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Gamal
Abdul Nasser
Gamal
Abdul Nasser was a Egyptian revolutionist that successfully drove
British out of his country after 72 years of rule, under his presidency
Egypt came out of intense poverty to prosperity, he became famous all
around the Arab Peninsula after standing firm against
Childhood
January
, 15th 1918. Gamal Abdul Nasser Hussein was born in Banny Mor
Asyout,Egypt. One year before the 1919 revolution against the English
Colonization. He lived 8 years there where he learnt the South Egyptian
strict and generous traditions. He moved then to Asyout city, then to
Alexandria, then Cairo. All of these moving were because of his father’s
job as an inspector in the ministry of Post. His mother passed away on
1926. Gamal spent 10 years in Cairo until he received his high school
diploma from “Nahda” school in 1937. At these years Gamal was part of
many demonstrations against the English colonization where he was
injured in one of them and got a scar in his face that stayed until he
died. 1937 was the year when Nasser joined the military school where he
graduated on 1938 to join the third platoon in Asyout where he met Anwar
El Sadat, and Zakaria Mohyi El Deen who later joined him in the “Free
Officers” organization. 1939 Nasser was transferred to Alexandria where
he met with Abdul Hakeem Amer who became his best friend, and played a
controversial role in his life.
Free
Officers Revolutionary organization
Egypt was a kingdom ruled by English and the figure head of the country
was the Puppet King Farouk , thousands of English army men were on
Egyptian soil to protect United Kingdom interests in the region. Not to
repeat the 1882 army revolution, or the 1919 revolution, the UK worked
hard to prevent any development of the Egyptian army. Corruption was
spreading with each government, the royal palace aided by the English
interference in the internal affairs. Such environment gathered a group
of young officers to fight corruption and work for the development of
Egypt and Egyptians.
1942
Nasser was transferred to Sudan with Abdul Hakeem Amer where their
friendship became stronger, and they exchanged their rebellion ideas
about the future of Egypt. While serving in the Sudan during the late
1940s, he and other three other officers founded the secret Free
Officers revolutionary organization. Their objective was the overthrow
of the British occupying regime and the puppet Egyptian king.
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The 1948 war was the ignition for the “Free Officers Organizations”. It
gave the free officers the time to meet, and share their thoughts about
the future of Egypt and quoted from Nasser diaries “…We were fighting in
Palestine, and our dreams were in Egypt. Our bullets were targeting the
enemy but our hearts were with our nation who was left for the
wolves”.Such war added a lot to Nasser’s personality, it gave him
confidence, and it added more to his rebellion nature for Freedom.
Nasser gained his leadership reputation after the battle of “Falouga”
where he managed to fight with no backup support, and under siege
against the Israeli armed forces, he was also wounded. The confidential
organization became active on 1949, started by a committee of young
officers that included Gamal Abdel Nasser, Kamal El Deen Hussein, Hassan
Ibrahim, Khaled Mohey El Deen, and Abdul Menim Raouf. New officers were
also added to this.
In 1950, Nasser was chosen president for the Free Officers organization.
They faced Lots of obstacles like being monitored by the “political
police”
which was responsible to stop any action against the royal palace or the
English personnel. This made the attempts of recruiting new officers a
difficult task; lots of investigations were to take place before adding
a new officer to the organization.
In November 1949 The Organization distributed their first “flyer” which
discussed the Defeat in Palestine War. The flyers continued to be sent
by Mail and to be delivered by hand according to the sector that the
free officer who is delivering it (Air Force, Infantry...etc).
In1951 the Organization started a newspaper called “the
voice of the free officers”
which was sent to 700 Egyptian officers by mail. The royal palace had
information about such organization, and King Farouk tried to destroy it
before it threatens his crown.
Yet the Organization kept working for its goal, and more officers were
drafted until July the 1952 date of revolution.
The
Revolution
After
becoming a mature organization, the free officers started publishing
their demands by the mailed flyers. They requested a strong Egyptian
army, where its duty to protect Egypt not to be used for serving the
royal palace, nor the English interests in the region. They demanded
quick solutions for the starvation of the Egyptians. The need of a
revolution against the royal system became a nation’s dream after the
poor standards that the citizens suffered, and increasing of corruption.
