 252.
  7. ^ Mershen, 2006, p. 253.
  8. ^ Bernstein, 2000, p. 123.
  9. ^ W.F. Albright, 'In Memoriam,' Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, No. 174 (Apr., 1964), pp. 1-3,p.3.
  10. ^ a b c Nashef, 2002, p. 25.
  11. ^ Abdullah, June 2000.
  12. ^ Lapp and Albright, 1964, pp. 1−3.
  13. ^ a b c Mershen, 2006, p. 251.
  14. ^ a b c d Nashef, 2002, p. 14.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h Nashef, 2002, p. 15.
  16. ^ Nashef, 2002, p. 14. "We used to go with my father on short and long trips all over the country in order to get acquainted with the country and the people. This continuous contact with the people nurtured in all of us, and particularly in me, love for the country and the people. This feeling of belonging and unshaken loyalty remained with me till this day."
  17. ^ Eisler and Frutiger, 2008, p. 334.
  18. ^ Irving,2017, p. 50, note 146.
  19. ^ Irving, 2017,p. 87.
  20. ^ Nashef, 2002, p. 19.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g Nashef, 2002, p. 16.
  22. ^ a b c d e f Nashef, 2002, p. 20.
  23. ^ After 1948, Israel took over the hospital building and its part of the Bikur Cholim Hospital.
  24. ^ Taylor, 2003, p. 158.
  25. ^ Mershen, 2006, p. 257.
  26. ^ Irving, 2017, p. 81.
  27. ^ a b c d e Nashef, 2002, p. 17.
  28. ^ Tamari, 2009, pp. 97–99. "Implicit in their scholarship (and made explicit by Canaan himself) was another theme, namely that the peasants of Palestine represent – through their folk norms ... the living heritage of all the accumulated ancient cultures that had appeared in Palestine (principally the Canaanite, Philistine, Hebraic, Nabatean, Syrio-Aramaic and Arab)."
  29. ^ Tamari, 2009, pp. 97-99
  30. ^ a b Tamari, 2009, p. 105.
  31. ^ Taylor, 1993, p. 81.
  32. ^ Sufian, 2007, p. 51.
  33. ^ a b c Mershen, p. 254.
  34. ^ Diana V. W. Kirkbride (1958). "A Kebaran Rock Shelter in Wadi Madamagh, Near Petra, Jordan". Man. Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 58 (April): 55–58. doi:10.2307/2794154. JSTOR 2794154.
  35. ^ a b c d e f Nashef, 2002, p. 21.
  36. ^ a b c d e Nashef, 2002, p. 22.
  37. ^ a b c d e Tamari, 2009, p. 202.
  38. ^ Taylor, 2001, p. 217
  39. ^ Richards, D. S. (2002). The Annals of the Saljuq Turks: Selections from Al-Kāmil Fīʻl-Taʻrīkh of ʻIzz Al-Dīn Ibn Al-Athīr. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-7007-1576-2.
  40. ^ a b Schaefer, Karl R. (2006). Enigmatic charms: medieval Arabic block printed amulets in American and European libraries and museums. Leiden: Brill. p. 239. ISBN 90-04-14789-6.
  41. ^ Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, 1912, p. 410.
  42. ^ Hygienische Rundschau, 1917, p. 225.
  43. ^ Canaan, T. (25 June 1929). "The Oriental Boil:An Epidemiological Study in Palestine". Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. Elsevier. 23 (1): 89–94. doi:10.1016/S0035-9203(29)90903-2.
  44. ^ Patai, 1957, p. 152.
  45. ^ Aall-Zyukov, 1932, p. 1011.
  46. ^ a b Irving, 2017, p. 91.
  47. ^ a b Nashef, 2002, p. 23.
  48. ^ a b Nashef, 2002, p. 24.

Bibliography

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  • Lapp, Paul W.; Albright, W. F. (April 1964). "Tawfiq Canaan in Memoriam". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. The American Schools of Oriental Research. 174 (174): 1–3. doi:10.1086/BASOR1356065. JSTOR 1356065. S2CID 166964584.
  • Mershen, Birgit (2006). Huebner Ulrich (ed.). "Tawfiq Canaan and His Contribution to the Ethnography of Palestine". Palaestina exploranda: Studien zur Erforschung Palästinas im 19. Und 20. Jahrhundert anlässlich des 125jährigen Bestehens des Deutschen Vereins zur Erforschung Palästinas: 251–264.
  • Nashef, Khaled (November 2002). "Tawfik Canaan: His Life and Works" (PDF). Jerusalem Quarterly (16): 12–26. Retrieved 21 July 2009.
