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According to ''[[YemenOnline]]'', the claim of Jewish descent is a "fantasy". According to this version, Abdul Rahman was not the adopted Zekharia, but his step-brother.<ref name="yemenonline" /> Further, Abdul Raheem, who was close to aided his step-brother Abdul Rahman, was the real Zekharia Hadad.<ref name="yemenonline">{{cite news|url=http://www.yemenonline.info/news-926.html|title=Haaretz Dreams |date=2008-11-21|publisher=''[[YemenOnline]]''|accessdate=2009-02-13}}</ref>
According to ''[[YemenOnline]]'', the claim of Jewish descent is a "fantasy". According to this version, Abdul Rahman was not the adopted Zekharia, but his step-brother.<ref name="yemenonline" /> Further, Abdul Raheem, who was close to aided his step-brother Abdul Rahman, was the real Zekharia Hadad.<ref name="yemenonline">{{cite news|url=http://www.yemenonline.info/news-926.html|title=Haaretz Dreams |date=2008-11-21|publisher=''[[YemenOnline]]''|accessdate=2009-02-13}}</ref>

==Biography==
The Guardian, 25 March 1998


By BRIAN WHITAKER ..

IN A COUNTRY where plots and intrigue were the norm, and political careers often provided a short cut to the cemetery, Abd al-Rahman al-Iryani, who has died aged 89, had the luck and astuteness to survive. After years of imprisonment and a narrow escape from the executioner's sword, he became the only civilian ever to hold the presidency of northern Yemen.
He was born in Iryan, a village among towering peaks at the head of Wadi Zabid, where narrow strips of soil perched on terraces provide fruit and vegetables. At times, the family home, a large house on a rock overlooking the village, would appear cut off from the world by the clouds below. Even today, it has no mains electricity and is reached by a precarious single-track road.
Despite this isolated rural setting, the Iryanis were a prominent qadi family - the class that by custom has produced judges versed in Islamic law.
After a traditional Islamic schooling in the capital, Sana'a, Abd al-Rahman joined al-Ahrar ('the free'), an organisation of educated young Yemenis committed to overthrowing the reactionary monarch, Imam Yahya.
But when tribesmen linked to al-Ahrar assassinated Yahya in 1948, success proved shortlived: within a month, Yahya's son, Ahmad, assumed the throne.
Several plotters were executed and al-Iryani, too, was eventually sentenced to death. Only minutes before he was due to lose his head, Imam Ahmad spared him.
Northern Yemen finally became a republic in 1962 - though civil war continued, with the monarchists supported by the Saudis and the republicans by Nasser's Egyptian forces. With the departure of the Egyptians in 1967, al-Iryani played a key role in the process of national reconciliation; despite his republicanism, his obvious piety made him more acceptable to the Saudis. Coming to power in an unusually bloodless coup in 1967, he found a government severely weakened by war and trapped between the irreconcilable demands of an urban population impatient for reform, the resistance of conservative tribal sheikhs, and the army's insatiable appetite for weapons.
These difficulties were exacerbated by an epic struggle to sack his prime minister, Abdullah al-Hajari, who had allowed inefficiency and corruption to flourish. By way of protest, President al-Iryani went into self-imposed exile until, in February 1974, he felt strong enough to replace al-Hajari with the more progressive Dr Hassan Makki. By then, though, it was too late.
A plot to oust al-Iryani was discovered; rather than resist, he resigned and went to live in Syria.
This unsatisfying end to his presidency belies the fact that al-Iryani was one of the key architects of modern Yemen, seeking to meld the conflicting interests of modernists and traditionalists into a workable system of government. He played a major part in drafting the 1970 constitution, which - unusually for a developing country - survived almost intact for 20 years.
Among its most important innovations was a large, mostly elected, consultative council - the first (indirect) elections in Yemeni history took place in April 1971.
However, since political parties were banned and council members generally lacked any coherent ideology, it became what one writer described as 'an assembly of notables, oligarchs grouped into small shifting factions and only tenuously linked to one another and to their constituents.' One of al-Iryani's main difficulties was that, in order to achieve a reconciliation between the royalists and republicans in the aftermath of the civil war, he had to expel the modernist left and give seats in the council to prominent traditionalist sheikhs - which resulted in a narrow, centre-right regime.
The British withdrawal from Aden in 1967 provided the first opportunity for north and south Yemen to unite - a goal which al-Iryani espoused, in the hope that it would reduce internal conflicts. Two unification agreements, signed in 1972, were thwarted mainly by the northern tribes during his presidency, but they provided the basis for eventual unification in 1990.
Despite his long absence in Damascus, al-Iryani remained a popular and respected figure, making occasional visits to his homeland. His nephew, Dr Abd al-Karim al-Iryani, is a former prime minister of north Yemen and currently foreign minister of the unified state. Only hours before his death, perhaps aware that the end was near, he called family and long-lost friends on the phone, then asked for a drive around the sights of his adopted city. It was a journey he did not quite complete.
Qadi Abd al-Rahman al-IRYANI, politician, born July 1909; died March 14, 1998


