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Messali Hadj

 
Biography: Messali Hadj

Messali Hadj (1898-1974) is considered the founder of the Algerian nationalist movement, having first spoken the word "independence" at an anticolonial congress in Brussels in 1927. After leading the most radical wing of Algerian nationalism for more than a quarter century, he was left behind in 1954 by the new generation of men who actually launched the Algerian revolution.

Messali Hadj was born on March 16, 1898, in the western Algerian city of Tlemcen. He was the youngest of seven children in a traditional family whose economic circumstances were extremely marginal. He attended a Qur'anic (Koranic) school and also a local French primary school. But because his parents sent him out to work during his tenth and eleventh years, Messali was 18 years old before he completed the primary curriculum. That ended his formal education.

Just before his 20th birthday, Messali Hadj was drafted into the French army, where he served three years, mostly in the Bordeaux region. In France the young man was astonished at the vastly higher living standards of French peasants and working people. Army life exposed him to the order, discipline, and relatively higher status that went with military service, while at the same time embittering him at the institutionalized prejudice to which colonial troops were subjected. It was in Bordeaux, also, that he first became acquainted with Marxist writings and with the activities of the Communist-dominated French labor movement.

Upon his discharge in February 1921, Messali returned to Tlemcen at a time when Algeria was experiencing severe economic depression. Trying his hand at five different jobs in the commercial and manufacturing sectors, Messali was appalled at the conditions imposed upon him by each of these Muslim employers. After two and a half years in which his political sensibilities grew enormously, Messali moved to Paris, joining there the largest of the North African immigrant communities in France, which then totaled some 120,000.

The new immigrant tried several industrial and service jobs but finally went into business for himself, selling stockings at weekly markets in the environs of the capital. He married Emilie Busquant, a department store clerk and member of the French Communist Party, by whom he had two children, Ali and Djanina. His wife remained loyal to him until her death in 1953.

Culturally isolated and confronted with many material problems, the Algerian workers in France discovered that only the French far left demonstrated much interest in their issues and welfare. In June 1926, with Communist logistical and moral support, North Africans created the Etoile nordafricaine (ENA) as a political organization to battle for their rights and for amelioration of conditions in their homelands. Messali Hadj was secretary-general of the ENA from its inception and soon came to dominate it. In February 1927 he delivered the ENA's first list of "Algerian demands" to an anticolonial congress organized by the Communist International in Brussels. Most singular among those demands was a call for the independence of Algeria. At a time when French-educated middle-class Algerians were working for assimilation of their country into the French Republic, and when Muslim reformers were calling for educational and cultural renewal, Messali's call was truly revolutionary.

Membership in the ENA grew rapidly among the émigrécommunity. By 1928 the Communist Party terminated its financial support, partially because Messali and his colleagues demonstrated more independence than it was comfortable with and partially because the ENA's nationalistic agenda was not consistent with party priorities of the moment. When the courts outlawed the movement the next year, the ENA went underground. In 1930 Messali began publishing a newspaper, El Ouma, which achieved phenomenal readership and for the first time drew attention to his movement within Algeria itself. At the same time Messali was fine-tuning the rhetoric of his movement to include a blend of Marxist themes and popular Islamic themes that could resonate with the lower middle classes with whom he was most at home.

For illegally resurrecting the ENA in 1933, French courts sentenced Messali to six months in prison. When, in 1936, Islamic reformers and liberal assimilationists seemed on the point of reaching an accord with France's Popular Front government, Messali traveled back to Algeria for the first time in 13 years to register his objections. In a stirring speech delivered August 2 in the Algiers municipal stadium, Messali stunned and thrilled his audience by resoundingly rejecting assimilation. Thus he began the process of implanting the independence movement on Algerian soil. When the ENA was outlawed again in 1937, Messali founded the Party of the Algerian People (PPA). For this the authorities jailed him in August 1937, and he spent most of the next nine years in prison or under house arrest. As the 1930s advanced into the 1940s and France rejected one moderate reform initiative after another, Messali Hadj, even in prison, became the only alternative for the growing body of Algerians for whom the colonial status quo had become insupportable.

