Naoum Mokarzel
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Naoum Mokarzel (
Mokarzel established his first daily publication, Al-ʿAsr (The Epoch) which floundered less than a year after its first issue. He attended medical school for two years before dropping out and became notorious within New York's Arab-speaking community for his aggressive character and controversial demeanor. He engaged in libel and disputes with other immigrants that often became physical and violent. He was arrested on several occasions but was never jailed; his actions stoked politico-sectarian animosity within the Arab-speaking communities of the US.
In 1895 Mokarzel was accused of adultery with a married woman; the two got married and eloped to
In 1910, Naoum and Salloum adapted the linotype machine to the Arabic script to replace manual typesetting. This contribution paved the way for cheaper and easier publishing for Arabic-speaking communities throughout the world. That same year he married his third wife but he never had children.
Mokarzel was politically engaged and called for the
Mokarzel died on 5 April 1932 in Paris; his body is interred in his hometown of Freike in Lebanon.
Biography
Youth in Mount Lebanon
Mokarzel was born into a
In New York, early careers and turmoil
On August 4, 1888, Mokarzel and the Rihanis landed in New York; they lived in the basement of 59
Upon his return to the United States, the Arbeelys, a Greek Orthodox family of Damascene origins, had begun printing Kawkab America (American Star), the first Arabic-language newspaper in North America; Mokarzel set out to open his own newspaper Al-ʿAsr (The Epoch) with capital from his wealthy merchant friend, Najeeb Maalouf. Mokarzel and Nageeb Arbeely engaged in a journalistic feud, personally attacking each other resulting in series of lawsuits and counter-suits between the two newspapers.[11] The enterprise floundered and was discontinued less than a year after its commencement.[12][4] Mokarzel attended medical school for two years before dropping out.[13][10] Meanwhile, Mokarzel was gaining notoriety for his controversial demeanor;[4] he engaged in brawls and verbal disputes with other Arabic-speaking immigrants and was arrested on several occasions for libel and physical assault against members of the community affiliated with the Arbeely family. The brawls that started as a result of professional competition and personal antipathy evolved into sectarian battles between Mokarzel's Maronite entourage and the Orthodox families of the community. Despite his multiple arrests, Mokarzel was never jailed but the incidents were to continue. In 1895, Tannous Shishim, a Lebanese immigrant, petitioned for divorce from his wife Sophie on the ground of adultery and Mokarzel was named co-respondent in the court proceedings. The Arbeelys were quick to publish the culpable news in their newspaper along with a bilingual transcript of the judge's decision, further tarnishing the reputation of Mokarzel. The accused couple got married and eloped to Philadelphia to flee the community's public denunciation.[14][4]
Inception of Al-Hoda
In Philadelphia on February 22, 1898, the estranged Mokarzel published the first issue of his second newspaper Al-Hoda (The Guidance), which became the longest-running Arabic newspaper in the United States.[10][4][12] The first issue consisted of 18 pages of three columns each and appeared on a weekly basis. The publication expanded in November 1898 to 24 pages including six full pages of advertisement and was distributed in over forty countries. In early 1899, Mokarzel boasted that the circulation of Al-Hoda surpassed that of its main competitor, the Orthodox-inclined Kawkab America.[12] Although claiming to be a non-sectarian publication, Al-Hoda was, like most of the New York-based Arabic newspapers, a mouthpiece to voice the confessional stances of the paper's owner.[15] Al-Hoda was aimed primarily at the Arabic-speaking Levantine immigrants, especially the Maronite community; it reported on Ottoman politics in the Levant, political reform in Lebanon and on the environment of immigrant-run businesses.[16][13] Mokarzel's brother Salloum traveled to the United States and joined the enterprise that same year.[4][17][5] The format of the publication changed after Salloum's arrival; Al-Hoda began appearing twice weekly and was reduced to eight pages with more space reserved for paid advertisements.