==Participation in the Constitution Revolution==
==Participation in the Constitution Revolution==

Revision as of 06:16, 27 March 2009

File:ZekhariaHadad.jpg
Abdul Rahman al-Iryani

Abdul Rahman Yahya Al-Iryani (Arabic: عبد الرحمن الإرياني) (born 1910, died 14 March 1998) was the President of the Yemen Arab Republic from November 5, 1967 to June 13, 1974. Al-Iryani was a leader of the al-Ahrar opposition group, which the Mutawakkilite Kingdom of Yemen.[1] He served as minister of religious endowments under northern Yemen's first national government and is the only civilian to have led northern Yemen.[1]

Early life

According to Yossi Melman of Haaretz, Dorit Mizrahi of the Mishpacha Magazine, and an article in the weekly HaOlam HaZeh, there are allegations that al-Iryani was born Zekharia Hadad to a Yemenite Jewish family in Ibb.[2][3] According to this version, in 1918, there was a drought in Yemen, which had a severe effect on the Jews, who were generally worse off then the Arabs.[2] Both his parents died, and he was then adopted by the Al-Iryani, a powerful Muslim family, was renamed "Abdul Rahman al-Iryani" and converted to Islam.[2] At that time, Yemen was ruled by Yahya Muhammad Hamid ed-Din, who decreed that all orphaned Jewish children must be disconnected from their religion and be given over for adoption to a Muslim family.[2][3]

According to YemenOnline, the claim of Jewish descent is a "fantasy". According to this version, Abdul Rahman was not the adopted Zekharia, but his step-brother.[3] Further, Abdul Raheem, who was close to aided his step-brother Abdul Rahman, was the real Zekharia Hadad.[3]

Biography

The Guardian, 25 March 1998


By BRIAN WHITAKER ..

IN A COUNTRY where plots and intrigue were the norm, and political careers often provided a short cut to the cemetery, Abd al-Rahman al-Iryani, who has died aged 89, had the luck and astuteness to survive. After years of imprisonment and a narrow escape from the executioner's sword, he became the only civilian ever to hold the presidency of northern Yemen. He was born in Iryan, a village among towering peaks at the head of Wadi Zabid, where narrow strips of soil perched on terraces provide fruit and vegetables. At times, the family home, a large house on a rock overlooking the village, would appear cut off from the world by the clouds below. Even today, it has no mains electricity and is reached by a precarious single-track road. Despite this isolated rural setting, the Iryanis were a prominent qadi family - the class that by custom has produced judges versed in Islamic law. After a traditional Islamic schooling in the capital, Sana'a, Abd al-Rahman joined al-Ahrar ('the free'), an organisation of educated young Yemenis committed to overthrowing the reactionary monarch, Imam Yahya. But when tribesmen linked to al-Ahrar assassinated Yahya in 1948, success proved shortlived: within a month, Yahya's son, Ahmad, assumed the throne. Several plotters were executed and al-Iryani, too, was eventually sentenced to death. Only minutes before he was due to lose his head, Imam Ahmad spared him. Northern Yemen finally became a republic in 1962 - though civil war continued, with the monarchists supported by the Saudis and the republicans by Nasser's Egyptian forces. With the departure of the Egyptians in 1967, al-Iryani played a key role in the process of national reconciliation; despite his republicanism, his obvious piety made him more acceptable to the Saudis. Coming to power in an unusually bloodless coup in 1967, he found a government severely weakened by war and trapped between the irreconcilable demands of an urban population impatient for reform, the resistance of conservative tribal sheikhs, and the army's insatiable appetite for weapons. These difficulties were exacerbated by an epic struggle to sack his prime minister, Abdullah al-Hajari, who had allowed inefficiency and corruption to flourish. By way of protest, President al-Iryani went into self-imposed exile until, in February 1974, he felt strong enough to replace al-Hajari with the more progressive Dr Hassan Makki. By then, though, it was too late. A plot to oust al-Iryani was discovered; rather than resist, he resigned and went to live in Syria. This unsatisfying end to his presidency belies the fact that al-Iryani was one of the key architects of modern Yemen, seeking to meld the conflicting interests of modernists and traditionalists into a workable system of government. He played a major part in drafting the 1970 constitution, which - unusually for a developing country - survived almost intact for 20 years. Among its most important innovations was a large, mostly elected, consultative council - the first (indirect) elections in Yemeni history took place in April 1971. However, since political parties were banned and council members generally lacked any coherent ideology, it became what one writer described as 'an assembly of notables, oligarchs grouped into small shifting factions and only tenuously linked to one another and to their constituents.' One of al-Iryani's main difficulties was that, in order to achieve a reconciliation between the royalists and republicans in the aftermath of the civil war, he had to expel the modernist left and give seats in the council to prominent traditionalist sheikhs - which resulted in a narrow, centre-right regime. The British withdrawal from Aden in 1967 provided the first opportunity for north and south Yemen to unite - a goal which al-Iryani espoused, in the hope that it would reduce internal conflicts. Two unification agreements, signed in 1972, were thwarted mainly by the northern tribes during his presidency, but they provided the basis for eventual unification in 1990. Despite his long absence in Damascus, al-Iryani remained a popular and respected figure, making occasional visits to his homeland. His nephew, Dr Abd al-Karim al-Iryani, is a former prime minister of north Yemen and currently foreign minister of the unified state. Only hours before his death, perhaps aware that the end was near, he called family and long-lost friends on the phone, then asked for a drive around the sights of his adopted city. It was a journey he did not quite complete. Qadi Abd al-Rahman al-IRYANI, politician, born July 1909; died March 14, 1998