  • Patai, Raphael (1957). Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria: an annotated bibliography. New Haven: HRAF Press. ISBN 9780837168944. OCLC 174331967.
  • Raheb, Mitri (1990). "Das reformatorische Erbe unter den Palästinensern". Zur Entstehung der Evangelisch-lutherischen Kirche in Jordanien (= die Lutherische Kirche, Geschichte und Gestalten) (in German). Gütersloh: Mohn. 11: 91–96. ISBN 3-579-00127-2. Originally presented in 1988 as author's thesis (doctoral) at Fachbereich Evangelische Theologie of Philipps-Universität in Marburg
  • Sperling, Arthur (1917). Hygienische Morgentoilette: Gymnastik und Selbstmassage für Gesunde und Kranke (in German). Vol. 27. Munich: Verlag der Ärztlichen Rundschau Otto Gmelin. OCLC 218409429.
  • Sufian, Sandra Marlene (2007). Healing the land and the nation: malaria and the Zionist project in Palestine, 1920–1947 (Illustrated ed.). University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-77935-5.
  • Tamari, Salim (2009). "Lepers, Lunatics and Saints: The Nativist Ethnography of Tawfiq Canaan and his Jerusalem Circle". Mountain Against the Sea. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-25129-8.
  • Taylor, Jane (2001). Petra and the Lost Kingdom of the Nabataeans. London: I.B.Tauris. ISBN 1-86064-508-9.
  • Taylor, Joan E. (1993). Christians and the holy places: the myth of Jewish-Christian origins (Illustrated ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-814785-5.
  • Taylor, Joan E. (2003). Jewish Women Philosophers of First Century Alexandria. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-929141-1.
  • U.S. Agricultural Research Service (1932). Charles Wardell Stiles (ed.). Index-catalogue of medical and veterinary zoology. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • Yellow Fever Bureau, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine (1912). Bulletin. Vol. 2. Liverpool: University Press. OCLC 1640456.

External links

  • The Tawfiq Canaan Collection of Palestinian Amulets – A virtual gallery
  • The Great War in Palestine: Dr Tawfiq Canaan’s Photographic Album, Norbert Schwake, 2014, Jerusalem Quarterly, Institute for Palestine Studies

tawfiq, canaan, arabic, توفيق, كنعان, september, 1882, january, 1964, pioneering, palestinian, physician, medical, researcher, ethnographer, palestinian, nationalist, born, beit, jala, during, rule, ottoman, empire, served, medical, officer, ottoman, army, dur. Tawfiq Canaan Arabic توفيق كنعان 24 September 1882 15 January 1964 was a pioneering Palestinian physician medical researcher ethnographer and Palestinian nationalist Born in Beit Jala during the rule of the Ottoman Empire he served as a medical officer in the Ottoman army during World War I 1 During British rule he served as the first President of the Palestine Arab Medical Association founded in 1944 and as the director of several Jerusalem area hospitals before during and after the 1948 war Over the course of his medical career he authored more than thirty seven studies on topics including tropical medicine bacteriology malaria tuberculosis and health conditions in Palestine and contributed to research that led to a cure for leprosy 2 3 Tawfiq CanaanBorn 1882 09 24 24 September 1882Beit Jala Ottoman EmpireDied15 January 1964 1964 01 15 aged 81 East Jerusalem West BankNationalityPalestinianOccupation s Physician Ethnographer authorKnown forPioneer in the field of medicine in Palestine Researcher of Palestinian popular heritageParent s Bechara Canaan and Katharina KhairallahDeeply interested in Palestinian folklore popular beliefs and superstitions Canaan collected over 1 400 amulets and talismanic objects held to have healing and protective properties His published analyses of these objects and other popular folk traditions and practices brought him recognition as an ethnographer and anthropologist 4 5 6 The several books and more than 50 articles he wrote in English and German serve as valuable resources to researchers of Palestinian and Middle Eastern heritage 2 4 Canaan also published works in Arabic and was fluent in Hebrew 7 An outspoken public figure he also wrote two books on the Palestine problem reflecting his involvement in confronting British imperialism and Zionism 2 8 He was arrested by the British authorities in 1939 The last two decades of his life were lived in the shadow of several personal tragedies the loss of his brilliant son in an accident at Jerash the loss and destruction of his family home and of his clinic in Jerusalem during the 1948 war 9 Canaan managed to re establish his life and career in East Jerusalem under Jordanian rule First taking sanctuary in a convent in the Old City for two years he was appointed director of the Augusta Victoria Hospital on the Mount of Olives where he lived with his family through his retirement until his death in 1964 10 Contents 1 Early life 2 Medical career 2 1 World Wars I amp II 3 Research amp writings on Palestine 3 1 Palestine Oriental Society amp its journal 3 2 Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine 3 3 Archaeology