Emile Habibi

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Emile Habibi
Date of birth 21 January 1922
Place of birth Haifa, Mandate Palestine
Date of death 2 May 1996
Knesset(s) 2nd, 3rd, 5th, 6th, 7th
Party Rakah
Former parties Maki
Palestinians Palestinian flag
Palestinian family in early 1900s
Demographics & geography

Definitions · Palestine
People · Diaspora
Territories · Refugee camps
Geography of the Gaza Strip
Geography of the West Bank
Electoral Districts · Governorates ·
Palestinian cities
Arab localities in Israel ·
Arab citizens of Israel·
East Jerusalem ·

Politics

Hamas · PLO · PNC · PLC · PFLP
PNA · PNA political parties
Palestinian flag
Politics of Palestine

Religion & religious sites

Christianity · Islam
History of the Levant
Houses of worship:
Church of the Nativity · Church of the Holy Sepulchre
· Church of the Annunciation · Rachel's Tomb
Al-Aqsa Mosque · Dome of the Rock · Mosque of Omar
Cave of the Patriarchs

Culture

Art · Costume & embroidery
Cinema · Cuisine · Dance · Pottery
Handicrafts · Language · Literature
Music

Notable Palestinians

Hany Abu-Assad
· Ibrahim Abu-Lughod
Yasser Arafat · Hanan Ashrawi
Mohammad Bakri · Rim Banna
Tawfiq Canaan · Mahmoud Darwish
Emile Habibi · Nathalie Handal
Mohammed Amin al-Husseini
Faisal Husseini
Abd al-Qader al-Husseini
Ghassan Kanafani · Ghada Karmi
Leila Khaled · Rashid Khalidi
Walid Khalidi · Samih al-Qasim
Edward Said · Khalil al-Sakakini
Elia Suleiman · Khalil al-Wazir
Ahmed Yassin · May Ziade

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Imil (Emile) Shukri Habibi (Arabic: إميل حبيبي‎, Hebrew: אמיל חביבי‎, born 21 January 1922, died 2 May 1996) was a Palestinian-Israeli writer and politician.

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[edit] Political career

Born in Haifa to a Protestant Palestinian Arab family (his family had originally been Arab Orthodox but converted to Protestantism due to disputes within the Orthodox church), he became one of the leaders of the Palestine Communist Party during the Mandate era. He supported the 1947 UN Partition Plan and chose to remain in Haifa until his death, despite it coming under Israeli control following the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.

He served in the Knesset between 1951 and 1959, and again from 1961 until 1972, first as a member of Maki, before breaking away from the party with Tawfik Toubi to found Rakah. He left Rakah in 1989.

[edit] Writing

Habibi began writing short stories in the 1960s, and in 1972 resigned from the Knesset in order to write his first novel: The Secret Life of Saeed the Pessoptimist. A classic of modern Arab literature, the book depicts the life of an Israeli Arab, employing black humour and satire. He followed this by other books, short stories and a play. His last novel, published in 1992, was Saraya, the Ogre's Daughter.

[edit] Writing Prizes

In 1990 Habibi received the Al-Quds Prize from the PLO, while two years later he received the Israel Prize. His willingness to accept both reflected his belief in coexistence.

[edit] External links