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Yusuf Abu Durra

Yusuf Sa'id Abu Durra (Arabic: يوسف سعيد أبو درة, 1900 – 30 September 1939), also known as Abu Abed was one of the chief Palestinian Arab rebel commanders during the 1936–39 Arab revolt in Palestine.[1] Abu Durra was a close disciple of the Muslim preacher and rebel Izz ad-Din al-Qassam and one of the few survivors of a shootout between British forces and Qassam, in which the latter was killed. When the revolt broke out, Abu Durra led bands of Qassam's remaining disciples and other armed volunteers in the region between Haifa and Jenin. He also administered a rebel court system in his areas of operation, which prosecuted and executed several Palestinian village headmen suspected of colluding with the British authorities. After experiencing battlefield setbacks, Abu Durra escaped to Transjordan, but was arrested on his way back to Palestine in 1939. He was subsequently tried later that year and executed by the authorities in 1939.

Yusuf Abu Durra
يوسف أبو درة
Abu Durra posing with his rifle, 1936
Born1900
Died30 September 1939 (aged 38/39)
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
NationalityPalestinian Arab
Other namesAbu Abed
Citizenship Ottoman Empire
 Mandatory Palestine
Military career
Allegiance Black Hand
Arab Higher Committee
Battles/wars1936–1939 Palestine revolt 

Early life and work Edit

Abu Durra was born during the Ottoman era, in 1900, in the village of Silat al-Harithiya, located near Jenin in Jabal Nablus (Samarian highlands). He hailed from the Jaradat clan, which at the time was part of a larger confederation of clans and tribes in Palestine and Transjordan known as the Qais. The Qais also included the Tuqan and Jarrar families, and the Bani Saqr tribe.[2]

During the period when the British administered Palestine, Abu Durra worked as a porter at a railway station in Zikhron Ya'akov.[1] Later, he became a day laborer in the port city of Haifa,[1] working with the Iraqi Petroleum Company.[3]

Early activism Edit

During his time in Haifa, he became a close disciple of the Muslim revivalist preacher and anti-British rebel Izz ad-Din al-Qassam.[1] As part of his efforts against British rule, Abu Durra actively sought recruits to join an armed struggle led by al-Qassam.[3]

When the British authorities believed al-Qassam was responsible for the killing of a British police officer, they set out to arrest him. Al-Qassam and twelve of his close supporters (known as "Qassamiyun" or "Qassamites"), including Abu Durra, evaded the authorities for a time before being cornered in the hills near Ya'bad in October 1935. The men refused to surrender and opened fire at the besieging British troops; in the ensuing firefight, al-Qassam and three of his men were killed and five arrested,[4][5] but Abu Durra managed to escape the area.[6]

Regional commander in the 1936 revolt Edit

 
Abu Durra (seated) and members of his rebel unit, sometime between 1936 and 1938

The 1935 confrontation served as a prelude to a countrywide revolt against the British by Palestinian Arabs that broke out in 1936. Abu Durra emerged as one of the major Qassamite commanders of rebels, particularly after the death of commander Ahmad Attiyah Awad in March 1938.[1] Subsequently, Abu Durra assumed the latter's position as the main commander of the region extending from Haifa to Jenin.[2] He eventually became one of four regional commanders of the revolt, the other three being Abu Ibrahim al-Kabir of the Upper Galilee, Abd al-Rahim al-Hajj Muhammad of the Tulkarm area, and Aref Abd al-Razziq of Arraba.[7] These four commanders were appointed by the Damascus-based Central Committee of National Jihad in Palestine to form the Bureau of the Arab Revolt in Palestine, which was meant to increase coordination among the disparate rebel factions and the exiled Palestinian leaders serving on the Central Committee.[1]

Like other local rebel leaders, Abu Durra organized his forces into a relatively small core of semi-permanent fighters and non-permanent, volunteer-based bands (fasa'il; sing. fasil) headed by local commanders subordinate to the main commander. The fasa'il normally launched nighttime attacks and were often used by Abu Durra for specific operations.[8] His core unit was based in the vicinity of Haifa and he presided over 17 fasa'il, totaling an estimated 250 fighters.[1] His second-in-command were Yusuf Hamdan who commanded a fasil in the Umm al-Fahm area, and Nawaf Abu Shahrour 'Abu Ghazi' who commanded the Aljazzar fasil in Haifa sub-district area.[9]

