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Muhammad Azza Darwaza

Personal Info

  • Country of residence: Syria
  • Gender: Male
  • Born in: 1887
  • Age: 136
  • Curriculum vitae :

Information

Muhammad Azza bin Abd al-Hadi Darwaza (June 21, 1887 - July 26, 1984) was an Arab thinker, writer, and nationalist. He was born in Nablus and died in Damascus. In addition to his political struggle, he was a writer, historian, journalist, translator and interpreter of the Qur'an. He is one of the founders of Arab nationalist thought along with Sati Al-Husri and Zaki Al-Arsuzi.

His struggle took a unitary form that transcended the conditions of fragmentation and artificial borders, so he participated in the establishment and activity of militant Arab independence unionist associations and parties in Greater Syria (before its division by colonialism in 1920), such as the Al-Arabiya Al-Fatat Association and the Arab Istiqlal Party, and opposed the policy of Turkification. He is a member of the General Syrian Congress (1919 AD), secretary of the Constituent Assembly, and one of the drafters of the first Syrian constitution. From the balcony of the Damascus municipality in Marjah Square, he announced the independence of Syria and the establishment of the Syrian Arab Kingdom on March 8, 1920. He led many activities against the British mandate over Palestine and the policy of dividing Arab lands, and called for the unification of Syria and Egypt in the fifties of the twentieth century. His autobiography is a history of the national struggle, independence and unionist movement during the twentieth century.

Darwazah left more than fifty books on various sciences related to Arabism, Islam and general history, including a series of books on the history of the Arab movement and the origins of Arab nationalism and Arab unity. His books, especially the book “Arab Unity,” are among the most important books on Arab nationalism and on ways to achieve Arab unity.

his family
Muhammad Azza (pronounced Izzat) grew up in a family from the “Al-Farihat” clan, which lives in the village of Kafranja in the Ajloun region, east of Jordan. It seems that a large part of the clan abandoned the village at the beginning of the eleventh century AH, and some of them headed to Nablus. His father, Abd al-Hadi ibn Darwish Darwaza, was a textile merchant in the famous old Khan al-Tijjar market in the Old City of Nablus, where he imported his goods from Beirut and Damascus, as Muhammad Azza reports in his memoirs. It is believed that his family name is derived from the work of some of his grandfathers in sewing.

his education and culture
Darwazah received his basic education in Nablus, where he obtained a primary certificate in the year 1900. After that, he joined the Rashadiya School (today's Fatimid), which is an intermediate secondary school, and graduated from it after three years, obtaining its certificate.

Darwazah educated himself and covered deficiencies by diligent reading and perusal to compensate for not completing his studies. He read the different books he had in the fields of literature, history, sociology and law, whether they were in Arabic or in Turkish and English, which he was fluent in. His work in the Postal Service allowed him to view the Egyptian periodicals circulating at the time, such as Al-Ahram, Al-Hilal Magazine, Al-Moayad Newspaper, Al-Moqattam Newspaper, and Al-Muqtataf Magazine, by virtue of the passage of these publications through the mail for distribution to subscribers. These periodicals carried a variety of cultural content and discussed hot issues at the time. They opened the horizons of thought to the bright young man's mind, broadened his perceptions, refined his talents, and made him aware of the events that were taking place throughout the Ottoman Empire.

He did not receive knowledge at the hands of specialized scholars except for short and intermittent periods during which he attended lessons in jurisprudence from Sheikh Mustafa Al-Khayyat at the Great Salahi Mosque in Nablus, and lessons on hadith from the book Sahih Al-Bukhari from Sheikh Suleiman Al-Sharabi, and others in grammar and morphology from Sheikh Musa Al-Qaddoumi, who was the director He attended the religious institute in Nablus until 1967. Darwazah continued to be interested in science and education while performing his job, and he carried his bookcase in all his travels and movements, and he did not leave the book in his hand for most of his day until he read, in a period not exceeding thirty years, one thousand five hundred books and volumes in various Topics include language, morphology, grammar, literature, poetry, stories, history, interpretation, biography and hadith.

his jobs and career

Darwazah moved professionally in three fields: telegraph and mail, education, and endowments, before devoting himself to politics and then writing.

in telegraph and mail
The financial circumstances of his family did not enable him to complete his studies, so he joined government work as an employee in the Telegraph and Post Department in Nablus in 1906, then moved to Beirut to work in the Telegraph and Post Directorate in 1914, then became its director. He was promoted inspector of the civil telegraph and mail centers in Sinai and Beersheba, and he continued to advance in his positions until he became in the year 1921 secretary of the court of Prince Abdullah, the Emir of Transjordan, but he left him after a month, and turned to the field of education.