amp ethnography 3 4 Nationalist writings 4 Published works 4 1 Folklore and ethnography 4 2 Politics 4 3 Medical 5 War amp Nakba 5 1 Imprisonment of Canaan his wife and his sister 5 2 Arab Medical Society of Palestine 5 3 The Nakba 6 Awards 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksEarly life Edit Looking towards the Mediterranean Sea a view from within and of the campus of the American University of Beirut formerly the Syrian Protestant College where Canaan studied medicine Born in the village of Beit Jala in Palestine during the rule of the Ottoman Empire Canaan studied as a child at the Schneller School founded by German missionaries in nearby Jerusalem His father Bechara who was also schooled there founded the first Lutheran church YMCA and co ed school in Beit Jala and the first Arab pastor for the German Protestant Palestine Mission 11 12 His mother Katharina was raised in a German orphanage in Beirut and met Bechara while working at a hospital in Jerusalem 13 In 1898 9 Canaan went to Beirut to study medicine at the Syrian Protestant College today the American University of Beirut Obliged to work while studying as his father died of pneumonia shortly after his arrival he graduated with distinction in 1905 14 13 His valedictory speech Modern Treatment was likely his first published piece and broached the use of serums animal organs and X rays 15 Canaan attributed his love of interest in and dedication to the people culture and land of Palestine to his upbringing and the influence of his father who regularly took the family with him on his trips around the country 16 In the Jerusalem Quarterly Khaled Nashef suggests Canaan s knowledge of nature in Palestine as exhibited in writings such as Plant lore in Palestinian Superstition 1928 among others were informed by these trips 14 Medical career Edit The Old City of Jerusalem in the 1900s Returning to Jerusalem from Beirut Canaan began work in the German Deaconesses Hospital German co administering it with Dr Adalbert Einsler 1848 1919 during a senior physician s absence in 1906 13 17 He was also sought as a manager at the German Jewish Hospital Shaare Zedek His first published medical article as a practicing physician Cerebro Spinal Meningitis in Jerusalem 1911 was based on studies he conducted with the director there 15 Between 1912 1914 Canaan travelled to Germany several times to further his knowledge of microbiology and tropical diseases He met his wife Margot Eilender in an Esperanto class on his first trip there 18 Margot s father was a German importer and she was born and raised in Palestine 19 They were quickly married having their first child Yasma that same year and built their family home in the al Musrarah district of Jerusalem in 1913 where their three other children Theo Nada and Leila were born In that home Canaan also opened the only Arab clinic operating in Jerusalem at the time 20 1 One of the physicians Canaan collaborated with in Germany was Hans Much head of a mission to Palestine whose 1913 report on tuberculosis included three research papers authored by Canaan 21 That same year he was appointed director of the Malaria Branch of the International Health Bureau a world center for medical research and microscopic examination founded by The German Society for Fighting Malaria The Jewish Health Bureau and The Jewish Physicians and Scientists for Improving Health in Palestine 22 He also served patients at the Arab General Hospital in the hilltop village of Sheikh Badr next to Jerusalem 1 World Wars I amp II Edit Canaan was working in the German Hospital in Jerusalem in 1914 when World War I began in October As a citizen of the Ottoman Empire which administered Palestine at the time Canaan was drafted as an officer into the Ottoman army First assigned as a physician to a contingent in Nazareth he was transferred that same year to Awja al Hafeer He was appointed Head of the Laboratories on the Sinai Front by the German chief physician in charge there a position that allowed Canaan to travel between Bir as Saba Beit Hanoun Gaza and Shaykh Nouran as well as Damascus Amman and Aleppo During this period he collected more than 200 amulets to add to a collection he had begun in the early 20th century 22 He contracted both cholera and typhus during the war and survived though his brother Wadia was killed in the fighting and buried at the Zion cemetery in Jerusalem 1 Soon after the end of the war in 1919 Canaan was appointed Director of The Leprosy Hospital Asylum of the Lepers Jesushilfe now Hansen House in Talbiyyah the only leprosy hospital in Syria Palestine and the Transjordan Considered an incurable disease at the time Canaan contributed to research in the fields of bacteriology and microscopic examination that resulted in the discovery of a cure using chaulmoogra oil 22 With the reopening of the German Hospital in 1923 Canaan was appointed head of the Internal Medicine Division a position he held until the hospital had to cease operations in 1940 23 The onset of World War II meant that most German citizens had