[12] Despite his standing in the American Maronite community, infamy and controversy still followed Mokarzel. In 1899, the newlyweds published in Al-Hoda an apologetic article of Sophie's divorce from her previous husband and their subsequent marriage. However, Mokarzel's marriage was failing; he separated from Sophie on the same year that their defensive article was published and they divorced in 1902. Sophie returned to New York and took up selling linens before moving to South California where she started a linen shop and married her third husband, a Levantine confectioner. The Mokarzel brothers continued to print Al-Hoda in Philadelphia until late 1902.[4]
Back in New York
In 1902, Naoum and his brother moved back to New York and settled in Brooklyn; they set up their newspaper's office on Manhattan's
Mokarzel and Ameen Rihani had a lasting professional collaboration with Ameen publishing a regular section entitled Kashkoul al-Khawater (Patchwork of Thoughts) from 1901 until 1904. The two writers fell out because of Naoum's divorce from Saada and because of political differences and conflicting values.[4][19]
Competing newspapers and sects
Mokarzel's approach to the Arab American community's other newspapers was contentious and confrontational, and he accused the editors of the other newspapers lacking integrity and professional ethics. The most frequent targets of Mokarzel's attacks were Kawkab America and Al-Islah (The Reform).[12][20] Mokarzel posited ever since the establishment of Al-Hoda that his newspaper was secular and independent, accusing the other Arabic US-based newspapers of being sectarian and aligned to France, Britain, Russia and to the Ottomans. This position was staunchly upheld by Mokarzel until two Maronite clergymen Yusuf Yazbek and Estephan Qurqumaz sought to publish Al-Sakhra (The Rock), a newspaper representing American Maronites. Feeling threatened by the looming publication, Mokarzel contravened his previous positions and declared that Al-Hoda had always served the Maronite sect and nation and accused the clergymen of seeking "personal and dishonorable purposes".[17] Yazbek accused Mokarzel's newspaper of being a mouthpiece of another Maronite priest, Khairallah Stefan.[21] Mokarzel and his newspaper eventually prevailed.[17]
The animosity prevailing between the newspapers representing different sects mirrored an intra-communal sectarian strife that turned violent in later years. In August 1905, Mokarzel reported that the Orthodox bishop Raphael Hawaweeny called upon his followers to "crush" him. The tensions developed into violence in the autumn of 1905 when the partisans of Hawaweeny and Mokarzel sympathizers clashed, resulting in 29 injured.[22]
The sectarian tension in Little Syria reached its zenith in 1906 when John Stefan, brother of the priest Khairallah Stephan, was killed in a restaurant brawl on Washington Street. Mokarzel was apprehended by the police for the assault that was linked to the murder. Mokarzel's calumnious accusation and arrest were overturned as the complainant did not show up to the trial. The charge was dismissed and the police authorities settled on an Orthodox man, Elias Zreik, as the murderer.[4][23] During Zreik's trial, the prosecution held that Elias and his brother George were sent to kill Mokarzel; when they did not find him in his office they set out to the restaurant where his Maronite sympathizers often met.[22]
New Arabic printing era and political involvement
In 1910, the Mokarzel brothers decided to adapt the linotype machine to Arabic script to mitigate the expensive cost and tedious task of manual typesetting.[24] Naoum Mokarzel imported Arabic type letters from Egypt and acquired the first such machine for Al-Hoda from the Mergenthaler company.[10][13] While the linotype machine made printing cheaper, there was significant competition for readership since New York's Arabic-speaking community did not exceed 10,000 before World War II.[13]
Through his writing in Al-Hoda and other American journals, Mokarzel was gaining further prominence as a leading figure of the American Maronite community and was seeking a similarly prominent woman to marry. In 1910 he married for the third and last time; his wife, Rose Abillama hailed from a princely Maronite family and was more than twenty years his minor.[4] Mokarzel did not have any offspring from any of his marriages.[25] In 1911, Mokarzel became the permanent president of the Lebanon League of Progress (Jamʿiyyat al-Nahda al-Lubnaniyya), a Maronite organization established in the US by the journalist Ibrahim Najjar (1882-1957) and dedicated to promoting a French-supported Maronite protectorate in Lebanon.[26][27][28][29]