26th January 1952, named “black Saturday” when a huge fire burnt
downtown Cairo destroying stores, factories, houses and killing tens of
innocent Egyptians. Corruption was the main cause of such tragedy. The
failure to pin point the responsible of such fire was a knock out for
“The Wafd” party who were in charge of the Egyptian government for years
before such incident. King Farouk tried to calm the Egyptians but
failed. At that time, the Free officers were well known by the palace,
and the political police exerted lots of effort to neutralize them, such
environment pushed ahead the date to start the revolution. Days before
the 23rd of July 1952, the officers started their plan to rebel against
the current system and change it. The plan was to move at the night of
22nd of July to capture the main base of the army, followed by taking
charge of the whole army and controlling them from there. Then the Free
officers controlled the telephone systems, Airport, train stations and
the Egyptian radio station. Controlling such major buildings allowed the
officers to give false information to the palace in Alexandria where
King Farouk was residing. The revolution managed to capture the Army
central bases in Al-Areesh and Rafah, by doing so the officers
controlled most of the army platoons which eased their mission in
controlling Alexandria. The revolution succeeded in their plan, and
Anwar El Sadat announced the evolution of a new Era that will work for
the sake of development of Egypt cleaning all the corruption caused by
the royal palace. King Farouk was exiled with none of his assets, and
brigadier Mohammed Nagueeb was given the authority to be the leader of
the Army and the political authority in Egypt. In 1953, the Egyptian
constitution changed and the royal system was cancelled and replaced by
the republican system. . Gen. Muhammad Naguib became the nominal head of
the government, but Nasser held power through his control of the
Revolutionary Command Committee. In 1954, following an attempt on
Nasser's life, he arrested Naguib and became premier of Egypt
Presidency and rise to a Outstanding Arab Leader
Soon after Nasser took
power, the British became aware of there fall and thus signed an
agreement , ending their 72- year presence in Egypt.
Nasser introduced new
political system, it was called Arab socialism, with a one-party system
and with Islam as its official religion. With this program he
confiscated 243,000 hectares (2,430 km²) farm land from a small group of
rich landowners and distributed it evenly to the population Later on in
his presidency he nationalized banks and industries. In
July,1956,Nasser announced to a huge cheering crowd in Manshia,
Alexandria and, via Cairo Radio, to the rest of the Arab World that he
was nationalizing the Suez Canal Company and creating the an Egyptian
Canal Authority to manage the Canal. The entire Third World was
thrilled and delighted. There existed no potent symbol of Western
colonial domination and a legend of the Western imperialism and hegemony
more than the Suez Canal. But there was worry about the consequences;
the West would surely not allow Nasser to succeed. USA and Britain
withdrew a promised support for the construction of a new Aswan. He also
continued his purchases of military equipment from Soviet bloc
countries. He had gone there after being turned down by the West, which
suspected plans to use the weapons against Israel.
The
nationalization of the Suez Canal was met by an Israeli invasion of the
Sinai Peninsula and an Anglo-French invasion of the Canal Zone. Although
Egyptian forces suffered military defeat but with Nasser’s diplomacy,
the invading forces were put under pressure from the UN and United
States, and had to withdraw. Egypt kept the full ownership of the Suez
Canal With US assistance the Canal was cleared and reopened in April
1957. All the British and French property in Egypt was sequestered.
About 3,000 British and French nationals were expelled, and more
thousands decided to leave. Britain and France attempted to retaliate
by imposing an economic blockade of Egypt, but the gesture was
ineffective, he also managed to get Soviet support for the construction
of the dam, which was completed 14 years later. Due to his economic
policies specially construction of Dam and the Canal to take water to
un-irrigated land, Egypt emerged from poverty stricken country to a
prospering nation.
By this time Nasser
had become a hero in the Arab world. In 1958 Syria and Egypt united
under his presidency, forming the United Arab Republic ,hoping that one
day all the Arab nations would join, but the Egypt-Syria union, however,
broke up in
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Nasser
(left) handshaking with Yasser Arafat |
1961 after a military
coup in Syria.

By 1967 the
Arab-Israeli situation had deteriorated. After the UN peacekeeping
force, at Nasser's request, had been withdrawn, and Egyptian guns
blockaded the Gulf of Aqaba to Israeli ships, Israel attacked Egypt and
occupied the entire Sinai Peninsula up to the Suez Canal ( Six-Day War)
in just six days.After humiliating defeat of Egypt’s forces, Nasser,
taking responsibility for the debacle, resigned, but the thousands of
people took to the streets, demanding his return to government. He
stayed in power for 18 years even in the face of a large number of
domestic competitors and opponents .On September 28, 1970, he died
suddenly of a heart attack.
Even after his death,
he is still remembered by Muslims as a man who stood up to Western
Dominance and lead his country from a poor slaved British Colony to a
Free Progressing Nation. Even his harshest critics who accuse him of
turning Egypt into a police state with controlled rule, censorship,
still beyond doubt see him as the foremost Arab leader, who restored
Arab dignity after the long humiliation of Western domination.
Nasser's ideas were laid down in his book of 1959, The Philosophy of
the Revolution.
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