either left Palestine or been arrested by the British Mandatory authorities as enemy aliens 22 Over the course of his medical career Canaan treated people from all classes and segments of Palestinian and Arab society He was one of a number of physicians from Jerusalem to examine Sherif Hussein of Mecca in Amman before his death in 1931 and removed a bullet from the thigh of Abu Jildah a notorious Palestinian rebel in 1936 10 An entry on Canaan is included in the book Famous Doctors in Tropical Medicine 1932 by Dr G Olpp director of the tropical medicine center in Tubingen indicating he was well known amp regarded within the medical community 2 Research amp writings on Palestine EditCanaan s interest in Palestinian peasantry fellaheen found its first public expression in an Arabic lecture he gave on Agriculture in Palestine in 1909 Published in German translation in the geographical journal Globus in 1911 it continues to be recognized as a useful historical reference for basic information on the development of Palestinian agriculture in the early 20th century In this first article outside the field of medicine Canaan exhibits his deep familiarity with the field of Oriental Studies referencing the work of Schumacher Bauer Guthe and Burckhardt alongside classical sources like Strabo and Josephus and Arab sources like Mujir ad Din 15 Influenced too by the Old Testament studies of Gustaf Dalman Albrecht Alt and Martin Noth all of whom were personal acquaintances Canaan used the Bible as a basic source to compare past and present agricultural practices 10 Canaan and Dalman co headed The Evangelical German Institute beginning in 1903 and they shared the idea that it is not possible to understand the Old Testament without studying Palestinian folklore 21 In The Calendar of Palestinian Peasants published by the Journal of the German Palestine Society German Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palastina Vereins in 1913 Canaan focused on traditional beliefs organizing the agricultural practices of Palestinian fellaheen 21 A significant observation recorded in this paper was that people in southern Palestine divided the year into 7 periods of 50 days a type of pentecontad calendar Subsequent scholars referencing his work traced the origins of this calendar system to Western Mesopotamia circa the 3rd millennium BCE suggesting it was also used by the Amorites 24 Canaan s first book on Palestinian folklore practices was published in 1914 and entitled Superstition and Popular Medicine 21 Palestine Oriental Society amp its journal Edit A member of the American School for Oriental Research established 1900 the Jerusalem branch of which was headed from 1920 to 1929 by the American archaeologist William Foxwell Albright Canaan was also a member of the Palestine Oriental Society established in 1920 by Albert Tobias Clay Albright was a lifelong friend of Canaan s and edited his book Mohammedan Saints and Sancruaries 1927 as well as several of his articles the last in 1962 25 Canaan played a very active role in the Palestine Oriental Society serving as a member of the board as well as secretary and sometime treasurer from early in the 1920s through until 1948 though the last article he published in its journal was in 1937 26 Other articles Canaan published for the Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society 1920 1948 such as Haunted Springs and Water Demons in Palestine 1920 1921 Tasit ar Radjfeh Fear Cup 1923 and Plant lore in Palestinian Superstition 1928 exhibit his deep interest in superstition 27 Salim Tamari director of the Institute of Jerusalem Studies describes Canaan as the most prominent member of a school of nativist ethnographers who published their works in The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society JPOS Their research and contributions were motivated by their belief that the native culture of Palestine was best represented in the traditions of the fellaheen and that this ancient living heritage had to be urgently documented as the modern world encroached upon the Palestinian countryside 28 These Palestinian ethnographers included Omar Saleh al Barghouti Stephan Hanna Stephan Elias Haddad and Khalil Totah and all of them excepting Totah were Jerusalemites like Canaan 29 Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine Edit Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine 1927 is identified by Meron Benvenisti as Canaan s most outstanding contribution to the ethnography of Arab Palestine and to the annals of his country In the introduction to the book Canaan makes explicit his urgent motivation to document ancient still practiced Palestinian traditions amp beliefs threatened by Western influence and the spread of European educational models The primitive features of Palestine are disappearing so quickly that before long most of them will be forgotten 6 The shrines awlia sanctuaries maqamat and cults that made up popular Islam and popular religion in Palestine and local Christian Jewish and Muslim rituals held in common are outlined in Canaan