In June 1913, Mokarzel was the Lebanon League of Progress delegate to the First Arab Congress in Paris where he represented the North American Maronites. Delegates to the congress discussed reforms to grant the Arabs living under the Ottoman Empire autonomy. The congress did not have a lasting effect, due mostly to the beginning of World War I.[30][31]
In 1917, Mokarzel sought and collected through Al-Hoda more than $30,000 US in donations to relieve his compatriots in Mount Lebanon who were experiencing a
Mokarzel represented the Lebanon League of Progress in the
Last years and death
Mokarzel's last years were marked by bed-confining illnesses. He boarded a boat to France on March 18, 1932 despite his deteriorating health condition to attend a Lebanon-related conference in Paris. Mokarzel succumbed to his illnesses on April 5, 1932. His body was sent from Paris to New York where he received a large public funeral. His body was sent to Lebanon and interred in the family cemetery in his hometown of Freike.[4][33] After his death, Al-Hoda came under Salloum's management,[34] which passed at the latter's death in 1952 to his daughter Mary. The newspaper closed in 1971.[12]
Views and activism
Mokarzel held an esteemed position in New York's Arabic-speaking community at a young age; his political and social views were expressed in Al-Hoda as well as other non-Arabic American newspapers.[4] According to Suleiman, Mokarzel was an obstinate and passionate individual who fiercely clung to and defended his opinions and the survival of his publication. He sought to convert detractors to his point of view and he repeatedly made contradictory statements and opinions.[17] Mokarzel engaged in many disputes with his detractors and with editors or rival newspapers and responded to criticism with personal attacks and sarcasm.[12]
Immigration
In 1896 the Ottoman government lifted the ban on the emigration of its subjects, prompting a surge of immigration to the United States from the Levant. The Ottomans saw benefit in the remittances sent by the Ottoman diaspora, which boosted the economy.[35] In 1898, the Ford Committee lobbied for more stringent immigrant admission criteria to the United States and proposed to the US Congress that the undesirable be turned back. These measures aimed to dampen the flow of the non-European immigrants and prompted Mokarzel to call on all the community's newspapers to stop promoting immigration because the immigrants were likely to be turned back upon arrival.[36] Despite the restrictive measures, only a small fraction of Levantine Ottoman immigrants were debarred.[37]
Lebanese independence
Mokarzel harbored tacit Lebanese separationist aspirations that he did not openly advocate until the Ottoman defeat in World War I. Before the Ottomans' fall, Mokarzel's rhetoric was more diplomatic; unlike Al-Ayam (The Days), another US-based Arabic newspaper, which was openly hostile toward the Ottoman sultan and authorities, Al-Hoda took a more cautious tone, reminding its Arabic-speaking American readers that they were above all, Ottoman settlers in a foreign land.[17] In 1894, Mokarzel attended an event honoring the Ottoman sultan, giving an address in French to the assembled notables among whom was the Ottoman consul-general of New York.[4] In 1899, Mokarzel criticized the newly established Young Syria Party that aimed to overthrow the Ottoman government and sought to recruit a militia for that purpose.[38] At the turn of the twentieth century, Mokarzel began to openly express his disdain for the Ottoman consul in New York.[39] Mokarzel represented the Lebanon League of Progress in the Arab Congress of 1913 in Paris advocating for the autonomy of Mount Lebanon within the Ottoman Empire.[26][40]
