(Redirected from Arabi Pasha)Colonel 'Ahmed Orabi' (
April 1,
1841 -
September 21,
1911), (
Arabic: 'Ø£ØÙ…د عرابي') (
contemporary English: ''Ahmed Arabi'' ) also known as 'Urabi
Pasha' or 'Orabi Pasha', was the first
Egyptian army officer
[1] and later an army general who revolted against the
khedive and European domination of Egypt in
1879 in what has become known as the
Urabi Revolt.
He was born a peasant in the small town of
Ghraib Rznh (Turkish: Hürriyet), near
Zagazig in the
Sharqia Governorate, approximately 80 kilometres to the north of Cairo.
[2] He was the son of a village leader and one of the wealthier members of the community, which allowed him to get a decent education. After completing elementary education in his home village, he joined the Islamic
Al-Azhar University, to complete his schooling in 1849.
He entered the army and moved up quickly through the ranks of the army, reaching Lieutenant Colonel by age 20.
He was a galvanizing speaker. Because of his origins he was at the time, and is still often today, viewed as an authentic voice of the Egyptian people. Ahmed Urabi's first intervention in politics occurred when Khedive
Tawfiq issued a new law preventing peasants from becoming officers. Urabi lead the group protesting the preference shown to Turkish officers. Urabi and his followers, which included most of the army, were successful and the law was repealed.
He and his allies in the army joined with the reformers and with the support of the peasants launched a broader effort to try to wrest Egypt from foreign control, and also to end the absolutist regime of the Khedive. The revolt spread to express resentment of the undue influence of foreigners, especially Christians.
He was first promoted, then made under-secretary for war, and ultimately a member of the cabinet. Plans were begun to create a parliamentary assembly. During the last months of the revolt (July to September
1882), it was claimed that Urabi held the office of prime minister.
Feeling threatened, Khedive Tawfiq called on the sultan to quell the revolt, but the Sublime Porte hesitated to employ troops against Muslims who were opposing foreign Christian interference. The British were especially concerned that Urabi would default on Egypt's massive debt and that he might try to gain control of the
Suez Canal. Thus when anti-European riots broke out in
Alexandria in
1882 the British fleet opened fire on the city's forts. In September of that year a British army was landed in the Canal Zone and on
September 13,
1882 they defeated Urabi's army at the
Battle of Tel al-Kebir. Urabi was captured. The khedive and his cabinet sentenced him to death, but under pressure from
Lord Dufferin, the British ambassador at Constantinople, who had been sent to Egypt as high commissioner, the sentence was commuted and Urabi was exiled to the British colony of
Ceylon, where he spent the rest of his life.
While the British intervention was meant to be short term, it in fact persisted until
1952. Egypt was effectively made a colony until
1922. Urabi's revolt also had a long lasting significance as the first instance of Egyptian anti-colonial nationalism, which would later play a very important role in Egyptian history. Especially under
Nasser, Urabi would be regarded as an Egyptian patriot, a national hero.
★ The earliest published work of
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory - later to embrace
Irish Nationalism and have an important role in the cultiral life of Iraland - was ''Arabi and His Household'' (1882), a pamphlet (originally a letter to ''
The Times'' newspaper) in support of Ahmed Orabi ("Arabi" in a transliteration common at the time).
References
1. 'Birth of Ahmad Orabi (A Revolutionary Leader), March 31' by ArabicNews
2. 'Far and Away' by Egypt Today