Abu Durra entered into confrontations with the Druze of Mount Carmel due to a number of factors. His earlier recruitment effort to enlist Druze fighters in Haifa was relatively unsuccessful, and his demand for financial contributions from the Mount Carmel villages to purchase 30 rifles were rebuffed.[3] There was also a general suspicion among the rebels that the Druze sheikhs (chiefs) of Mount Carmel were cooperating with the authorities against their cause.[10] In early October 1938, Abu Durra led two successive assaults against the villages of Isfiya and Daliyat al-Karmil. Three Druze men were killed and some local Druze sheikhs were taken prisoner. The rebels also allegedly desecrated Druze religious texts.[10]

Due in part to an alert sent by the Druze residents of Mount Carmel following an attack by Abu Durra in late November 1938, the British Army launched an ambush on his men,[11] while they were on their way to their Umm al-Fahm headquarters.[12] The ensuing engagement became known as the "Battle of Umm al-Zinat [or Umm al-Daraj]", due to its location outside of the village of Umm al-Zinat, which was situated in the southern foothills of Mount Carmel. The British force numbered over a thousand and was backed by 13 fighter planes, while the rebel force was considerably smaller.[6] Abu Durra was wounded and 43 of his fighters were killed,[12] but he managed to escape.[6]

Head of Haifa rebels court Edit

In the course of the revolt, Abu Durra headed a rebel court in his areas of operation, which were the vicinity of Haifa, Mount Carmel, Wadi Ara, and the Jezreel Valley. The court dealt with issues that ranged from suspected treachery to petty crimes.[13] Abu Durra gained a reputation for ordering the deaths of suspected collaborators among Palestinian village headmen (makhatir, sing. mukhtar).[14] According to interviews conducted by historian Ted Swedenberg of former Palestinian rebels and civilians who lived during the revolt, offhand estimates of the number of makhatir Abu Durra ordered to be executed ranged from around 20 to 85. However, the latter figure was considered "fantastical" by Swedenberg.[15]

The memoirs of Palestinian historian Izzat Darwaza mention an anecdote in which a British citizen pressed the Haifa Magistrates' Court to speed up the recovery of her stolen jewelry from known suspects, was told by the judge that her request would take time and that she might have better luck with Abu Durra's court. Although the judge made the latter suggestion in jest, the woman did go to one of Abu Durra's courts in Ein al-Sahala with the suspects' names; one week later she was summoned back to the court, where her jewelry was restored to her.[13]

Arrest and execution Edit

In 1939, as the revolt was close to being suppressed, Abu Durra departed Palestine for Damascus.[6] Sometime later, he set out for Hashemite Transjordan. On 24 July, while he was traveling in the eastern Jordan Valley, apparently with the intention of returning to Palestine, he was arrested by the Arab Legion headed by British general John Glubb Pasha. According to Glubb, he was dressed in civilian attire, but had in his possession a military uniform and a "rebel order of battle".[16] He was subsequently detained in a prison in al-Karak until being extradited to Palestine.[17] Abu Durra's arrest and extradition were unpopular among the people of Transjordan and as his convoy passed through various towns on its way to Palestine, it was surrounded by crowds cheering for him.[18]

Abu Durra was tried and sentenced to death for ordering the assassinations of thirty-eight mukhtars on 4–5 January 1939.[19] The mukhtars had been sentenced to death in absentia by rebel courts run by Abu Durra's subordinates.[19] They were charged with selling land illegally, land speculation and collaborating with the British government and Jewish institutions.[19] During the operation, four mukhtars and a prominent rural leader were killed, six mukhtars were wounded, while the remainder had been warned and sought safety.[19] The assassinations of the local leaders contributed to the growing split between the Palestinian Arab public and the rebel leadership.[19] Abu Durra was executed on 30 September 1939.[20][16][21] According to the memoirs of British Mandatory police officer Geoffrey Morton, Abu Durra walked to his death with his head held high.[21] He was considered a martyr by his supporters, and during the 1970s, a Palestine Liberation Organization unit that launched raids into Israel was named after him.[21]

