Mohamed Rahmoune
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Mohamed Rahmoune | |
---|---|
File:محمد (رابح) رحمون (1940-2022).jpg | |
Born | Mohamed Rahmoune 1940 |
Died | 4 February 2022 | (aged 81–82)
Resting place | Thénia Cemetery, Algeria |
Other names | Si Rabah, Rabah Rahmoune |
Known for | |
Movement | FLN, ALN |
Mohamed Rahmoune (1940 – 4 February 2022), commonly known as Si Rabah or simply as Rahmoune, was a prominent revolutionary leader during the Algerian war of independence as a member of the Front de Libération Nationale (FLN; National Liberation Front) that launched an armed revolt throughout Algeria and issued a proclamation calling for a sovereign Algerian state.[1][2]
Education
Rahmoune was born in 1940 in the village of Soumâa, located 53 km east of the city of Algiers, into a kabyle maraboutic family descended from the maliki and sufi theologian Sidi Boushaki (1394-1453).[3][4][5][6]
His birth in the middle of the Second World War meant the abolition of civil life in French Algeria and the establishment of the state of exception with the suspension of the participation of his uncle Mohamed Seghir Boushaki (1869-1959) in the cogwheels of the colonial administration as adviser and representative of the Algerian natives.[7]
Despite this extraordinary situation, he began in 1945 to study with his brother Djilali the precepts of the Quran and the Arabic language in the Zawiyet Sidi Boushaki like his other cousins, under the patronage and supervision of the Rahmaniyya mufti and muqaddam Ali Boushaki (1855-1965) with the other imams and teachers as the theologian Brahim Boushaki (1912-1997).[8][9]
The massacres of May 1945, for their part, had finally sealed the conviction of the Algerian mountain and rural population that the participatory procedure in local elections could not take away the civil and political rights claimed since the 1920 elections in Algeria, and this is so since Mohamed Rahmoune was integrated from a very young age in a course that only saw independence torn by the weapons in the hands of his generation.[10][11]
Among his closest cousins who inspired him in Soumâa with nationalist and independence fervor is his cousin Yahia Boushaki (1935-1960) who sponsored and supported him since 1951 to prepare him for the tough and decisive tasks of insurrectionary action against the French army.[12][13]
War of Independence
Since the outbreak of the Algerian revolution when he was only 14 years old, he was well prepared politically and physically to join the maquis and comfort the Algerian warriors against the enemy troops in order to definitively dislodge the French colonial system from the land of Algeria.[14][15][16]
But after the organization of the Soummam conference on August 20, 1956, and the revolutionary structuring of the Algerian territory, the armed action was entrusted to Mohamed's congeners over 16 years of age to ignite the insurrection to perpetuate it by attacking the colony's interests in cities, such as Thénia (formerly Ménerville) which was only 3 km north of his village of Soumâa.[17][18][19]
Thus, he participated, together with his cousin Bouzid Boushaki, in planting a bomb in the post office in the center of Thénia in 1956, as well as various sabotage actions in the colonial agricultural estates around this strategic railway city.[20][21][22]
After his brother Djilali Rahmoune died as a martyr (shahid) in the field of honor in 1957, he joined the ranks of the National Liberation Army (ALN) in the third district, the first region, in the fourth historical wilaya, where he participated in many battles.[23][24]
Prison
After participating in a 1957 military ambush against French soldiers near the town of Beni Amrane, Mujahid Rahmoune was captured with some surviving soldiers to be taken to the Ferme Gauthier torture and physical abuse camp in the north of the town of Souk El-Had.[25][26][27]
He was then tortured with electric shocks and brutal traumas while he was buried with his cousin Bouzid Boushaki in the pits of the vats of this wine estate that was transformed by the torturers Scarfo and Mathieu among others into a concentration camp and extrajudicial killing.[10][28][29]
While many detainees in this sinister place of torture succumbed to the pain and abuse they suffered, and their bodies and remains were hidden in wells or thrown into the waters of the Isser River, Rahmoune was transferred after a few weeks of torture to the Serkadji Prison in the Casbah of Algiers with the local leaders of the revolution to stand trial.[30][31][29]
Escape
Rahmoune managed to escape from Boghar prison in 1959 with four mujahideen acolytes, and this after recovering from the aftermath of the 1957 battle and the various phases of torture he suffered.[32]
After having crossed the Chahbounia ravines with his friends, he was picked up by the soldiers of the Algerian Revolutionary Army (ALN) who took him to the headquarters of the fourth historical wilaya to meet Colonel M'Hamed Bougarra (1928-1959) who appointed Rahmoune as military secretary in the first region of this historic wilaya.[33]
He then asked the revolutionary command to post him to the Sour El Ghozlane (former Aumale) region that he knew well and in which he had strong revolutionary ties, and there he continued his subversive action against French settlers and soldiers.[34]
While traveling in 1960 to Mount Dirrah overlooking Sour El Ghozlane to carry out one of the military operations he was orchestrating, he was exposed to direct confrontation with enemy French forces, during which he was seriously injured in the knee.[7]
This restrictive injury made it difficult for him to move in the maquis, which made it easier for the French soldiers to arrest him again and transfer him to the torture center (the second office) in Sour El Ghozlane. Rahmoune was re-arrested at Boghar Prison, and immediately spent 7 months in the CMS prison where he was repeatedly tortured by French soldiers. He remained in custody at the CMS until February 23, 1962, a few weeks before the ceasefire on March 19 on the eve of independence after the Évian Accords have been concluded.[2]
Death
Moudjahid Rahmoune died on February 4, 2022, at the home of his family in Thénia at the age of 82.[34]
He was buried the following day at the Djebanat El Ghorba Cemetery[35] in southern Thénia on the outskirts of the village of Soumâa in front of his family and friends and a delegation from the Algerian government.[2]
See also
- Algerian nationalism
- Algerian War of Independence
- National Liberation Front (Algeria)
- National Liberation Army (Algeria)
- List of Algerians
- Ministry of Mujahideen
- National Mujahideen Organization
- National Organization for the Children of the Martyrs
- National Organization for the Sons of the Mujahideen
References
- ^ "وزير المجاهدين يعزي في وفاة المجاهد رابح رحمون". Aps.dz. 6 February 2022. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
- ^ a b c "Le ministre des Moudjahidines présente ses condoléances suite au décès du moudjahid Rabah Rahmoune". Aps.dz. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
- ^ "الضوء اللامع لأهل القرن التاسع" – via Internet Archive.