The mistreatment of the Lebanese during World War I and the ensuing famine were turning points for Mokarzel, who afterward openly called for Lebanon's independence from the Ottomans. In 1917, Mokarzel urged his readers to join a special battalion and fight alongside France to help force the Ottomans out of Lebanon.[4][17] His call for action was met with distrust and was not successful as there was a growing concern that the recruits would be exploited in occupying Mount Lebanon on behalf of the French, not liberate it from the Turks.[41] Mokarzel then engaged in a campaign among the Lebanese communities in the diaspora, especially in the Americas, to change the name of the community and its organizations from "Syrian" to "Lebanese".[17] Mokarzel participated in the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 and advocated a French Mandate over Mount Lebanon to train the locals in good governance in preparation for independence.[32] Mokarzel designed the flag used of Mandatory Lebanon;[31][42] his calls for the establishment of a French-supported protectorate in Lebanon caused his detractors to accuse his newspaper of being financially supported by French endowments.[41]
Religion and sectarianism
Despite being a staunch practicing Maronite, Mokarzel had often criticized and clashed with the Maronite clergy especially
Mokarzel also called for freedom of expression and religious tolerance and used the Al-Hoda publishing house to propagate these values. In 1903, Al-Hoda published Ameen Rihani's The Tripartite Alliance in the Animal Kingdom, a book that was critical of religion. Both Rihani and Mokarzel were severely attacked by the
Women's rights and literacy
In a 1904 article entitled "You Are What Your Womenfolk Are", Mokarzel adamantly called against gender discrimination against women in education and attributed the Levantine women's lack of education to the backwardness of the clergy and their authority over women, which he argued, was the root cause of the lack of progress of the Arabic-speaking community of the United States. In an attack on the role of the clergy in barring women from education and from becoming teachers, Mokarzel described the women who submit to the clergy's impositions as traitors to God, and to the mothers' purpose of upbringing.[49]
Mokarzel attacked what he called "false modesty" and how the men of the community allowed their women to peddle freely and stay out of town overnight while labeling them as immodest if they became writers or gave public lectures. Mokarzel found an ally in
Mokarzel condemned forced marriages and child marriage that were still a tradition among Arabic-speaking communities of the US.[54]
Great Druze Revolt
Mokarzel was a vehement opponent of the
Arab whiteness and naturalization
In 1909 Mokarzel founded the Syrian American Association to defend the eligibility of Syrians to the American citizenship.[57][58] Mokarzel and the SAA were engaged in the 1914 case Dow v. United States. The plaintiff, George Dow, was an Ottoman Syrian whose application for citizenship had been rejected twice by the lower courts of South Carolina. Mokarzel and Dow's lawyer mounted an elaborate defense of five points arguing why Dow was to be in the "white persons" category.[59][57]
Mokarzel argued that Syrians are of Arab origins, "the purest type of the Semitic race" and that therefore are "free white persons" falling within the meaning of the naturalization statute.
Legacy
By adapting the linotyope machine to the Arabic script, Mokarzel and Al-Hoda paved the way for cheaper and easier publishing for Arabic-speaking communities all throughout the world; subsequently, the New York Arabic-speaking colony became an intellectual epicenter through the preponderance of Arabic printing presses.[13] Al-Hoda grew to be an Arabic daily with the widest circulation in North America.[26] The New York Times wrote in 1948 that this development "made possible and immeasurably stimulated the growth of Arabic journalism in the Middle East".[63]
See also
- Al-Hoda
- Nageeb Arbeely
- 'Afifa Karam
References
- ^ Mokarzel 1968, p. 123.
- ^ Mokarzel 1932, p. ز.
- ^ a b Mokarzel 1968, p. 124.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Jacobs 2015b.
- ^ a b Mokarzel 1932, p. ح.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 1705.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 1673.
- ^ Fahrenthold 2009, p. 6.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 1712.
- ^ a b c d Mokarzel 1932, p. ط.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 5685, 5735.
- ^ a b c d e f g Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 5602–5670.
- ^ a b c d e Fahrenthold 2009, p. 7.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 8602–8690.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location:5456–5600.