s work While local saints worshipped in Palestine can be said to be rooted in Muslim traditions they are actually ennobled sheikhs who after their death have been elevated to sainthood 30 Local Muslims many of whom had never stepped into a mosque honoured these village saints at awlia often situated by trees or other natural landmarks some at or nearby ancient sites of worship for the local Baals of Canaan given as John Wilkinson puts it a Muslim disguise 31 Canaan saw these practices as evidence that the fellaheen were heirs to the practices of the earlier pre monotheistic inhabitants of Palestine who built the first high places 30 Also covered in this work are therapeutic bathing rituals people undertook to cure diseases and ailments with descriptions of the specific water sources perceived to be especially holy or effective Canaan noted how people with fevers many from malaria would drink from al Suhada cistern in Hebron and bathe in springs in Silwan Kolonia Ein al Samiya and Nebi Ayyub Ein al Nebi Ayyub and a well in Beit Jibrin for al Sheikh Ibrahim Specific swamps were also considered to be sacred healing places Al Matbaa at Tel al Sammam in the Plain of Esdraelon associated with the wali saint al Sheik Ibrek was widely renowned for curing sterility rheumatism and nervous pains Canaan noted that after washing in its water women seeking to conceive would offer a present to al Sheikh Ibrek 32 Archaeology amp ethnography Edit Among Canaan s acquaintances were a number of specialists in the field of Palestinian archaeology including William Foxwell Albright Nelson Glueck and Kathleen Kenyon and his interest in the history of the region naturally extended to the field of archaeology 14 33 In 1929 he participated in an archaeological expedition in Petra organized by George Horsfield and discovered at its northern boundary a Kebaran shelter that he named Wadi Madamagh 34 33 That same year he published a five chapter article Studies in the Topography and Folklore of Petra in the JPOS that included topographical maps with Arabic names for the features and sites that he collected from the local Bedouin population along with oral histories associated with them He also devoted a chapter to an ethnographic study of the Lijatne tribe and politely dispelled their erroneous identification as Simeonites or other Beni Israel by non Arabic speaking authors due to their sidelocks noting it just happened to be a recent fashion among them at the time 33 Nationalist writings Edit Canaan s politics and strong sense of nationalism find clear expression in two of his published works The Palestine Arab Cause 1936 and Conflict in the Land of Peace 1936 Published in English Arabic and French The Palestine Arab Cause was a 48 page booklet that collated a series of articles Canaan authored for the local and foreign press following the outbreak of the 1936 Arab revolt Canaan described British policy in Palestine as a destructive campaign against the Arabs with the ultimate aim of exterminating them from their country 35 He questioned the nationality laws enacted by the Mandatory authorities which prevented Palestinian immigrants in the Americas who had been citizens of the Ottoman Empire from obtaining Palestinian citizenship in Mandate Palestine 36 Directed at influencing British public opinion the writings were seen by the Mandatory authorities as subversive 35 Conflict in the Land of Peace was penned to respond to an anonymous rebuttal of The Palestine Arab Cause that claimed European Jewish immigration to Palestine brought benefits such as improvements in agriculture and the general health of the peasantry Canaan delves more deeply into the Palestine problem and deconstructs the alleged benefits For example he concedes that Zionist settlers did contribute to controlling the malaria epidemic in Palestine through the draining of swamps but notes that the workers who performed the actual task were Arabs who thus transformed lands purchased by Zionist owners at very low prices into more valuable agricultural lands for their exclusive benefit Recalling that dozens of the Egyptian labourers employed to dig the drainage channels died in the process Canaan writes Baron De Rothschild supplied the money and the Egyptians gave their lives 36 Canaan further notes that the anonymous pamphleteer ignores that Palestinians and Arabs drained swamps in dozens of sites throughout Palestine under the supervision of the Department of Health with Arab financial support and volunteer labour caring for and improving their own lands and lives 36 Canaan was also co signatory to a document sent to the Higher Arab Committee on 6 August 1936 and there is reason to believe that he supported Arab armed resistance 36 From 1936 onward Canaan clearly expressed his rejection of British policies in particular the policy of Zionist immigration to Palestine 36 Published works Edit Partial list Folklore and ethnography Edit The cover of Haunted Springs and Water Demons in Palestine published in 1922 Der Ackerbau in Palastina Agriculture in Palestine