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Abd al-Rahim Mahmoud

Personal Info

  • Country of residence: Palestine
  • Gender: Male
  • Born in: 1913
  • Age: 110
  • Curriculum vitae :

Information

Abd al-Rahim Mahmoud (born in 1913 - martyred on July 13, 1948), a Palestinian revolutionary and poet, was born in Anabta. He wrote political poems, the most famous of which is “The Martyr”. He participated in the 1936-1939 revolution and in the 1948 war, and was martyred near the village of Al-Shajara in northern Palestine.

About him
Abd al-Rahim Mahmoud was born in the village of Anabta in the district of Tulkarem, Palestine, in 1913. His father, Sheikh Mahmoud al-Anabtawi, was known as one of the poets of the influential and graceful sheikhs. He studied elementary school until the fifth grade in his hometown, then moved to Al Fadhiliya School in Tulkarm, and received his secondary education from 1928-1932 at An-Najah National School in Nablus (currently An-Najah University). He had met the poet Ibrahim Touqan there, as he was among his teachers there, and his relationship with him was strengthened as a colleague and friend. . The British Mandate government chased him after the revolution stopped, so he migrated to Iraq, where he spent three years. He entered the Iraqi Military College and graduated as a lieutenant during the days of King Ghazi bin Faisal bin Al-Hussein. He also worked as a teacher of the Arabic language in Baghdad and worked as a principal of an elementary school in Basra, and participated with the Arab mujahideen. In the revolution of Rashid Ali al-Kilani in Iraq.

When the situation in Palestine calmed down due to England's preoccupation with World War II, Abd al-Rahim returned to his country and resumed work as a teacher at An-Najah National School in Nablus. In the year 1947, the Palestinian revolution flared up again due to the issuance of the decision to partition Palestine. So our poet decided to join the Salvation Army, and he entered the Balaa region in Palestine and participated in the battle of Pierre Adass with a company from the Hittin Regiment, and participated in the Battle of Ras al-Ain, and in April 1948 AD he was appointed as a discipline commander in Tulkarem, then as an assistant to the regiment commander in Nazareth.

his poems
He left behind a number of poems he wrote between 1935 AD and 1948 AD.. They were collected by a committee of writers ten years after his death, and some of them had been published in Palestinian, Lebanese, Syrian and Egyptian magazines. His collection was published in Amman in 1958 AD, and it includes twenty-seven poems. What are the most important books in the short old full of struggle.

In haste, we shed light on his patriotic views, which he formulated in poetry and lived in life. He deserved to be an example for the youth of Palestine in struggle and honesty. In 1935, during a visit by Prince Saud, Crown Prince of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (King Saud later) to Al-Aqsa Mosque, Abd al-Rahim recited a poem in his hands when he was twenty-two years old, in which he said:

O prince, before your eyes there is a poet whose ribs are drawn together over bitter complaints.
Did you come to visit Al-Aqsa Mosque? Or did you come from Diyaa to bid it farewell?
Sanctuaries are permitted to every homeless person and to every homeless horizon four
And tomorrow and what is below, there is nothing left but tears for us to flow and a tooth to knock.

Here, the farsightedness of the young poet and his realistic vision of the Arab conditions, peoples and rulers, become clear.

In his poem “The Martyr,” he was about twenty-four years old. He portrays the martyr as he wishes:

I will carry my soul at my ease and throw it into the abyss of ruin
Either a life that pleases the friend, or a death that enrages the enemy
And Nafs al-Sharif has two goals: the roses of desires and the attainment of desires
By your life, I see my death, but I follow the steps towards it
I see my death without my robbed right and without my country is the goal
It pleases my ears to hear the clattering, my soul is agitated by the gushing of blood
And a body arguing in the desert, which the prey animals of the wilderness squabble with.
From it is a share for the lion of the sky, and from it is a share for the lion of evil
His blood covered the earth with purple and made the fragrance of youth heavy
And he reprimanded his forehead, but afar increased his pride.
And on his lips appeared a smile whose meanings were a mockery of this world.
And he slept to dream the dream of eternity and rejoice in it with the sweetest visions
For your life this is the death of men, and whoever dreams of an honorable death will be
' '

The poet chose the full-length rhyme, whatever the last letter of this wonderful poem, which depicts the death of honorable men for the sake of the country. Enjoying the sounds of cannons and the joy of shedding blood makes it easier for honorable people to die for a great cause that they defend, which is the liberation of the country and the preservation of its dignity. And in his poem (A call to jihad), he recklessly says that death is a sacrifice for the homeland:

The sacrificial country called for jihad, but my heart softened because of its excessive joy.
And I raced the breeze, and there is no pride. Should I not sacrifice my country?
I carried my soul and my heart on my hands, and I carried it only as my gear
March for the right struggle, a fire pouring on the enemy in every valley
I am not lower than a people that sits still and whose home calls out.

Abdul Rahim Mahmoud's poems continue to express his love for his country and his determination to sacrifice for it.

The poet Abd al-Rahim Mahmoud is considered one of the few poets who gave their entire lives to their country and associated words with action. The verbal and attention to graphic formalities that we find with other poets who were affected by the follower current, which preserves the traditional system inherited by the Arabic poem, with a diversification of rhymes and the fondness of many poems that express personal emotional experiences and social, political and human issues.

his family
In 1942, Abd al-Rahim Mahmoud married Mahfouz Ibrahim Nassar, and they had two children, Tayyib, Talal and Ruqayyah.

Books and studies about him
The martyr Palestinian poet Abd al-Rahim Mahmoud, Jaber Qamiha.
Abd al-Rahim Mahmoud, between loyalty and remembrance, the poet Adeeb Rafiq Mahmoud, the poet Tariq Abd al-Karim Mahmoud.
Professor Mahmoud Ghanayem's study, Abd al-Rahim Mahmoud: A Poet Searching for an Identity.
Abd al-Rahim Mahmoud died on July 13, 1948 AD in the village of al-Shajara, at the age of about 35 years.

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