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Lachman, Shai (2015), "Qassamites in the Arab Revolt, 1936–39", Zionism and Arabism in Palestine and Israel, Routledge, ISBN 9781317442721
  2. ^ a b Swedenberg 2003, p. 132
  3. ^ a b c Firro, 1992, p. 337
  4. ^ Segev 1999, pp. 360–362.
  5. ^ Milton-Edwards 1999, p. 19.
  6. ^ a b c d Jayyusi 1992, p. 623.
  7. ^ Great Britain and the East, 1939, p. 126.
  8. ^ Thomas 2008, p. 247.
  9. ^ Patai 1970, p. 232.
  10. ^ a b Swedenberg 2003, pp. 92 –93.
  11. ^ Firro 1992, p. 339.
  12. ^ a b Artzi 1978, p. 177.
  13. ^ a b Kabha, pp. 202–203.
  14. ^ Swedenberg 2003, p. 118
  15. ^ Swedenberg 2003, pp. 118–119.
  16. ^ a b Morris 2003, p. 54.
  17. ^ Great Britain and the East, 1939, p. 114.
  18. ^ Morris 2003, pp. 54–55.
  19. ^ a b c d e Kabha, p. 205.
  20. ^ Horne, Edward; Horne, Edward Porter (2003). A Job Well Done: (being a History of the Palestine Police Force 1920-1948). Book Guild. pp. 224–240. ISBN 978-1-85776-758-2.
  21. ^ a b c Stendel, Ori (1996). The Arabs in Israel. Sussex Academic Press. p. 187. ISBN 9781898723240.

Bibliography Edit

  • Artzi, Pinhas (1978). Bar-Ilan Studies in History: Confrontation and Coexistence. Bar-Ilan University Press. ISBN 9789652260499.
  • Firro, Kais (1992). A History of the Druzes. Vol. 1. BRILL. ISBN 9004094377.
  • Great Britain and the East. Vol. 53. Great Britain and the East, Limited. 1939.
  • Jayyusi, Salma Khadra (1992). Anthology of Modern Palestinian Literature. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231075084.
  • Mustafa, Kabha (2011). "The Courts of the Palestinian Revolt, 1936–39". In Singer, Amy; Neumann, Christopher K.; Somel, Selçuk Akşin (eds.). Untold Histories of the Middle East: Recovering Voices from the 19th and 20th Centuries. Routledge. ISBN 9781136926655.
  • Milton-Edwards, Beverley (1999). Islamic Politics in Palestine. I.B. Tauris.
  • Morris, Benny (2003). The Road to Jerusalem: Glubb Pasha, Palestine and the Jews. I. B. Tauris. ISBN 9781860649899.
  • Patai, Raphael (1970). Israel between East and West: a study in human relations. Greenwood Pub. Corp. ISBN 9780837137193. Yusuf Hamdan.
  • Segev, Tom (1999). One Palestine, Complete. Metropolitan Books. ISBN 0-8050-4848-0.
  • Swedenburg, Ted (2003). Memories of Revolt: The 1936–1939 Rebellion and the Palestinian National Past. University of Arkansas Press. ISBN 1610752635.
  • Thomas, Martin (2008). Empires of Intelligence: Security Services and Colonial Disorder After 1914. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0520933743.