Globus illustrierte Zeitschrift fur Lander und Volkerkunde in German 96 268 272 283 286 1909 15 Demons as an Aetiological Factor in Popular Medicine Al Kulliyeh Beirut 1912 Der Kalender des palastinensischen Fellachen The Calendar of Palestinian Peasants Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palastina Vereins in German 36 4 266 300 1913 21 Scragg D G 1914 Superstition and Popular Medicine ISBN 1 871034 01 9 21 Canaan Tawfiq 1921 Haunted Springs and Water Demons in Palestine The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society Jerusalem The Palestine Oriental Society 1 153 170 Alternative Haunted Springs and Water Demons in Palestine Jerusalem Palestine Oriental Society 1922 OCLC 187062829 27 See also Jumana Emil Abboud Canaan Tawfiq 1922 Byzantine Caravan Routes in the Negev The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society Jerusalem The Palestine Oriental Society 2 139 144 Canaan Tawfiq 1923 Folklore of the seasons in Palestine The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society Jerusalem The Palestine Oriental Society 3 21 35 Canaan Tawfiq 1923 Tasit ar Radjfeh Fear Cup The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society Jerusalem The Palestine Oriental Society 3 122 131 27 Canaan Tawfiq 1927 Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine London Luzac amp Co 37 Alt Canaan Tawfiq 1927 Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine London Luzac amp Co Plant lore in Palestinian Superstition The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society VIII 1928 27 Belief in Demons in the Holy Land in German 1929 27 Studies in the Topography and Folklore of Petra The Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society IX 1932 38 Light and Darkness in Palestine Folklore Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society JPOS 1931 37 Unwritten Laws Affecting the Arab Women of Palestine PDF Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society JPOS 1931 Archived from the original on 2 October 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link The Palestinian Arab House Its Architecture and Folklore Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society JPOS Jerusalem The Syrian Orphanage Press XIII 1933 37 Arabic Magic Bowls Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society 1936 39 The Saqr Bedouin of Bisan Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society JPOS 16 21 32 1936 Review of Dalman s Arbeit und Sitte in Palastina Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society JPOS 1934 37 Review of Granquist s Marriage Conditions in a Palestinian Village Journal of the Palestine Oriental Society JPOS 1933 1937 37 The Decipherment of Arabic Talismans Berytus Archaeological Studies 4 69 110 1937 40 The Decipherment of Arabic Talismans Berytus Archaeological Studies 5 141 151 1938 40 Canaan T October 1962 Superstition and Folklore about Bread Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research The American Schools of Oriental Research 167 167 36 47 doi 10 2307 1355686 ISSN 0003 097X JSTOR 1355686 S2CID 163293237 The Azazme Bedouin and Their Region Arab World Geographer 2 4 Winter 1999 translated from German by William Templer orig Die Azazme Beduinen and ihr Gegiet Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palastina Vereins in German 51 Politics Edit The Palestine Arab Cause 1936 48 page booklet 35 Conflict in the Land of Peace 1936 Published in English Arabic and French 35 Medical Edit Modern Treatment Al Muqtataf Beirut 1905 14 Cerebro Spinal Meningitis in Jerusalem Al Kulliyeh Beirut 1911 21 Beobachtungen bei einer Denguefieberepidemie in Jerusalem Observations on an epidemic of dengue fever in Jerusalem Archiv fur Schiff und Tropenhygiene in German 17 20 25 1912 41 Die Jerichobeule Archiv fur Schiff und Tropenhygiene in German 20 109 119 1916 42 Canaan T 1929 The Oriental Boil An Epidemiological Study in Palestine Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 23 89 94 doi 10 1016 S0035 9203 29 90903 2 43 Zur Epidemiologie der Orientbeule in Palastina Dermatologische Wochenschrift in German 29 91 1779 1930 Kalazar in Palestine Festschrift Bernhard Nocht in German 80 67 71 1937 Topographical studies in leishmaniasis in Palestine Journal of the Palestinian Arab Medical Association 1 4 12 1945 44 CANAAN T 1951 Intestinal parasites in Palestine J Med Liban 4 3 163 69 PMID 14898190 45 War amp Nakba EditImprisonment of Canaan his wife and his sister Edit Canaan was arrested by the British Mandate authorities the same day that Britain and France declared war on Germany on 3 September 1939 Ordered released at his second court session the Criminal Investigation Department intervened and had him imprisoned for nine weeks in Acre 22 His wife Margot and his sister Badra were also arrested and imprisoned at a women s facility for criminal prisoners in Bethlehem Margot for nine months and Badra for four years 35 They were then held in Wilhelma a German colony turned British detention camp for German Palestinians until their release in 1943 46 