- ^ الرحمن/السخاوي, شمس الدين محمد بن عبد (1 January 2003). الضوء اللامع لأهل القرن التاسع 1-6 ج1. Dar Al Kotob Al Ilmiyah دار الكتب العلمية. ISBN 9782745137135 – via Google Books.
- ^ "شجرة النور الزكية في طبقات المالكية - محمد مخلوف ( نسخة واضحة ومنسقة )" – via Internet Archive.
- ^ مخلوف ،الشيخ, محمد بن محمد (1 January 2010). شجرة النور الزكية في طبقات المالكية 1-2 ج1. Dar Al Kotob Al Ilmiyah دار الكتب العلمية. ISBN 9782745137340 – via Google Books.
- ^ a b "Le ministre des Moudjahidines présente ses condoléances suite au décès du moudjahid Rabah Rahmoune". Djazairess.
- ^ "ولاية بومرداس: وفاة الأمين الولائي لمنظمة المجاهدين رحمون رابح". بـــاك برس.
- ^ "Zaouïa of Sidi Boushaki". wikimapia.org.
- ^ a b ""Le camp de torture Haouch Goutier, témoin des atrocités de l'occupant"". Djazairess.
- ^ "Montagne Thala Oufella (Soumâa) de Thénia". wikimapia.org.
- ^ Guenaïzia rend hommage à la gendarmerie Archived 22 December 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Si la torture nous était contée ..." 10 May 2016.
- ^ "شهادات مُفجعة عن انتهاكات مروّعة لحقوق الإنسان". جزايرس.
- ^ "L'histoire d'une région martyrisée". Djazairess.
- ^ "Les camps de tortures à Boumerdès, un autre témoin de la barbarie du colonisateur". Aps.dz. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
- ^ "مركز التعذيب "غوتيي"..شاهد على فظاعة الاستعمار". جزايرس.
- ^ "BOUMERDES: L'histoire de la révolution algérienne revisitée". DZAYER24. 19 January 2016.
- ^ "BOUMERDES: L'histoire de la révolution algérienne revisitée". Djazairess.
- ^ "Alger républicain / directeur Pascal Pia". Gallica. 3 July 1948.
- ^ "Alger républicain / directeur Pascal Pia". Gallica. 31 May 1950.
- ^ "معتقل "حوش قوتي" بسوق الحد (بومرداس ) : شاهد على انتهاك المحتل لأدمية الإنسان". Aps.dz. 29 October 2017. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
- ^ "معتقل الاستنطاق "حوش قوتي" بسوق الحد: تأخر ترحيل القاطنين يرهن تحويله إلى معلم تذكاري". Aps.dz. 15 January 2020. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
- ^ "بومرداس : تأخر ترحيل قاطني معتقل "حوش قوتي" يعرقل تحويله لمعلم تذكاري | يومية الاتحاد الجزائرية". Retrieved 16 August 2023.
- ^ "شاهد على بشاعة جرائم الاستعمار في حق المجاهدين والمدنيّين العزل". جزايرس.
- ^ "نحو تحويل معتقل التعذيب "حوش قوتي" ببلدية سوق الحد إلى معلم تذكاري". جزايرس.
- ^ "المساء - مركز التعذيب "غوتيي"..شاهد على فظاعة الاستعمار". El-massa.com. 10 October 2017. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
- ^ "مديرية المجاهدين تشرع في تصوير مركز التعذيب "حوش قوتي" بسوق الحد". جزايرس.
- ^ a b "Si la torture nous était contée …". Djazairess.
- ^ "مراكز التعذيب ببومرداس شاهدة على وحشية الاستعمار وانتهاكه لآدمية الإنسان الجزائري". Aps.dz. 30 October 2019. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
- ^ "المساء - مركز "غوتتيه" لتعذيب المجاهدين.. يشهد على فظاعة الاستعمار". El-massa.com. 31 October 2014. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
- ^ "وزير المجاهدين يعزي في وفاة المجاهد رابح رحمون". Aps.dz. 6 February 2022. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
- ^ "ولاية بومرداس: وفاة الأمين الولائي لمنظمة المجاهدين رحمون رابح". بـــاك برس.
- ^ a b "وزير المجاهدين يعزي في وفاة المجاهد رابح رحمون". جزايرس.
- ^ "Cimetière Musulman El Ghorba de Thénia". wikimapia.org.
External links
- 1940 births
- 2022 deaths
- People from Thénia
- Kabyle people
- Rahmoune family
- Deaths in Algeria
- Zawiyet Sidi Boushaki alumni
- Algerian revolutionaries
- Indigenous activists of Africa
- People of the Algerian War
- Algerian torture victims
- Members of the National Liberation Front (Algeria)
- Algerian military personnel
- Members of the National Liberation Army (Algeria)
- Algerian resistance leaders
- National Heroes of Algeria
- Algerian political people
- Arab politicians
- National Liberation Front (Algeria) politicians
- Burials in Algeria