yusuf, durra, yusuf, durra, arabic, يوسف, سعيد, أبو, درة, 1900, september, 1939, also, known, abed, chief, palestinian, arab, rebel, commanders, during, 1936, arab, revolt, palestine, durra, close, disciple, muslim, preacher, rebel, qassam, survivors, shootout. Yusuf Sa id Abu Durra Arabic يوسف سعيد أبو درة 1900 30 September 1939 also known as Abu Abed was one of the chief Palestinian Arab rebel commanders during the 1936 39 Arab revolt in Palestine 1 Abu Durra was a close disciple of the Muslim preacher and rebel Izz ad Din al Qassam and one of the few survivors of a shootout between British forces and Qassam in which the latter was killed When the revolt broke out Abu Durra led bands of Qassam s remaining disciples and other armed volunteers in the region between Haifa and Jenin He also administered a rebel court system in his areas of operation which prosecuted and executed several Palestinian village headmen suspected of colluding with the British authorities After experiencing battlefield setbacks Abu Durra escaped to Transjordan but was arrested on his way back to Palestine in 1939 He was subsequently tried later that year and executed by the authorities in 1939 Yusuf Abu Durraيوسف أبو درةAbu Durra posing with his rifle 1936Born1900Al Harithiya Ottoman EmpireDied30 September 1939 aged 38 39 Russian Compound Jerusalem Mandatory PalestineCause of deathExecution by hangingNationalityPalestinian ArabOther namesAbu AbedCitizenship Ottoman Empire Mandatory PalestineMilitary careerAllegianceBlack Hand Arab Higher CommitteeBattles wars1936 1939 Palestine revolt Contents 1 Early life and work 2 Early activism 3 Regional commander in the 1936 revolt 3 1 Head of Haifa rebels court 3 2 Arrest and execution 4 References 5 BibliographyEarly life and work EditAbu Durra was born during the Ottoman era in 1900 in the village of Silat al Harithiya located near Jenin in Jabal Nablus Samarian highlands He hailed from the Jaradat clan which at the time was part of a larger confederation of clans and tribes in Palestine and Transjordan known as the Qais The Qais also included the Tuqan and Jarrar families and the Bani Saqr tribe 2 During the period when the British administered Palestine Abu Durra worked as a porter at a railway station in Zikhron Ya akov 1 Later he became a day laborer in the port city of Haifa 1 working with the Iraqi Petroleum Company 3 Early activism EditDuring his time in Haifa he became a close disciple of the Muslim revivalist preacher and anti British rebel Izz ad Din al Qassam 1 As part of his efforts against British rule Abu Durra actively sought recruits to join an armed struggle led by al Qassam 3 When the British authorities believed al Qassam was responsible for the killing of a British police officer they set out to arrest him Al Qassam and twelve of his close supporters known as Qassamiyun or Qassamites including Abu Durra evaded the authorities for a time before being cornered in the hills near Ya bad in October 1935 The men refused to surrender and opened fire at the besieging British troops in the ensuing firefight al Qassam and three of his men were killed and five arrested 4 5 but Abu Durra managed to escape the area 6 Regional commander in the 1936 revolt Edit nbsp Abu Durra seated and members of his rebel unit sometime between 1936 and 1938The 1935 confrontation served as a prelude to a countrywide revolt against the British by Palestinian Arabs that broke out in 1936 Abu Durra emerged as one of the major Qassamite commanders of rebels particularly after the death of commander Ahmad Attiyah Awad in March 1938 1 Subsequently Abu Durra assumed the latter s position as the main commander of the region extending from Haifa to Jenin 2 He eventually became one of four regional commanders of the revolt the other three being Abu Ibrahim al Kabir of the Upper Galilee Abd al Rahim al Hajj Muhammad of the Tulkarm area and Aref Abd al Razziq of Arraba 7 These four commanders were appointed by the Damascus based Central Committee of National Jihad in Palestine to form the Bureau of the Arab Revolt in Palestine which was meant to increase coordination among the disparate rebel factions and the exiled Palestinian leaders serving on the Central Committee 1 Like other local rebel leaders Abu Durra organized his forces into a relatively small core of semi permanent fighters and non permanent volunteer based bands fasa il sing fasil headed by local commanders subordinate to the main commander The fasa il normally launched nighttime attacks and were often used by Abu Durra for specific operations 8 His core unit was based in the vicinity of Haifa and he presided over 17 fasa il totaling an estimated 250 fighters 1 His second in command were Yusuf Hamdan who commanded a fasil in the Umm al Fahm area and Nawaf Abu Shahrour Abu Ghazi who commanded the Aljazzar fasil in Haifa sub district area 9 Abu Durra entered into confrontations with the Druze of Mount Carmel due to a number of factors His earlier recruitment effort to enlist Druze fighters in Haifa was relatively unsuccessful and his demand for financial contributions from the Mount Carmel villages to purchase 30 rifles were rebuffed 3 There was also a general suspicion among the rebels that the Druze sheikhs chiefs of Mount Carmel were cooperating with the authorities against their cause 10 In early October 1938 Abu Durra led two successive assaults against the villages of Isfiya and Daliyat al Karmil Three Druze men were killed and some local Druze sheikhs were taken prisoner The rebels also allegedly desecrated Druze religious texts 10 Due in part to an alert sent by the Druze residents of Mount Carmel following an attack by Abu Durra in late November 1938 the British Army launched an ambush on his men 11 while they were on their way to their Umm al Fahm headquarters 12 