Though Margot s arrest was primarily because of her German ancestry both women were politically active having helped found the Arab Women s Committee in Jerusalem in 1934 46 This charitable society took strong political stances calling for civil disobedience and the continuation of the general strike that kicked off the 1936 revolt 22 Badra also served as the assistant secretary in the Palestinian delegation to The Eastern Women s Conference that was held in support of Palestine in Cairo in October 1938 These arrests of the Canaan family were part of the general British policy of suppressing Palestinian resistance to Zionism amp British rule 35 Arab Medical Society of Palestine Edit The Arab Medical Society of Palestine was established in August 1944 based on a decision taken at the Arab Medical Conference in Haifa ten years earlier A coordinating body for medical associations in cities throughout Palestine Canaan was its first president He was also a member of the editorial board for the Society s journal al Majallah at Tibbiyyah al Arabiyyah al Filastiniyyah The Palestinian Arab Medical Journal the first issue of which was published in Arabic and English in December 1945 The Society also organized medical conferences the first of which was in July 1945 47 As the situation in Palestinian cities and villages became increasingly insecure the Society trained and organized relief units and centers to provide medical aid to civilians and the Palestinian and Arab militants fighting to defend them Contacting and coordinating with the Red Cross to protect hospitals and other humanitarian institutions the Society also made appeals to medical associations to send help and limited medical aid was sent by some in the Arab world Canaan was also a founding member of the Higher Arab Relief Committee established on 24 January 1948 to receive aid coming to the country and supervise its distribution 47 The Nakba Edit See also NakbaBombs and mortar shells hit Arab houses in al Musrarah quarter of Jerusalem where the Canaan family home was located on 22 February 1948 Shortly thereafter the children were moved to a safer location but Tawfiq Margot Badra and Nora his sister in law stayed until the house sustained a direct hit on 9 May 1948 The extended family all then went to stay at a convent in the Old City in a room given to them by the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem where they lived for two and a half years Canaan s daughter Leila Mantoura wrote of this time Mother and father would go daily to the top of the Wall of Jerusalem to look at their home They witnessed it being ransacked together with the wonderful priceless library and manuscripts which mother guarded jealously and with great pride They saw mother s Biedermeyer furniture being loaded into trucks and then their home being set on fire 48 Canaan s family home library and three manuscripts ready for publication were destroyed in the process His collection of amulets and icons was spared as it had already been entrusted to an international organization in the western part of Jerusalem earlier that same year for safekeeping 48 Awards EditOrder of the Red Crescent in World War I 15 Iron Cross of 1914 15 Holy Sepulchre Cross with a red ribbon awarded by the Greek Orthodox Patriarch 1951 15 Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany 1951 15 See also EditSaint George Interfaith shrine Palestinian ChristiansReferences Edit a b c d Mershen 2006 p 252 a b c d Nashef 2002 p 13 El Eini 2006 p 88 a b Jubeh Fall Winter 2005 p 103 Davis 2004 a b Benvenisti 2000 p 252 Mershen 2006 p 253 Bernstein 2000 p 123 W F Albright In Memoriam Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research No 174 Apr 1964 pp 1 3 p 3 a b c Nashef 2002 p 25 Abdullah June 2000 Lapp and Albright 1964 pp 1 3 a b c Mershen 2006 p 251 a b c d Nashef 2002 p 14 a b c d e f g h Nashef 2002 p 15 Nashef 2002 p 14 We used to go with my father on short and long trips all over the country in order to get acquainted with the country and the people This continuous contact with the people nurtured in all of us and particularly in me love for the country and the people This feeling of belonging and unshaken loyalty remained with me till this day Eisler and Frutiger 2008 p 334 Irving 2017 p 50 note 146 Irving 2017 p 87 Nashef 2002 p 19 a b c d e f g Nashef 2002 p 16 a b c d e f Nashef 2002 p 20 After 1948 Israel took over the hospital building and its part of the Bikur Cholim Hospital Taylor 2003 p 158 Mershen 2006 p 257 Irving 2017 p 81 a b c d e Nashef 2002 p 17 Tamari 2009 pp 97 99 Implicit in their scholarship and made explicit by Canaan himself was another theme namely that the peasants of Palestine represent through their folk norms the living heritage of all the accumulated ancient cultures that had appeared in Palestine principally the Canaanite Philistine Hebraic Nabatean Syrio Aramaic and Arab Tamari 2009 pp 97 99 a b Tamari 2009 p 105 Taylor 1993 p 81 Sufian 2007 p 51 a b c Mershen p 254 Diana V W Kirkbride 1958 A Kebaran Rock Shelter in Wadi Madamagh Near