Darwazah's first attempts at writing began during his work in the Telegraph and Post Office, so he contacted the press, and participated in editing the Ottoman Brotherhood newspaper, which was published in Beirut by Ahmed Shaker al-Tibi. He used to write a weekly article dealing with a social or patriotic issue in the Beirut Al-Haqiqa newspaper, which was published by Kamal bin Sheikh Abbas. He also published articles in the Palestine newspaper, which was published by Issa Daoud Al-Issa in Jaffa, and the Al-Carmel newspaper, which was published by Najeeb Nassar in Haifa.

in education
Darwaza returned to Nablus in October 1918, a month after it fell to the British at the end of World War I. He moved to the field of education, and in 1921 he assumed the management of Al-Najah National School, which had been established in Nablus in 1917. The school was transformed by his hands into one of the centers of patriotism in addition to its teaching and educational mission. It develops programs that nurture pride in Arab and Islamic glories and civilization. His efforts in the five years that he took over the management of the school led to the improvement of its systems and the upgrading of its curricula until it became of great stature. His influence was evident in her national orientation, as she graduated during his presidency and taught many young people who had a prominent role in the history of the Palestinian national movement. Darwaza at this stage played a major role in educating the students of the school, from whom later leaders emerged such as Suleiman al-Nabulsi, the Prime Minister of Jordan. Among the students of the Darwaza was Akram Zuaiter, who later became a diplomat and nationalist activist. Zuaiter mentioned that Darwazah used to give students a weekly lesson on the principles of Arab nationalism and modern society, and this had a great impact on the development of their thinking and broadening their horizons.

Darwazah remained committed to this work for five consecutive years, and the burdens of school did not distract him from writing social and educational articles, which he used to supply the magazines Al-Kashf in Beirut, and the New Woman in Cairo, and published political articles in the newspapers of the Arab League and Al-Quds in Palestine.

in endowments
In the year 1928, Darwazah moved to work in the Islamic Endowments Department, where he was appointed superintendent of the Endowments in Nablus. Then, in 1932, he was promoted to General Director of the Islamic Endowments in Palestine, and he remained in this position until the outbreak of the Great Palestinian Revolution in 1936. As a result of his participation in the revolution, the Department issued The British Mandate issued a decision to remove him from his position in 1937 and another decision to prevent him from returning to Palestine, where he was outside at the outbreak of the revolution, and that was the end of the Darwaza era in governmental and private jobs.

Achievements and Awards

His death and appreciation
Muhammad Azza Darwazah gave the last interview to the Palestinian journalist Muhammad Musleh in the year 1983, over a period of 8 days, during which he was allowed to photograph all his memoirs without exception, and Musleh says that it was clear that Darwazah’s health was in constant decline. Muhammad Azza Darwazah died in the Al-Rawda neighborhood in Damascus on Thursday, July 26, 1984, corresponding to Shawwal 28, 1404 AH.

Darwazah was one of the most important early nationalist thinkers, along with Sati al-Husri and Zaki al-Arsuzi. Muhammad Azza Darwazah did not yet take the position he deserves among the great Arab nationalist writers, despite his great contribution to laying the foundations of traditional Arab national thought (especially in the books “Arab Unity” and “The History of the Arab Race”), and his tireless struggle within the Palestinian national movement during the first half. Of the twentieth century, his literary and intellectual achievements are evident. Perhaps this cultural blockade of the Druze and other nationalist thinkers is imposed as part of the program of the ruling Arab regimes (including the leadership of the Palestine Liberation Organization) to fight any unitary tendency and preserve the ruling chairs in scattered states. Darwazah himself did not like to appear, and he did not hold any government political positions, despite his intense political activity, his complex relationships, and his friendship with influential personalities. He always chose to leave the front ranks of others at a time when he was pushing the general trend strongly away from negligence and concessions and towards a more radical and unitary direction in the Palestinian national action, and at a time when he was taking risks and incurring hardship, and at a time when he was wasting hours at work Hardworking and spends the days traveling.

Interest in the books and heritage of Muhammad Azza Darwazah focused on a few writers who were his contemporaries. Recently, the era of the Internet and electronic books has contributed to unveiling Darwazah's contributions and major achievements in several fields. National, historical, cultural and Islamic. The following are the most important books and studies published on Darwazah and his contributions:

Muhammad Azza Darwazah: Pages from His Life, Jihad, and His Writings, written by Hussein Omar Hamadeh. General Union of Palestinian Writers and Journalists, Beirut. 1983.
“National Anthologies of Muhammad Azza Darwazah,” written by Naji Alloush. Center for Arab Unity Studies, Beirut. 1988. In the National Heritage Series.
Muhammad Azza Darwaza, ninety-five years of life, notes and recordings. Ali Jarbawi and Hassan Shakhshir.

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