Tarab Abdul Hadi

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Tarab Abdul Hadi
طَرب عبد الهادي
Portrait of Abdul Hadi circa 1940s-1950s
Born1910
Died1976 (aged 65–66)
OccupationActivist
SpouseAwni Abd al-Hadi

Tarab Abdul Hadi (

Palestine Arab Women's Congress (PAWC), the first women's organization in British Mandate Palestine
, and was an active organizer in its sister group, the Arab Women's Association (AWA).

Biography

Tarab Abdul Hadi was born in

Istiqlal party.[3] Abdul Hadi and other women from notable Jerusalem families, established the Palestine Arab Women's Congress (PAWC) to make clear their opposition to the Zionist presence in Palestine and their support for the men's national struggle for independence.[5]

The first meeting of the PAWC was held at Abdul Hadi's home in Jerusalem on 26 October 1929, with the event since heralded as the "first time" that Palestinian women entered the political arena.

telegrams to raise awareness of the Palestinian plight, the PAWC also engaged in prisoner advocacy. This involved the attempt to shorten harsh prison sentences by appealing to the British authorities and raising money to support families who had lost their breadwinners to imprisonment.[5]

Abdul Hadi was also active in the Arab Women's Association (AWA), also founded in 1929, which became the most prominent feminist organization in Palestine.

General Allenby, stating:

"The Arab ladies ask Lord Allenby to remember and tell this to his government ... The mothers, daughters, sisters of the Arab victims are gathered here to make the world witness the betrayal of the British. We want all the Arabs to remember that the British are the cause of our suffering and they should learn from the lesson."[6]

Abdul Hadi was also active in the campaign against the veil, an initiative launched by local women encouraging Palestinian women to remove their veils.[7]

After the

1948 Arab–Israeli war, Abdul Hadi ended up in Cairo, Egypt with her husband. She died in Cairo in 1976.[1][5]

See also

  • Arab Women's Executive Committee

References

  1. ^ a b "Tarab Abdul Hadi". Palestine: Information with Provenance. Archived from the original on 29 September 2011. Retrieved 9 November 2008.
  2. ^ Penny Johnson (August 2004). "Women of "Good Family"". Jerusalem Quarterly. Issue. 21. Institute of Jerusalem Studies. Archived from the original on 24 August 2007. Retrieved 9 November 2008.
  3. ^ a b c d Ellen Fleischmann (March 1995). "Jerusalem Women's Organizations During the British Mandate, 1920s-1930s". PASSIA. Archived from the original on 4 June 2011.
  4. ^ "طرب عبد الهادي" (in Arabic). Taraajem. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
  5. ^ a b c Karmi, 2002, pp. 31-33.
  6. ^ a b Susan Muaddi Darraj (May 2004). "Palestinian women: fighting two battles". Monthly Review.
  7. ^ "Palestine Facts – Personalities: Chronological listing". Palestinian Academic Society for the Study of International Affairs (PASSIA). Retrieved 11 September 2008.

Bibliography

External links