Petra Jordan Man Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 58 April 55 58 doi 10 2307 2794154 JSTOR 2794154 a b c d e f Nashef 2002 p 21 a b c d e Nashef 2002 p 22 a b c d e Tamari 2009 p 202 Taylor 2001 p 217 Richards D S 2002 The Annals of the Saljuq Turks Selections from Al Kamil Fiʻl Taʻrikh of ʻIzz Al Din Ibn Al Athir New York Routledge ISBN 0 7007 1576 2 a b Schaefer Karl R 2006 Enigmatic charms medieval Arabic block printed amulets in American and European libraries and museums Leiden Brill p 239 ISBN 90 04 14789 6 Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine 1912 p 410 Hygienische Rundschau 1917 p 225 Canaan T 25 June 1929 The Oriental Boil An Epidemiological Study in Palestine Tropical Medicine and Hygiene Elsevier 23 1 89 94 doi 10 1016 S0035 9203 29 90903 2 Patai 1957 p 152 Aall Zyukov 1932 p 1011 a b Irving 2017 p 91 a b Nashef 2002 p 23 a b Nashef 2002 p 24 Bibliography EditAbdullah Wissam June 2000 Special Feature The Tawfik Canaan Collection of Palestinian Amulets Birzeit University This Week in Palestine No 26 Benvenisti Meron 2000 Sacred Landscape The Buried History of the Holy Land since 1948 Berkeley University of California Press p 253 ISBN 0 520 21154 5 Bernstein Deborah S 2000 Constructing Boundaries Jewish and Arab Workers in Mandatory Palestine Albany SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 4539 9 Davis Rochelle January 2004 Peasant Narratives Memorial Book Sources for Jerusalem Village History Jerusalem Quarterly 20 Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 4 August 2009 El Eini Roza 2006 Mandated Landscape British Imperial Rule in Palestine 1929 1948 New York Routledge ISBN 0 7146 5426 4 Eisler Ejal Jakob איל יעקב איזלר Frutiger Hans Hermann 2008 Johannes Frutiger 1836 1899 ein Schweizer Bankier in Jerusalem in German Cologne et al Bohlau ISBN 978 3 412 20133 3 Sarah R Irving 2017 Intellectual networks language and knowledge under colonialism the work of Stephan Stephan Elias Haddad and Tawfiq Canaan in Palestine 1909 1948 PDF Literatures Languages and Cultures PhD Thesis Collection University of Eidenburgh Baha al Ju beh Fall Winter 2005 Magic and Talismans The Tawfiq Canaan Collection of Palestinian Amulets PDF Jerusalem Quarterly 22 23 103 Retrieved 21 July 2009 Lapp Paul W Albright W F April 1964 Tawfiq Canaan in Memoriam Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research The American Schools of Oriental Research 174 174 1 3 doi 10 1086 BASOR1356065 JSTOR 1356065 S2CID 166964584 Mershen Birgit 2006 Huebner Ulrich ed Tawfiq Canaan and His Contribution to the Ethnography of Palestine Palaestina exploranda Studien zur Erforschung Palastinas im 19 Und 20 Jahrhundert anlasslich des 125jahrigen Bestehens des Deutschen Vereins zur Erforschung Palastinas 251 264 Nashef Khaled November 2002 Tawfik Canaan His Life and Works PDF Jerusalem Quarterly 16 12 26 Retrieved 21 July 2009 Patai Raphael 1957 Jordan Lebanon and Syria an annotated bibliography New Haven HRAF Press ISBN 9780837168944 OCLC 174331967 Raheb Mitri 1990 Das reformatorische Erbe unter den Palastinensern Zur Entstehung der Evangelisch lutherischen Kirche in Jordanien die Lutherische Kirche Geschichte und Gestalten in German Gutersloh Mohn 11 91 96 ISBN 3 579 00127 2 Originally presented in 1988 as author s thesis doctoral at Fachbereich Evangelische Theologie of Philipps Universitat in Marburg Sperling Arthur 1917 Hygienische Morgentoilette Gymnastik und Selbstmassage fur Gesunde und Kranke in German Vol 27 Munich Verlag der Arztlichen Rundschau Otto Gmelin OCLC 218409429 Sufian Sandra Marlene 2007 Healing the land and the nation malaria and the Zionist project in Palestine 1920 1947 Illustrated ed University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 77935 5 Tamari Salim 2009 Lepers Lunatics and Saints The Nativist Ethnography of Tawfiq Canaan and his Jerusalem Circle Mountain Against the Sea Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 25129 8 Taylor Jane 2001 Petra and the Lost Kingdom of the Nabataeans London I B Tauris ISBN 1 86064 508 9 Taylor Joan E 1993 Christians and the holy places the myth of Jewish Christian origins Illustrated ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 814785 5 Taylor Joan E 2003 Jewish Women Philosophers of First Century Alexandria Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 929141 1 U S Agricultural Research Service 1932 Charles Wardell Stiles ed Index catalogue of medical and veterinary zoology Washington D C U S Government Printing Office Yellow Fever Bureau Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine 1912 Bulletin Vol 2 Liverpool University Press OCLC 1640456 External links EditThe Tawfiq Canaan Collection of Palestinian Amulets A virtual gallery The Great War in Palestine Dr Tawfiq Canaan s Photographic Album Norbert Schwake 2014 Jerusalem Quarterly Institute for Palestine Studies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tawfiq Canaan amp oldid 1131469795, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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