Freed in 1946, Messali founded the Mouvement pour le triomphe des libertés démocratiques (MTLD) as a successor to the outlawed PPA. Unusually tall, bearded, and always wearing the traditional jalaba with a tarbush or a red fez, Messali Hadj became the most potent symbol of Algerian nationalist aspirations. His organization, however, was soon riven by internal dissensions. These included divisions as to the relative merits of political as opposed to revolutionary strategies and arguments over the decision-making process and leadership, which in turn related to both ideological and generational differences. When, in 1952, Messali was ordered to house arrest in western France, intra-party communications worsened and differences between him and other party leaders grew. By 1954 disillusioned younger activists began deserting the squabbling MTLD, and by October they created the National Liberation Front (FLN), which launched the Algerian War of Independence on November 1, 1954.

The FLN called upon patriotic Algerians of all political groupings to rally to its banner. Most eventually did so, but Messali refused, going on to found his own Algerian National Movement (MNA). First in Algeria and then in France, MNA loyalists and the FLN entered into bloody, fratricidal battles, with the MNA gradually losing ground in both places. When Charles de Gaulle came to power in 1958, Messali Hadj for the first and only time in his life urged compromise between Algerians and the French. With his effectiveness waning, he was released from house arrest in January 1959 and settled in Gouvieux, north of Paris. There he lived until he died of cancer on June 3, 1974. Messali Hadj was buried in his hometown of Tlemcen four days later.

Further Reading

The most detailed study of Messali Hadj's life and career is Benjamin Stora's Messali Hadj, pionnier du nationalisme algérien, (1898-1974) (1982). His career is also discussed in John Ruedy, Modern Algeria. The Origins and Development of a Nation (1992); Charles-Robert Ageron, Histoire de l'Algérie contemporaine, Vol. II (1979); and Mahfoud Kaddache, Histoire du nationalisme algérien and Question nationale et politique algérienne, 1919-1951, 2 vols. (1981).

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Mideast & N. Africa Encyclopedia: Messali al-Hadj
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1898 - 1974

Renowned Algerian nationalist.

Messali al-Hadj was born in Tlemcen and was the son of a cobbler. He received a religious education influenced by the Darqawa sect of Islam and later, in France, enrolled in Arabic language university courses. While serving in the French army from 1918 to 1921, Messali was disturbed by discrimination within the ranks and distressed by the demise of the Ottoman Empire during the post - World War I years. He was attracted by labor politics, which drew him to a French Communist party - affiliated movement known as the Etoile Nord-Africaine (ENA; Star of North Africa). He became its leader in 1926, but the ENA disbanded in 1929. Messali reorganized it in 1933 and distanced it from the French Communists as a new Algerian nationalist organization called the Glorieuse Etoile (Glorious Star - then renamed the Union Nationale des Musul-mans Nord-Africans [National Union of North African Muslims] in 1935). It was dedicated to achieving an Arab Muslim independent state of Algeria. After a sojourn in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1935 with the cultural and political nationalist Chekib Arslan (a Druze leader), Messali placed greater emphasis on Arabism within his movement.

Messali supported the Popular Front (France) but did not endorse its proposed assimilationist Blum - Viollette legislation (which, anyway, never passed in Parliament in 1936). His criticism of France's colonial policy and his agitation in Algeria led to the official dissolution of his movement in January 1937, although Messali responded quickly by forming the Parti du Peuple Algérien (PPA; Algerian People's Party) in March. He was arrested several months later, freed in August 1939, only to be incarcerated again in November. Messali was tried by a Vichy (pro-German French government during World War II) court in March 1941 and sentenced to sixteen years of hard labor. He remained under arrest after the Allied forces landed in North Africa during World War II (late 1942). Messali did not concur with Ferhat Abbas's "Manifesto of the Algerian People" of 1943 but in 1944 agreed to head the Amis du Manifeste et de la Liberté (AML; Friends of the Manifesto and Liberty), an organization that briefly (1944 - 1945) united nationalist movements and called for Algerian autonomy. The announcement in April 1945 of Messali's impending deportation to exile in France heightened tensions but, by that time, Messali's PPA had infiltrated the AML, directing it toward a confrontation with the French colonialists. This was dramatically disclosed in the Sétif Revolt in May when, during the parade celebrating victory in Europe, nationalist placards provoked violence that resulted in 103 European deaths and thousands of retributive Muslim fatalities. The AML disintegrated and the nationalists resumed their separate paths.

