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Home > Yasser Arafat


 

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Yasser Arafat ( Arabic: ياسر عرفات Yāsir `Arafāt) ( August 4 or August 24, 1929November 11, 2004), born Muhammad Abd al-Rahman ar-Rauf al-Qudwah al-Husayni and also known as Abu Ammar, was co-founder and Chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) (since 1969) and President of the Palestinian National Authority (PNA) (since 1993); and a co-winner of the 1994 Nobel Peace Prize. As a guerrilla and a Fatah leader, he was regarded as a freedom fighter by supporters, but a terrorist or collaborator by his opponents.

1 Biography

1.1 Early life

Arafat was the fifth of seven children. His father was a Palestinian textile merchant and his mother came from a prominent Palestinian family. Arafat's claim to have been born in JerusalemCapitals in Asia For alternate uses see Jerusalem (disambiguation Jerusalem ( Modern Hebrew: Yerushalayim Biblical Hebrew: Arabic: al-Quds see also Names of Jerusalem) is an ancient Middle Eastern city of key importance to the religions of Judaism, Christ on August 4, 1929 is supported by his death certificate. However, a birth certificate registered in CairoCairo ( Arabic: ; romanized: al-Qāhirah is the capital city of Egypt and has an estimated metropolitan area population of 15 million. It is the largest city in both Africa and the Middle East and is currently the thirteenth most populous city in the, EgyptJumhuriyat Misr al-Arabiyah ( In Detail) Official language Arabic Capital Cairo Largest City Cairo President Hosni Mubarak Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif Area Total % water Ranked 29th 1,001,450 km² 0. 6% Population Total (2003) Density Ranked 15th 74,718,797 gives August 24, 1929 as his date of birth, as confirmed by Arafat's biographer Alan Hart and Palestinian biographer, Said K. Aburish. Arafat maintained his father forged the birth certificate for him in Egypt so he could attend school for free. Other sources have given GazaThe article is about the Middle Eastern city. For the province in Mozambique, see Gaza Province. The city of Gaza ( Arabic Gazzah Hebrew alphabet Standard Hebrew Azza Tiberian Hebrew Gazzh Azzh sometimes called Gaza City to distinguish it from the Gaza St, Palestine, as his birthplace. [1] [2]

When Arafat was four his mother died, and he and his father moved to Jerusalem. He lived in a house close to the Western Wall and the Al-Aqsa Mosque, which is within the Temple Mount/ Haram al-Sharif, a holy site to Jews, Christians and Muslims. During this time, local Muslim authorities had effective control of these two sites, but a growing number of Zionist immigrants were agitating to gain control of the Temple Mount, the ancient site of the first and second Jewish Temple in Jerusalem, now occupied by the Dome of the Rock. At the age of eight his father married again and they moved back to Cairo. The marriage did not work and his father married again shortly thereafter. When this happened Arafat's sister Inam was left in charge of the upbringing of her siblings. She once noted that Arafat was "not like other children in playing or in his feelings... He gathered the Arab kids of the district, formed them into groups and made them march and drill. He carried a stick and he used to beat those who did not obey his commands."[3]

Arafat attended the University of King Fuad I (later renamed Cairo University). He sought to better understand Judaism and Zionism by engaging in discussions with Jews and reading publications by Theodor Herzl and other Zionists. But by 1946 he had become a Palestinian nationalist and was procuring weapons in Egypt to be smuggled into Palestine in the Arab cause. [4]. During the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, Arafat left the university and, along with other Palestinians, sought to enter Palestine to fight for Palestinian independence. He was disarmed and turned back by Egyptian military forces that refused to allow the poorly trained partisans to enter the war zone. Arafat felt that he had been "betrayed by these [Arab] regimes". After returning to the university, Arafat joined the Muslim Brotherhood and served as president of the Union of Palestinian Students from 1952 to 1956. By 1956, Arafat graduated with a bachelor's degree in civil engineering and served as a second lieutenant in the Egyptian Army during the Suez Crisis. [5]. Later in 1956 at a conference in Prague he donned the keffiyeh, the traditional chequered head-dress which was to become his emblem.



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