Biography

Raghib al-Nashashibi

Biography

Raghib al-Nashashibi

راغب النشاشيبي
1882, Jerusalem
1951, Jordanie

Raghib al-Nashashibi was born in Jerusalem to a prominent Jerusalem family. His father, Rashid, was a wealthy Jerusalem notable and a member of the governing council of the Jerusalem mutasarrifiyya (Ottoman province). He had three children: one, Mansur, worked in the Jordanian government, and the other two lived in France.

He completed his primary education in the schools of Jerusalem and then enrolled at the Jerusalem Maktab Sultani  (Ottoman high school). Thereafter he travelled to Istanbul to pursue a degree in civil engineering.

Nashashibi, a member of the Committe of Union and Progress, was elected deputy for the Jerusalem province in the Ottoman parliament (mab‘uthan) and remained a deputy until the end of the Ottoman period. Toward the end of that period he was appointed head of the Public Works (Nafi‘a) Department in the Jerusalem province.

In the spring of 1919, Nashashibi took part in a meeting held by a number of Palestinian nationalists in Jerusalem on the eve of the arrival of the American King-Crane Commission of Inquiry in Palestine. The meeting resolved to demand the independence of Palestine within an Arab union and to reject Zionism and the Jewish National Home.

British military governor Ronald Storrs appointed Nashashibi  mayor of Jerusalem in 1920, succeeding Musa Kazim Husseini who had been charged  with inciting the bloody clashes between Arabs and Jews in Jerusalem in early April of that year and dismissed from his position. He was re-elected mayor in the elections of 1927 and remained in that post until 1934 when Hussein Fakhri al-Khalidi was elected.

Nashashibi was concerned to preserve the Arab character of the Jerusalem municipality and, when first appointed as mayor, refused a large sum of money offered by Sir Alfred Mond, a wealthy British Jew, to be spent by the municipality on various public projects. Nashashibi had discovered that the sum of money thus offered would turn the municipality into a Jewish “colony.”

He participated in the joint Palestinian-British Committee formed by the British High Commissioner to organize and administer Islamic affairs. The committee proceeded to formulate the basic regulations of an Islamic Religious Society on 12 March 1921, from which emerged the Supreme Moslem Council.

Nashashibi, together with some mayors, businessmen, and landowners, constituted what came to be known as the “opposition” to the majlisiyyun led by Haj Amin al-Husseini, Mufti of Jerusalem and head of the Supreme Moslem Council (al-majliss). The opposition bloc (led by Nashashibi) attended the seventh Palestinian National Congress held in June 1928, and he became a member of the Arab Executive Committee that resulted from that congress. In that capacity, and following the al-Buraq / Western Wall Disturbances, he travelled to London with the Executive Committee’s delegation in March 1930 to negotiate with the British government.

When Haj Amin al-Husseini convened the Pan-Islamic Congress in December 1931, in Jerusalem, Nashashibi countered by convening a rival congress at the same time as the other, and also in Jerusalem, calling it the Conference of the Islamic Palestinian Nation.

In early December 1934, Nashashibi founded and led a political party called the National Defense Party. Its declared program was the Palestinian National Covenant, which called for rejecting the Balfour Declaration, Jewish immigration, selling land to Jews, and the formation of a national parliamentary government.

On 25 April 1936, and following the General Strike, Nashashibi became a member of the Arab Higher Committee chaired by Haj Amin al-Husseini, as a representative of the National Defense Party. However, he resigned from that committee on 4 July 1937, a few days before the publication of the report of the British Commission of Inquiry headed by Lord Peel.

Nashashibi opposed the partition plan proposed by the Peel Commission but was generally known as a moderate in his opposition to British policy and was close to Prince Abdullah, the emir of Transjordan. The Peel Commission had suggested that, after partition, the Arab part of Palestine be added to Transjordan, this being a major ambition of Prince Abdullah.

When the revolt broke out again in the autumn of 1937 as a protest against the Peel Commission’s proposal, Nashashibi and the opposition failed to fill the political vacuum created when Haj Amin al-Husseini fled to Lebanon to avoid arrest by the British.  

At the suggestion and insistence of the British government, Nashashibi participated in the London Round Table Conference in February 1939, as a member of the Palestinian delegation headed by Jamal al-Husseini, leader of the Palestine Arab Party, who deputized for Haj Amin al-Husseini. The British government had refused to admit Haj Amin to that conference.

During World War II, the opposition led by Nashashibi failed to replace the majlisiyyun in leading the nationalist movement. The breach between the two groups persisted over the years, which led to very serious consequences for Palestinian resistance to the British Mandate and the Zionist movement.  

In November 1945, he participated as leader of the National Defense Party with the other Palestinian parties (Palestine Arab Party, Independence Party, National Bloc Party, Reform Party, Arab Youth Congress Party) in reconstituting the Arab Higher Committee that had been banned by the British authorities in 1937.  However differences between Jamal al-Husseini, head of the Palestine Arab Party (and also head of the Arab Higher Committee) and the leaders (including Raghib Nashashibi) of the other Palestinian parties led to the withdrawal of the latter from the Committee and their forming an Arab Higher Front in May 1946. This situation lasted until 12 June 1946, when the League of Arab States supervised the formation of a new Arab Higher Committee  consisting of four members, two from the front and two from the older committee.

Nashashibi and Haj Amin al-Husseini were principal rivals who failed to come together during the worst crisis that befell the country in 1948. Nashashibi spent the year of the Nakba, 1948, in Egypt. He then returned to Jordan where he was appointed minister in the Jordanian government and then Governor General of the West Bank, which after annexation became part of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. He was also appointed Guardian of the Noble Sanctuary (al-Haram al-Sharif) and other sanctuaries.

He was awarded the Commander of the British Empire distinction by the British government.

Raghib al-Nashashibi was a charming and sociable figure, attractive in speech and physical appearance, with a sense of humor and very loyal to his friends. He was known for his elegant attire and his luxurious style of life.

He died in Jordan and was buried in Jerusalem.

 

Sources

الحوت، بيان نويهض. "القيادات والمؤسسات السياسية في فلسطين 1917- 1948". بيروت: مؤسسة الدراسات الفلسطينية، 1981.

دروزة، محمد عزة. "مذكرات محمد عزة دروزة: سجل حافل بمسيرة الحركة العربية والقضية الفلسطينية خلال قرن من الزمن" (خمسة مجلدات). بيروت: دار الغرب الإسلامي، 1993.

"الموسوعة الفلسطينية"، القسم العام، المجلد الثاني. دمشق: هيئة الموسوعة الفلسطينية، 1984.

"من هو؟: رجالات فلسطين 1945- 1946". ط 2. عمّان: مؤسسة التعاون، 1999.

نويهض، عجاج. "رجال من فلسطين". بيروت: منشورات فلسطين المحتلة، 1981.   

Abdul Hadi, Mahdi, ed. Palestinian Personalities: A Biographic Dictionary. 2nd ed., revised and updated. Jerusalem: Passia Publication, 2006.