- ^ Mokarzel 1968, p. 3.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Suleiman 1999.
- ^ Mokarzel 1932, p. ي.
- ^ Reuters 2014.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 5689, 5735.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 5653.
- ^ a b Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 7326–7359.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 7359–7400.
- ^ Mokarzel 1968, p. 2.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 8682.
- ^ a b c Hazam 1932, p. 90.
- ^ Hourani & Shehadi 1992, p. 153.
- ^ Mokarzel 1932, pp. ل-م.
- ^ Gualtieri 2009, p. 92.
- ^ Khalidi 1980, pp. 310–311.
- ^ a b Mokarzel 1932, p. ن.
- ^ a b c Gualtieri 2009, p. 102.
- ^ Mokarzel 1932, p. س.
- ^ Mokarzel 1968, p. 125.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 841.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 941.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 1258.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, Kindle location: 8020, 8052.
- ^ Jacobs 2015a, p. Kindle location: 5825.
- ^ Gualtieri 2009, p. 16.
- ^ a b Fahrenthold 2014.
- ^ Hazran 2013, p. 177.
- ^ a b Mokarzel 1932, pp. 102–107.
- ^ a b c d Suleiman 1999, p. 75.
- ^ Mokarzel 1904a, p. 2.
- ^ Mokarzel 1923, p. 2.
- ^ Mokarzel 1932, pp. 102–107, Article: الفتح الروحي [The spiritual conquest].
- ^ Mokarzel 1932, pp. 119–123, Article: الله يعين [God helps].
- ^ a b Suleiman 1999, pp. 75–76.
- ^ Mokarzel 1904b, p. 2.
- ^ Jackson 2013, p. 177.
- ^ Suleiman 1999, p. 76.
- ^ Gualtieri 2009, p. 88.
- ^ Mokarzel 1905, p. 4.
- ^ Bailony 2013, p. 18.
- ^ Bailony 2013, p. 20.
- ^ a b Gualtieri 2009, p. 67.
- ^ GhaneaBassiri 2010, p. 155.
- ^ a b Kayyali 2006, p. 51.
- ^ Hourani & Shehadi 1992, p. 195.
- ^ Gualtieri 2004.
- ^ Blum 2012, p. 149.
- ^ Dunlap 2010.
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- Kayyali, Randa A. (2006). The Arab Americans. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-33219-7.
- ISBN 978-0-903729-57-4.
- Mokarzel, Mary (1968). Al-Hoda, 1898-1968: The Story of Lebanon and Its Emigrants Taken from the Newspaper Al-Hoda. New York: al-Hoda press.
- Mokarzel, Naoum (1904a). "The School and the Church". Al-Hoda.
- Mokarzel, Naoum (1904b). "The Syrian-American marriage". Al-Hoda.
- Mokarzel, Naoum (1905). "It is a Syrian crime". Al-Hoda.
- Mokarzel (1923). "Which is better to have, churches or schools?". Al-Akhlaq.
- Mokarzel, Naoum (1932). Mokarzel, Salloum (ed.). مختارات الخواطر [An anthology of thoughts] (PDF) (in Arabic). New York: al-Hoda press. pp. أ–ع. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-12-04.
- "جان داية يكشف عن خمسين مقالة مجهولة لأمين الريحاني في "كشكول الخواطر" – الاسبوع العربي احداث لبنانية عربية سياسية اقتصادية اجتماعية" [Jean Dayeh reveals fifty anonymous articles by Amin al-Rayhani in " Kashkul al-Khawater»] (in Arabic). الاسبوع العربي. Reuters. 2014. Archived from the original on 2021-03-19. Retrieved 2021-03-19.
- Suleiman, Michael W. (1999). "The Mokarzels' contributions to the Arabic-speaking community in the United States". Arab Studies Quarterly. 21 (2): 71–88. JSTOR 41858285.