Tawfiq Ziad

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Template:Infobox member of the Knesset

Tawfiq Ziad (Arabic: توفيق زيّاد, Template:Lang-he-n, also spelt Tawfik Zayyad or Tawfeeq Ziad, 7 May 1929 – 5 July 1994) was a Palestinian politician well known for his "poetry of protest".[1]

Biography

Born in the Galilee, Ziad studied literature in USSR.[2] After returning home, he was elected mayor of Nazareth on 9 December 1973, as head of Palestine 48 Rakah, a communist party, a victory that is said to have "surprised and alarmed" Israelis.[3]

Elected to the Knesset in the 1973 elections on Rakah's list, Ziad was active in pressuring the Israeli government to change its policies towards Arabs - both those inside Palestine and in the occupied Palestinian territories. A report he co-authored on Israeli prison conditions and the use of torture on Palestinian inmates was reprinted in the Israeli newspaper Al HaMishmar. It was also submitted to the United Nations by Tawfik Toubi and Ziad after their visit to Al-Far'ah prison on 29 October 1987. It was subsequently quoted from at length in a UN General Assembly report dated 23 December 1987, where it was described as "Perhaps the best evidence of the truth of the reports describing the repugnant inhumane conditions endured by Arab prisoners."[4]

Ziad died on 5 July 1994 in a head-on collision in the Jordan Valley on his way back to Nazareth from Jericho after welcoming Yasser Arafat, the chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization, back from exile.[5] At the time of his sudden death, he was still Mayor of Nazareth, a member of the Knesset and "a leading Arab legislator". A street is named after him in Shefa-'Amr.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Ben Ze'ev 2011, p. 218
  2. ^ Mariam Shahin (2005). Palestine: A Guide. Interlink Books. p. 44. ISBN 1-56656-557-X.
  3. ^ "Rakah Victory in Nazareth". Journal of Palestine Studies. Spring - Summer, 1976, Vol. 5, No. 3/4. pp. 178–180. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  4. ^ General Assembly (23 December 1987). "Report of the Special Committee To Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Population of the Occupied Territories". United Nations.
  5. ^ "Tawfik Ziad, 65, Mayor of Nazareth, Obituary". New York Times. 6 July 1994.

References

External links