| Columbia Encyclopedia: Charles Habib Malik |
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1906 - 1987
Lebanese academic, philosopher, and diplomat.
Born 11 February 1906 to a Greek Orthodox family from Kura in Lebanon, Malik was schooled at the American Tripoli Boys' High School, then attended the American University of Beirut (AUB), Harvard University, and the University of Freiburg. Throughout his academic career, Malik taught philosophy, mathematics, and physics at AUB, where he was also dean. During the 1958 Lebanese Civil War, Malik was president of the 13th session of the General Assembly of the United Nations. Foreign minister (1956 - 1958) during the presidency of Camille Chamoun, Malik alienated many Lebanese politicians because of his pro - United States and pro-Western stands. He accused Egypt, Syria, and the Palestinians of fomenting trouble in the Land of Cedars.
During the Lebanese Civil War of 1975 - 76, Malik joined a coalition of conservative Christian leaders known as the Lebanese Front. In several statements and publications, Malik expressed his full awareness of the tragedy of the Palestinian people, but he was very distrustful of the intentions of Muslim leaders in Lebanon. Malik feared that Lebanon as a land of Christian-Muslim coexistence was bound to be destroyed by outside interference, mainly from Syria and radical Palestinian forces. Malik authored several books and publications and was awarded honorific titles and degrees.
Bibliography
Helmick, Raymond G. "Internal Lebanese Politics: The Lebanese Front and Forces." In Toward a Viable Lebanon, edited by Halim Barakat. Washington, DC: Center for Contemporary Arab Studies, 1988.
Hudson, Michael C. The Precarious Republic: Political Modernization in Lebanon. New York: Random House, 1968.
Petran, Tabitha. The Struggle over Lebanon. New York: Monthly Review Press, 1987.
— GEORGE E. IRANI
UPDATED BY MICHAEL R. FISCHBACH
| Quotes By: Charles Malik |
Quotes:
"The greatest thing about any civilization is the human person, and the greatest thing about this person is the possibility of his encounter with the person of Jesus Christ."
| Wikipedia: Charles Malik |
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Charles Habib Malik (1906 - 28 December 1987) (Arabic: شارل مالك) was a Lebanese philosopher and diplomat.
Born in Bterram, Lebanon, Malik was the son of Dr. Habib Malik and Zarifa Karam. He was educated at the American Mission School for Boys, now Tripoli Evangelical School for Girls and Boys in Tripoli and the American University of Beirut, where he graduated with a degree in mathematics and physics. He moved on to Cairo in 1929, where he developed an interest in philosophy, which he proceeded to study at Harvard (under Alfred North Whitehead) and in Freiburg, Germany (under Martin Heidegger in 1932. His stay in Germany, however, was short-lived. He found the policies of the Nazis unfavorable, and left soon after they came to power in 1933. In 1937, he received his Ph.D. in philosophy (based on the metaphysics in the philosophies of Whitehead and Heidegger) from Harvard University. He taught there as well as at other universities in the United States. After returning to Lebanon, Malik founded the Philosophy department at the American University, as well as a cultural studies program (the 'civilization sequence program'). He remained in this capacity until 1945 when he was appointed to be the Lebanese ambassador to the United States and the United Nations.
Malik represented Lebanon at the San Francisco conference at which the United Nations was founded. He served as a rapporteur for the Commission on Human Rights in 1947 and 1948, when he became President of the Economic and Social Council. The same year, he helped to draft the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights with Chair and President of the Human Rights Commission, U.S. Delegate to the U.N. General Assembly, Eleanor Roosevelt. He succeeded Mrs. Roosevelt as the Human Rights Commission's Chair. He remained as ambassador to the US and UN until 1955. He was an outspoken participant in debates in the United Nations General Assembly and often criticized the Soviet Union. After a three-year absence, he returned in 1958 to preside over the thirteenth session of the United Nations General Assembly.
Meanwhile, Malik had been appointed to the Lebanese Cabinet. He was Minister of National Education and Fine Arts in 1956 and 1957, and Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1956 to 1958. While a Minister, he was elected to the National Assembly in 1957, and served there for three years.
Malik returned to his academic career in 1960. He travelled extensively, lectured on human rights and other subjects, and held professorships at a number of American universities including Harvard, the American University in Washington, DC, Dartmouth College (New Hampshire), University of Notre Dame (Indiana). In 1981, he was also a Pascal Lecturer at the University of Waterloo in Canada. His last official post was with The Catholic University of America (Washington, DC), where he served as a Jacques Maritain Distinguished Professor of Moral and Political Philosophy from 1981 to 1983. Meanwhile, he had also returned to his old chair in Philosophy at the American University of Beirut (1962 to 1976).
Following the outbreak of the Lebanese Civil War, which raged from 1975 to 1990, Malik helped to found the Front for Freedom and Man in Lebanon to defend the Christian cause. It was later renamed the Lebanese Front. A Greek Orthodox Christian, he was the only non-Maronite among the Front's top leaders, who included Phalangist Party founder Pierre Gemayel and former President and National Liberal Party leader Camille Chamoun. Malik was widely regarded as the brains of the Front, in which the other politicians were the brawn.
Malik was also noted as a theologian who successfully reached across confessional lines, appealing to his fellow Eastern Orthodox Christians, Roman Catholics, and Evangelicals alike. The author of numerous commentaries on the Bible and on the writings of the early Church Fathers, Malik was one of the few Orthodox theologians of his time to be widely known in Evangelical circles, and the evangelical leader Bill Bright spoke well of him and quoted him. Partly owing to Malik's ecumenical appeal, as well as to his academic credentials, he served as President of the World Council on Christian Education from 1967 to 1971, and as Vice-President of the United Bible Societies from 1966 to 1972.
Malik died of complications due to kidney failure, secondary to atheroembolic disease sustained after a cardiac catheterization, performed at the Mayo Clinic two years earlier, in Beirut on 28 December 1987. His son, Habib Malik, is a prominent academic and human rights activist. He was also survived by his brother, the late Father Ramzi Habib Malik, a prominent Catholic priest who worked tirelessly for the cause of Christian reconciliation with the Jewish people as well as for the belief that the Jewish People are the elder brothers of the Christians.
| Diplomatic posts | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Leslie Munro |
President of the United Nations General Assembly 1958–1959 |
Succeeded by Víctor Andrés Belaúnde |
| Preceded by Eleanor Roosevelt |
President and Chair of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights 1952–? |
Succeeded by ? |
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