- Egyptian Revolution of 1919
The Egyptian Revolution of 1919 was a countrywide non-violent revolution against the British occupation of
Egypt . It was carried out byEgyptians from different walks of life in the wake of the British-ordered exile of revolutionary leaderSaad Zaghlul and other members of theWafd Party in 1919. The event led to Egyptian independence in 1922 and the implementation of a new constitution in 1923.The event is considered to be one of the earliest successful implementations of non-violent
civil disobedience in the world and has been followed immediately by similar actions in theIndian independence movement led byMohandas Karamchand Gandhi .Some of the most impressive cases of nonviolent resistance has come in North Africa. The 1919 revolution in Egypt consisted of months of civil disobedience against the British occupation, centered in Cairo and Alexandria, and strikes by students and lawyers, as well as postal, telegraph, tram and railway workers, and, eventually Egyptian government personnel. The result of this nonviolent movement was the British recognition of limited Egyptian independence. [Zunes, 1999, p. 42]
Background
Shortly after the First World War
armistice of November 11 was concluded inEurope , a delegation of Egyptian anti-colonial activists led by Saad Zaghlul made a request to High CommissionerReginald Wingate to end the British Protectorate in Egypt and gain Egyptian representation at the next peace conference inParis . Meanwhile, a mass movement for independence was being organized on the Egyptian street using the tactics ofCivil Disobedience . By then, Zaghlul and the Wafd had enjoyed massive support among the Egyptian people. [Vatikitotis 1992, p. 267] Wafdist emissaries went into towns and villages to collect signatures authorizing the movement's leaders to petition for the complete independence of Egypt.Seeing the popular support that the Wafd leaders enjoyed among the native population, and fearing social unrest, the British in March 1919 proceeded to arrest Zaghlul and two other movement leaders and exiled them to
Malta . "The result was revolution," according to noted professor of Egyptian history James Jankowski. [2000, p. 112]Events
On March 8, 1919, the first modern Egyptian revolution broke out after the British authorities in Egypt arrested Zaghlul and his associates and exiled them to Malta. For several weeks until April, demonstrations and strikes across Egypt by students, civil servants, merchants, peasants, workers, religious leaders; by Egyptian women; by
Copt s as well as Muslims became such a daily occurrence that normal life was brought to a halt. [Jankowski, "op cit."] The uprising in the Egyptian countryside was more violent, involving attacks on British military installations, civilian facilities and personnel. The revolts forcedLondon to issue a unilateral declaration of Egyptian independence on February 22, 1922.The Wafd Party drafted a new constitution in 1923 based on a parliamentary representative system. Egyptian independence at this stage was provisional, as British forces continued to be physically present on Egyptian soil. Saad Zaghlul became the first popularly-elected Prime Minister of Egypt in 1924, and in 1936 the Anglo-Egyptian Treaty was concluded. By the end of the actions, 800 Egyptians were dead and 1,600 others were wounded. [ [http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F10B17F83D5C147A93C7AB178CD85F4D8185F9 NY Times] . 1919]
See also
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Saad Zaghlul
*Wafd Party
*History of modern Egypt Notes
Further reading
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