In 1946, Messali organized the Mouvement pour le Triomphe des Libertés Démocratiques (MTLD; Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties). The younger elite, tempered by the Sétif riots, wanted direct action and formed the Organisation Spéciale (OS; Special Organization), which was still linked to the MTLD. The OS paramilitary operations (1947 - 1950) led to the arrest of its leaders and its demise. The MTLD concurrently faced a Berber crisis, as the Berbers (or Kabylia) believed that the organization was too Arabized, and they questioned Messali's authoritarianism. In 1953, the MTLD split between the centralists and the Messalists over the role of immediate and violent attacks against French colonialism. At first, Messali rejected the centralist position, which soon transmuted into the Front de Libération Nationale (FLN; National Liberation Front). The FLN's attacks, from 31 October to 1 November 1954, convinced Messali that he had to organize his own military group; it appeared in December as the Mouvement National Algérien (MNA; Algerian National Movement).

During the Algerian War of Independence, the MNA and the FLN's Armée de Libération Nationale (National Liberation Army) campaigned against each other. This fratricide was underscored by the MNA's highly publicized and grievous losses at Mélouza (south of Kabylia) in 1957. Messali's movement lost its credibility (i.e., the Bellounis affair) and its predominant influence over the emigrant community. France intimated a willingness to initiate discussions with the MNA before the Evian negotiations in 1961, but this was generally viewed as a stratagem challenging the FLN's legitimacy.

Even after the war of independence was won by Algeria, Messali remained in exile in France until his death in 1974. He was returned for burial in Tlemcen, the place of his birth. He and his ideas were always viewed as a threat - even after the October 1988 riots and the political liberalization they inspired, a regenerated PPA was denied legal status. Nevertheless, the extensive historical section of Algeria's revised National Charter (1986) could not ignore Messali's commitment and contribution to Algeria's independence.

Bibliography

Naylor, Phillip C., and Heggoy, Alf A. Historical Dictionary of Algeria, 2d edition. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1994.

PHILLIP C. NAYLOR

Wikipedia: Messali Hadj
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Ahmed Ben Messali Hadj (Arabic: مصالي الحاج‎) (1898 in Tlemcen, Algeria - June 3, 1974 in Paris, France) was an Algerian nationalist politician dedicated to the independence of his homeland from France. He co-founded the 'Étoile Nord-Africaine', the 'Parti du Peuple Algérien' and the 'Mouvement pour le Triomphe des Libertés Démocratiques' before dissociating himself from the armed struggle for Independence in 1954. He also founded the 'Mouvement National Algerien' to counteract the ongoing efforts of the 'Front de Libération Nationale'.

Contents

Background

In 1927 Messali Hadj was elected leader of an Algerian workers' association based in Paris. He attended the Anti-Imperialism Congress in Belgium that year, which created the League against Imperialism, and met with Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh. Back in France and in his native Algeria, then a French colony, Messali helped build an underground movement and work towards Algerian independence. In the 1920s he started Étoile Nord-Africaine (North African Star), one of the first modern Algerian nationalist organizations, and in 1937 he founded the Algerian People's Party (PPA). Both groups were suppressed by France, and in November 1937, Messali was put on trial for agitation, and imprisoned for several years.

Radicalization in Algeria

In May 1945, nationalist riots and clashes between French troops and native Algerians during World War II victory celebrations led to reprisals; tens of thousands of Algerians were killed. Many realized then that the independence movement would not succeed by peaceful means.

In 1946 Messali founded the Mouvement pour le Triomphe des Libertés Démocratiques (MTLD). Messali lived under house arrest in Brittany, France, and could not travel to Algeria. His group was perceived as moderate and accommodating, but his revolutionary ideals alienated parts of Algeria's conservative Muslim society. Messali's brand of Algerian nationalism gained its most important following among Algerian workers in France, while the FLN and other grass-roots groups took hold in Algeria.

Leader of the MNA

After the outbreak of the Algerian War of Independence in 1954 which was started against his wishes, Messali created the Mouvement National Algérien, or MNA (French Algerian National Movement). Messali's followers clashed with the FLN; his was the only socialist faction not absorbed into the Front's fight for independence. The FLN's armed wing, the Armé de Libération Nationale (ALN) wiped out the MNA's guerrilla apparatus in Algeria early on in the war; the infighting then continued in France, during the so-called "café wars" over control of the expatriate community. In 1958 Messali supports the proposals of President Charles de Gaulle and France probably attempted to capitalize on the internal rivalries of the nationalist movement. During negotiation talks in 1961 the FLN did not accept the participation of the MNA and led to new outbursts of fighting.

After independence

In 1962, as Algeria gained independence from France, Messali tried to transform his group into a legitimate political party, but it was not successful, and the FLN seized control over Algeria as a one-party state.

Messali Hadj remained in exile near Paris, with little influence over Algerian politics. He died in 1974.

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