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Al-Shukairy, Ahmad
(1907-1980)
Ahmad Al-Shukairy was born in Tebnin, in the south
of Lebanon, where
his father Sheikh As'ad Al-Shukairy was banished because of his
opposition to the policies of the Ottoman rule during the reign of the
Sultan Abdul Hameed.
Ahmad moved as a child to the city of Toulkarm in Palestine to live
with his mother. And in 1916, he moved to Akka where he completed his
primary school education. He then proceeded to complete his secondary
schooling in Jerusalem in 1926. He immediately joined the American
University in Beirut, but was expelled the following year by the French
Mandatory Power in Lebanon, due to his participation in addressing a
demonstration organized by the Arab students at the AUB in memory of
the 6th of May. At that point, he returned to Palestine and joined the
Institute of Law in Jerusalem, studying at night and working during the
day at a newspaper called Mir'at Alshark "Mirror of the East".
After he graduated from the Institute of Law, he worked and trained at
the office of the distinguished lawyer Awni Abdul Hadi who was one of
the founders of the Istiklal party "the Independence party" in
Palestine.
In the nineteen twenties and thirties, Palestine had lived consecutive
revolutions. The Great Palestinian Revolution (1936 - 1939) was the
most important one of all. Al-Shukairy became actively involved in this
great nationalist movement and struggled against the British mandatory
rule and the Zionist infiltration into Palestine. He also defended
prisoners and Arab Palestinian revolutionists in the British courts.
When the Revolution ended, Al-Shukairy was persecuted by the British,
and therefore had to leave Palestine and move to Egypt. He returned to
Palestine, in the early days of World War II, and started his own law
office in Akka. He specialized in defending the nationalist militants
and concentrated on the issues of the threatened Palestinian
territories. Al-Shukairy succeeded in saving many Arab lands and
preventing the Zionists from laying their hands on them.
When it was decided to establish the Arab Bureaus, headed by Musa
Al-Alami, in foreign countries, Al-Shukairy was chosen as the first
director of the Arab Media office in Washington, D.C. Later in 1946 he
was appointed as the head of The Central Arab Media Office in
Jerusalem, where he resumed his law practice. He remained in Palestine
until he was forced in 1948 to migrate to Lebanon and take refuge with
his family in Beirut.
He was appointed as a member of the Syrian delegation to the United
Nations (1949 - 1950). Soon after, Al-Shukairy was nominated to become
the Assistant Secretary General for the Arab League in Cairo, Egypt,
and he remained in office until the year 1957. Al-Shukairy was then
appointed by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia as minister of state for the
United Nations Affairs.
After Al-Shukairy returned from the United Nations, he was chosen by
the heads of the Arab states to represent Palestine in the Arab League,
following the death of the previous representative, Ahmed Hilmi Abdul
Baki. The decision was made in the 1st Arab Summit held in January
1964. Al-Shukairy, as the Palestinian representative start contacts for
establishing the Palestinian Entity. He toured the Arab countries,
where Palestinians had taken residence, and presented to them his
proposals for the National Charter as well as the by-laws of
establishing the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO). The
preparatory committees were chosen, and these in turn nominated their
representatives to the Palestinian Conference, which was held in
Jerusalem between May 28 - June 2, 1964. The Conference was entitled
The First Palestinian National Council for the Palestinian Liberation
Organization. The Conference elected Ahmed Al-Shukairy as its president.
Al-Shukairy presented his report to the Second Arab Summit Conference
(September 1964) on the establishment of the PLO as the Palestinian
Entity. His report explained the organizational aspects of the PLO and
its goal to achieve the mobilization of the Palestinian people in their
struggle for liberation of their homeland. Al-Shukairy also presented
the members of the Executive Committee of the PLO and urged the Summit
to pledge financial support for the Organization. Al-Shukairy devoted
himself to the tasks of the Executive Committee in Jerusalem. These
included the establishment of foundations, and the creation of the
military body, named the Palestinian Liberation Army. At the end of the
second Palestinian National Council (Cairo, May 31- June 4, 1965),
Al-Shukairy presented the achievements of the Executive Committee.
After the Israeli Invasion of June 1967, Al-Shukairy, submitted his
resignation to the Palestinian people in December 1967. From this point
onward, Al-Shukairy declined any official position and directed his
efforts towards his writing. He alternated his residence between Cairo
and Lebanon. He left Cairo for Tunisia in 1979. A chronic illness,
required his transfer to the Hussein Medical Center, in Amman, where he
died on the 26th of February 1980. Al-Shukairy had left a number of
valuable books and publications on various Arab and Palestinian issues.
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