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Hanan Mikhail Ashrawi

Spokesperson for the Palestinian delegation in the Arab-Israeli peace talks and later chair of a human rights group in the West Bank and Gaza, Hanan Mikhail Ashrawi (born 1946), a professor of English literature and a political activist, won international recognition for her articulate defense of Palestinian national rights. Her innate eloquence is further manifested by her literary accomplishments.

Hanan Mikhail Ashrawi was born October 8, 1946, in Nablus, one of the big cities of what was then central Palestine. The youngest of five children - all female - Hanan and the rest of the Mikhails moved around quite a bit during her childhood, mainly due to the 1948 war of Israeli independence and to demands placed on her father, a physician. From Nablus, her family moved to the warm city of Tiberias in the north where they remained until Israel became a state in 1948. With most Palestinian Arabs of that part of Palestine - now Israel - fleeing the war and ending in refugee camps in southern Lebanon and Syria, Mikhail's family moved to Amman, Jordan. Initially, her father, Daoud Mikhail, remained behind in the war-torn country, but he rejoined his family a bit later. While in Jordan, Hanan's father worked as a health inspector with that government.

Finally, in 1950 the Mikhails returned to the West Bank, settling in Ramallah, a city located six miles north of Jerusalem. The West Bank, which had been annexed by the Amman government in August 1950, came under Israeli occupation during the Six-Day War of 1967.

As a physician, Daoud Mikhail, along with his wife Wadi'a Mikhail, a nurse, provided his family with a comfortable standard of living. Daoud Mikhail was a liberal thinker and quite progressive in his philosophy. Brought up by his sisters when his mother died, he had learned to respect and admire the position of women and favored a greater role for them in society. Contrary to acceptable norms for most girls and women at the time, Hanan grew up believing that there was nothing she could not or should not do only because she was a woman. Her father's status and his social and political views undoubtedly influenced Hanan's personality and character and set her on a path which ultimately led to her activist and leadership roles.

Daoud Mikhail's activities with the Arab National Socialist Party had led to his imprisonment by the Jordanian authorities for a time. Later on he was involved in the establishment of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). He died in 1988.

Hanan Mikhail received her B.A. and M.A. degrees from the American University of Beirut. While there she joined the General Union of Palestinian Students (GUPS) and became its spokesperson. She also taught political awareness classes to Palestinians in that city's surrounding refugee camps. ABC's World News Tonight anchor Peter Jennings met Hanan while in Beirut and described her as "incredibly smart." In 1970, unable to rejoin her family in the West Bank, Hanan left Beirut to go to the United States to complete her graduate studies at the University of Virginia, where she received her Ph.D. in English and Comparative Literature.

Hanan met Yasser Arafat for the first time in 1969 while attending a GUPS convention in Amman; she joined Fateh, the largest of the PLO components, but then she left. She was able to return to the West Bank in 1973 under the Family Reunification Act. There she became involved in the women's rights movement and began to speak about coexistence with Israel and about a two-state solution for the Arab-Israeli conflict.

In 1975 Hanan Mikhail married Emile Ashrawi, an artist, filmmaker, and later a photographer in Jerusalem for the United Nations refugee relief group. They had two daughters.

Hanan Ashrawi came to world attention during her highly praised performance on ABC's Nightline "town meeting" from Jerusalem in April 1988, five months after the breakout of the Palestinian intifada (uprising against Israeli rule). That event catapulted her into the world of high politics and placed her under a substantial level of responsibility. Ashrawi, a professor of English literature and the former dean of arts at Beir Zeit University in the West Bank, became very involved in the talks with then Secretary of State James Baker that eventually lead to the 1992 Madrid peace conference. As a resident of East Jerusalem, she was denied a role as a negotiator by Israel, becoming instead the chief spokesperson for the Palestinian delegation. As such, and with the world as her audience, Hanan's articulate conferences on behalf of the Palestinian people, and her information duels with her Israeli counterpart, made her face one of the most recognizable in the world. Along with Faisal Husseini, the chair of the group and another West Bank personality, Hanan sat at the core of an influential team of advisers for the Palestinian delegation.

Ashrawi published many articles, conferred with heads of state, and addressed numerous international conventions. When arrested by the Israeli authorities along with Husseini, former President George Bush said, "Hanan is on my mind." These Palestinians were soon released.

Ashrawi received her share of criticism, and not only from the Israelis. From the Palestinian corner, Ashrawi was criticized as too moderate and too accommodating to both the Americans and the Israelis.

After the signing of the September 13, 1993, agreement between Israel and the PLO, Ashrawi resigned her position on the Palestinian team. She then founded a human rights group that focused on women's issues in the West Bank and Gaza.

