Adila Bayhum-al-Jazairi (1900–1975) was a Syrian (originally Lebanese) feminist, independence activist and philanthropist. She was a pioneer of the Syrian women's movement, as well as supporter of Syrian independence from France.
She was born in a wealthy family in Beirut. She participated as a journalist in the magazine Fata al-Arabi. In 1922, she married a member of the Jaza'iri family and settled in Damascus in Syria.
She was a Co-founder of the Damascus Women's Awakening Society in 1927.[1] She was the founder of the Dawhet al-Adab Society in 1928, which founded an Arab nationalist girls' school with the same name.[2] For her effort she was given the Medal of Educational Honor.[3] She was a Co-founder of the Syrian Women's Union in 1928, and served as its President between 1933 and 1967 and Honorary President in 1967–1975.[4] She was the Syrian delegate to the Eastern Women's Conference for the Defense of Palestine in Cairo in 1938.
In this time period, the Syrian women's movement advocated unveiling since the viewed the veil as a part of Islamic gender segregation.[5] Adila Bayhum did not actively participate in the campaign, but still came to collide with the conservatives in the issue. As a feminist, she was a target of Muslim conservatives who advocated for women to live in seclusion, veil and not interfere in life outside of the home. In 1943, the Islamic movement al-Gharra was informed that there was to be an anti veil demonstration at a ball hosted by Adila Bayhum, where women attending were to unveil, and the al-Gharra therefore threatened to attack and put fire to the house.[6] As a response to the threat, Adila Bayhum stopped her donations of free milk to the poor quarters of the city for 24 hours, resulting in riots among the poor, who successfully demonstrated against the al-Gharra, demanding that they leave Adila Bayhum alone.[7]
As a modernist, Adila Bayhum supported women's rights to not wear the veil, to vote and to be elected to political office, however as an national independence activist she favored Syrian independence first, and women's rights later.[8] She gave her support to Husni al-Zaim, who promised her to introduce women's suffrage in Syria, a reform that was finally introduced in 1953.[9] In 1960, the President of Syria appointed her Chair of the African-Asian Arab Women's Association.
In January 1945, Adila Bayhum arranged the biggest women's march in the history of Syria, as a protest against the French refusal to discuss Syrian independence.[10]
In 1971, she was appointed to serve as Member of Parliament by the President of Syria.[11]
References
edit- ^ Sami M. Moubayed: Steel & Silk: Men and Women who Shaped Syria 1900–2000 430–432
- ^ Sami M. Moubayed: Steel & Silk: Men and Women who Shaped Syria 1900–2000 430–432
- ^ Sami Moubayed: The Makers of Modern Syria: The Rise and Fall of Syrian Democracy 1918–1958 124
- ^ Ghada Hashem Talhami: Historical Dictionary of Women in the Middle East and North Africa 187
- ^ Sami M. Moubayed: Steel & Silk: Men and Women who Shaped Syria 1900–2000 430–432
- ^ Sami M. Moubayed: Steel & Silk: Men and Women who Shaped Syria 1900–2000 430–432
- ^ Sami M. Moubayed: Steel & Silk: Men and Women who Shaped Syria 1900–2000 430–432
- ^ Sami M. Moubayed: Steel & Silk: Men and Women who Shaped Syria 1900–2000 430–432
- ^ Sami M. Moubayed: Steel & Silk: Men and Women who Shaped Syria 1900–2000 430–432
- ^ Sami M. Moubayed: Steel & Silk: Men and Women who Shaped Syria 1900–2000 430–432
- ^ Sami Moubayed: Under the Black Flag: An Exclusive Insight into the Inner Workings of ISIS 33
- Fruma Zachs, Sharon Halevi: Gendering Culture in Greater Syria: Intellectuals and Ideology in the Late
- James A. Reilly: Fragile Nation, Shattered Land: The Modern History of Syria