Participation in the Constitution Revolution

Al-Iryani actively opposed the kings of the Mutawakkalite Kingdom of Yemen, helping to lead al-Ahrar ("the free") in pushing for a republic. In February 1948, he participated in the "Constitution Revolution" of the Free Yemeni Movement against the King (Imam) aiming at the establishment of constitutional monarchy. After its failiure, virtually the entire al-Iryani family, including the qadi and his sons, were killed. He was imprisoned for about 7 years after the fall of the revolution, which stood for only a few weeks. Al-Iryani was sentenced to death by beheading in 1955 for his activities with al-Ahrar, minutes before his execution by sword, he was granted a reprieve by King Imam Ahmed. He spent more than 15 years until his release in 1962.[1]

Term as prime minister of Yemen and coup d'état

In the same year, The Yemen Arab Republic was created when the Mutawakkalite King, Muhammad al-Badr, was deposed. Al-Iryani served as the Prime Minister of the new republic from 5 October 1963 to 10 February 1964. He also served as a minister of justice, and a member of the presidential council.

He opposed the Egyptian and Saudi interference in Yemen affairs and led with two of his colleagues, Ahmed Noaman and Mohamad Al-Zubairi, a strong movement against the foreign involvement in the Yemeni civil war between republicans and royalists. He was held in Egypt with Noaman in 1966 while their partner Al-Zubairi was assassinated earlier. He was allowed to go back to Yemen in November 1967 where he became the second President of the Yemen Arab Republic on 5 November 1967. In 1970, he arrived at a national conciliation agreement with the supporters of the royal regime and established a formal relation with Saudi Arabia. In 1972, he reached an agreement with South Yemen for the unification of the two parts of the country which constituted the basic foundations for the unification of 1990. It was also during his regime that Yemen had parliamentary elections and permanent constitution for the first time. He served until a coup d'état led by Ibrahim al-Hamdi and the military succeeded in seizing power on 13 June 1974.

After the coup, Al-Iryani went into exile in Syria in 1974, where he eventually died in 1998, aged 88. His body was flown to Yemen, where he was buried.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Abdul-Rahman al-Iryani, Ex-Yemen President, 89". New York Times. 1998-03-17. Retrieved 2009-02-13. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  2. ^ a b c d Melman, Yossi. "Our man in Sanaa: Ex-Yemen president was once trainee rabbi". Haaretz. Retrieved 2009-02-13. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ a b c d "Haaretz Dreams". YemenOnline. 2008-11-21. Retrieved 2009-02-13. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)