Her convictions and determination to bring freedom and democracy to the war-torn country of Palestine are described in her critically acclaimed memoir, This Side of Peace. The book draws from the imagery of her native Arabic, but Ashrawi wrote the book in English in order that it might be more widely read. Reviewer William B. Quandt of Foreign Affairs Magazine described the book as "an appealing and powerful personal statement from a person of integrity and insight." Ashrawi plans to publish a novel dealing with the realities of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

Further Reading

The best source of additional information is The New Palestinians: The Emerging Generation of Leaders (1992) by John Wallach and Janet Wallach. See also Mikhail-Ashrawi, Hanan, This Side of Peace (Simon & Schuster, 1995); Victor, Barbara, A Voice of Reason: Hanan Ashrawi and Peace in the Middle East (Harcourt, Brace & Company, 1994). Periodical articles include Commonweal, June 16, 1995; Foreign Affairs, July-August 1995; Interview, July 1995; Mother Jones, March-April 1993; and Publishers Weekly, December 5, 1994.

 
 
Wikipedia: Hanan Ashrawi
Hanan Ashrawi
Born 8 October 1946 (1946--) (age 61)
Nablus
Occupation Politician
Spouse Emile Ashrawi
Children Amal, Zeina
Parents Daoud Mikhail, Wadi'a Ass'ad

Dr. Hanan Daoud Khalil Ashrawi is a Palestinian scholar and political activist. She is a protege and later colleague and close friend of Edward Said. Ashrawi was an important leader during the First Intifada, served as the official spokesperson for the Palestinian Delegation to the Middle East peace process, and has been elected numerous times to the Palestinian Legislative Council.

Personal life

Ashrawi was born to Palestinian Christian parents on October 8 1946 in the West Bank city of Nablus.[1] Her father, Daoud Mikhail, was a founder of the Palestine Liberation Organization and her mother was of Lebanese descent. Her family later moved to Ramallah, where she attended the Ramallah Friends Girls School. She received her bachelor's and master's degrees in literature in the Department of English at the American University of Beirut. Ashrawi also has a Ph.D. in Medieval and Comparative Literature from the University of Virginia. While a graduate student in literature at the American University in Beirut she dated Peter Jennings of ABC News who was then stationed there as ABC's Beirut bureau chief. [2]

She got married on August 8 1975 to Emil Ashrawi, a Christian Jerusalemite (born 1951)[3] who is now a photographer and a theater director [4]. Together they have two daughters, Amal (b. 1977) and Zeina (b. 1981). [5]

Political Activism

Ashrawi returned to the West Bank in 1973 to establish the Department of English at Birzeit University. She served as Chair of that department from 1973 to 1978, and again from 1981 through 1984; and from 1986-1990 she served the university as Dean of the Faculty of Arts. She remained a faculty member at Birzeit University until 1995, publishing numerous poems, short stories, papers and articles on Palestinian culture, literature, and politics.

Ashrawi's political activism in the occupied territories began almost as early as her academic career at Birzeit. In 1974, while the university was suffering intermittent closures by the Israeli military, she founded the Birzeit University Legal Aid Committee/Human Rights Action Project. Her political work took a greater leap in 1988 during the First Intifada, when she joined the Intifada Political Committee, serving on its Diplomatic Committee until 1993. From 1991 to 1993 she served as the official spokesperson of the Palestinian Delegation to the Middle East peace process and a member of the Leadership/Guidance Committee and executive committee of the delegation.

From 1993 to 1995, with the signing of the Oslo Accords by Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin, Palestinian self-rule was established, and Ashrawi headed the Preparatory Committee of the Palestinian Independent Commission for Citizens' Rights in Jerusalem. Ashrawi has also served since 1996 as an elected member of the Palestinian Legislative Council, Jerusalem District.

In 1996 Ashrawi was appointed the Palestinian Authority Minister of Higher Education and Research, but she resigned the post in 1998 in protest against political corruption, specifically Arafat's handling of peace talks.

In 1998, Ashrawi founded MIFTAH -- the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy, an initiative which works towards respect for human rights, democracy and peace.

In 2003 Ashrawi was awarded the Sydney Peace Prize. Her selection was controversial among conservative Australians, who decried Ashrawi as "an apologist for terrorism". A more sympathetic account of Ashrawi's selection can be found in Antony Loewenstein's My Israel Question.[6]

Ashrawi holds honorary degrees from Earlham College and Smith College.

Works Published

  • Anthology of Palestinian Literature (ed).
  • The Modern Palestinian Short Story: An Introduction to Practical Criticism
  • Contemporary Palestinian Literature under Occupation
  • Contemporary Palestinian Poetry and Fiction
  • Literary Translation: Theory and Practice
  • This Side of Peace: A Personal Account (ISBN 0-684-80294-5)

Notes

  1. ^ Sarah K. Horsley. Hanan Ashrawi. Retrieved on 2007-06-12.
  2. ^ Fenyvesi, Charles (December 30, 1991 / January 6, 1992). Washington whispers. US News & World Report through LexisNexis® Academic. Retrieved on November 30, 2006.
  3. ^ A glimpse into the life of Hanan Ashrawi, Muslimedia: April 1-15, 1997
  4. ^ Israel - Palestina: la paz imposible (in Spanish), Solidarios humanitarian organization web site
  5. ^ Conversation with Hanan Ashrawi, University of California publication
  6. ^ Questioning Israel. The Australian Jewish News (28 July 2006). Retrieved on 2007-06-01.

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