Lyès Deriche

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Lyès Deriche
Arabic: [إلياس دريش]
Tifinagh: Lⵢèⵙ ⴹⴻⵔⵉⵛⵀⴻ
Lyès Deriche
National Liberation Front Member
In office
1954–1962
Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action Member
In office
1954–1954
Special Organisation Member
In office
1947–1954
Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties Member
In office
1948–1952
Personal details
Born1932
Souk El-Had, Algiers department, Kabylie, Algeria.
Died1982
El Madania, Sidi M'Hamed District, Algiers Province, Kabylie, Algeria.

Lyès Deriche (Arabic: [إلياس دريش], Berber languages: ⵉⵍⵢⴰⵙ ⴷⴻⵔⵉⵛⴻ), (born 1932 in Souk El-Had, Boumerdès Province, Kabylie, Algeria; died 1982 in El Madania, Algeria) was an Algerian Berber politician after the French conquest of Algeria.[1]

Algerian War

Lyès Deriche, the grandson of Mohamed Deriche, housed in his villa in the Algerian commune of Clos-Salembier the meeting of the Group of 22 baptized Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action (RCUA).[2]

On July 25, 1954, in the modest villa belonging to Lyès Deriche, twenty-two Algerians spoke for the unlimited revolution until total independence. They were all elders of the Special Organization who were summoned in the second half of June 1954.[3]

Many of them were from families where there were qaids and bachaghas who had studied in the schools of the Association Of Algerian Muslim scholars[4] · .[5]

Lyès Deriche, a friend of Zoubir Bouadjadj, was a former militant of the Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties who exploited the notoriety of his family to weave a clandestine revolutionary network in Lower Kabylia. He welcomed Mohamed Boudiaf who was the revolutionary leader of Algiers, and had prepared the meal for the participants in the historic meeting.[6]

About noon the owner of the house, Deriche, invited the presents to a couscous, and after a short pause they returned to work.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ "fete150eme-anniversaire-de-la-revolution-2".
  2. ^ "24 juin 1954 : Tenue de la réunion du Groupe des « 22 » historiques".
  3. ^ "Juillet 1954: La réunion du Clos-Salembier".
  4. ^ "Hommage à Lyes Derriche".
  5. ^ "Nos 22 héros - 22 héros, 22 bourses".
  6. ^ Stora, Benjamin (1 January 1985). "Dictionnaire biographique de militants nationalistes algériens: E.N.A, P.P.A., M.T.L.D., 1926-1954". L'Harmattan – via Google Books.
  7. ^ "La réunion des 22 : quand le sort de l'Algérie bascule !".

External links