Central Syrian Committee

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The Central Syrian Committee (French: Comité Central Syrien) was an organization active during after World War I, seeking the independence and the unity of Syria. It lobbied for an autonomous and indivisible Syria extending from the Taurus mountains to the Isthmus of Suez, and from the Mediterranean to the banks of the Euphrates and beyond. The movement did not consider Palestine as a separate political entity.[1][2]

At the Versailles Peace Conference

The Syrian Delegation met with the Supreme Council of the

Sydney Sonnino for Italy, and Matsui Keishirō for Japan.[a][3] The Syrian delegation members were Chekri Ganem, the Central Syrian Committee's top representative, Anis Schehade, Jamil Mardam Bey, Georges Samné, Nejil Bey Maikarze, and Tewfik Farhi.[3]

Notes

  1. ^ Additionally present were Mr. A. J. Toynbee and Major the Honorable W. Ormsby Gore.

References

Citations

Sources

  • Center for Online Judaic Studies (2008). "Statement of the Syrian Delegation to the Peace Conference, Feb. 13, 1919". Center for Online Judaic Studies. Archived from the original on 7 July 2022. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  • W., W. H. A. (1923). "Review of The Cambridge History of India". The Geographical Journal. 61 (6): 453–455.
    JSTOR 1780828
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  • Comité Central Syrien (1919). La Syrie devant la conférence. Mémoire à Monsieur Georges Clémenceau et à MM. les délégués des puissances alliées et associées à cette conférence, documents et cartes (in French). Paris: Imprimerie des arts et manufactures - M. Barnagaud.
  • Simon, James J. (1996). "The role of the administrative council of Mount Lebanon in the creation of Greater Lebanon: 1918–1920". Journal of Third World Studies. 13 (2): 119–171.
    JSTOR 45197729
    .