The ensuing engagement became known as the Battle of Umm al Zinat or Umm al Daraj due to its location outside of the village of Umm al Zinat which was situated in the southern foothills of Mount Carmel The British force numbered over a thousand and was backed by 13 fighter planes while the rebel force was considerably smaller 6 Abu Durra was wounded and 43 of his fighters were killed 12 but he managed to escape 6 Head of Haifa rebels court Edit In the course of the revolt Abu Durra headed a rebel court in his areas of operation which were the vicinity of Haifa Mount Carmel Wadi Ara and the Jezreel Valley The court dealt with issues that ranged from suspected treachery to petty crimes 13 Abu Durra gained a reputation for ordering the deaths of suspected collaborators among Palestinian village headmen makhatir sing mukhtar 14 According to interviews conducted by historian Ted Swedenberg of former Palestinian rebels and civilians who lived during the revolt offhand estimates of the number of makhatir Abu Durra ordered to be executed ranged from around 20 to 85 However the latter figure was considered fantastical by Swedenberg 15 The memoirs of Palestinian historian Izzat Darwaza mention an anecdote in which a British citizen pressed the Haifa Magistrates Court to speed up the recovery of her stolen jewelry from known suspects was told by the judge that her request would take time and that she might have better luck with Abu Durra s court Although the judge made the latter suggestion in jest the woman did go to one of Abu Durra s courts in Ein al Sahala with the suspects names one week later she was summoned back to the court where her jewelry was restored to her 13 Arrest and execution Edit In 1939 as the revolt was close to being suppressed Abu Durra departed Palestine for Damascus 6 Sometime later he set out for Hashemite Transjordan On 24 July while he was traveling in the eastern Jordan Valley apparently with the intention of returning to Palestine he was arrested by the Arab Legion headed by British general John Glubb Pasha According to Glubb he was dressed in civilian attire but had in his possession a military uniform and a rebel order of battle 16 He was subsequently detained in a prison in al Karak until being extradited to Palestine 17 Abu Durra s arrest and extradition were unpopular among the people of Transjordan and as his convoy passed through various towns on its way to Palestine it was surrounded by crowds cheering for him 18 Abu Durra was tried and sentenced to death for ordering the assassinations of thirty eight mukhtars on 4 5 January 1939 19 The mukhtars had been sentenced to death in absentia by rebel courts run by Abu Durra s subordinates 19 They were charged with selling land illegally land speculation and collaborating with the British government and Jewish institutions 19 During the operation four mukhtars and a prominent rural leader were killed six mukhtars were wounded while the remainder had been warned and sought safety 19 The assassinations of the local leaders contributed to the growing split between the Palestinian Arab public and the rebel leadership 19 Abu Durra was executed on 30 September 1939 20 16 21 According to the memoirs of British Mandatory police officer Geoffrey Morton Abu Durra walked to his death with his head held high 21 He was considered a martyr by his supporters and during the 1970s a Palestine Liberation Organization unit that launched raids into Israel was named after him 21 References Edit a b c d e f g Lachman Shai 2015 Qassamites in the Arab Revolt 1936 39 Zionism and Arabism in Palestine and Israel Routledge ISBN 9781317442721 a b Swedenberg 2003 p 132 a b c Firro 1992 p 337 Segev 1999 pp 360 362 Milton Edwards 1999 p 19 a b c d Jayyusi 1992 p 623 Great Britain and the East 1939 p 126 Thomas 2008 p 247 Patai 1970 p 232 a b Swedenberg 2003 pp 92 93 Firro 1992 p 339 a b Artzi 1978 p 177 a b Kabha pp 202 203 Swedenberg 2003 p 118 Swedenberg 2003 pp 118 119 a b Morris 2003 p 54 Great Britain and the East 1939 p 114 Morris 2003 pp 54 55 a b c d e Kabha p 205 Horne Edward Horne Edward Porter 2003 A Job Well Done being a History of the Palestine Police Force 1920 1948 Book Guild pp 224 240 ISBN 978 1 85776 758 2 a b c Stendel Ori 1996 The Arabs in Israel Sussex Academic Press p 187 ISBN 9781898723240 Bibliography EditArtzi Pinhas 1978 Bar Ilan Studies in History Confrontation and Coexistence Bar Ilan University Press ISBN 9789652260499 Firro Kais 1992 A History of the Druzes Vol 1 BRILL ISBN 9004094377 Great Britain and the East Vol 53 Great Britain and the East Limited 1939 Jayyusi Salma Khadra 1992 Anthology of Modern Palestinian Literature Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231075084 Mustafa Kabha 2011 The Courts of the Palestinian Revolt 1936 39 In Singer Amy Neumann Christopher K Somel Selcuk Aksin eds Untold Histories of the Middle East Recovering Voices from the 19th and 20th Centuries Routledge ISBN 9781136926655 Milton Edwards Beverley 1999 Islamic Politics in Palestine I B Tauris Morris Benny 2003 The Road to Jerusalem Glubb Pasha Palestine and the Jews I B Tauris ISBN 9781860649899 Patai Raphael 1970 Israel between East and West a study in human relations Greenwood Pub Corp ISBN 9780837137193 Yusuf Hamdan Segev Tom 1999 One Palestine Complete Metropolitan Books ISBN 0 8050 4848 0 Swedenburg Ted 2003 Memories of Revolt The 1936 1939 Rebellion and the Palestinian National Past University of Arkansas Press ISBN 1610752635 Thomas Martin 2008 Empires of Intelligence Security Services and Colonial Disorder After 1914 University of California Press ISBN 978 0520933743 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yusuf Abu Durra amp oldid 1179751756, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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