Mohamed_Aïchaoui

Mohamed Aïchaoui

Mohamed Aïchaoui

Algerian journalist


Mohamed Aïchaoui (29 January 1921 - 1959) was an Algerian journalist and militant in the nationalist movement against French Algeria.[1][2] Aïchaoui wrote the Declaration of 1 November 1954, the National Liberation Front's first appeal to the Algerian people at the start of the Algerian War. After earlier imprisonment and torture, he died in a 1959 clash with the French army.

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Early life

Aïchaoui was born on 29 January 1921 in the town of Si Mustapha, in lower Kabylia near the Isser River. He grew up in woody Thénia, part of the Khachna mountain range.[3][4] Aïchaoui's father worked for a French settler and, after his death, his wife moved to Algiers with her children. They settled in El Annasser, renting a house on the former Rue Ampère. His family's poverty forced Aïchaoui to leave school and work with his older brother, Saïd, as a carpenter.[5][6] He later worked for a French lawyer, where he learned administration and fingerprinting.[7][8]

Algerian nationalism

Inspired by Saïd's underground activism in the Algerian People's Party (PPA), Aïchaoui became interested in Algerian independence. He joined the party, and participated in the 1 May 1945 demonstrations in Algiers' Belcourt (Belouizdad) neighbourhood.[9] He led marchers through the Bab Djedid district, on rue Larbi Ben M'hidi, to the Grande Poste d'Alger.[10][11]

Aïchaoui was a political orator during World War II after evading compulsory military service in France, citing illness. His activism inspired resistance by young people from working-class neighbourhoods, laying the groundwork for an uprising against the colonial regime.[12] Aïchaoui pled the nationalist cause with young athletes returning from training, discussing their favorite sport and moving on to colonial Algeria, its history, and its need for independence.[3][13]

Journalism

L'Algérie Libre, 11 March 1950

Aïchaoui's interest in literature and journalism stemmed from a desire to appeal to the Algerian elite, driving him to improve his language and writing.[14][9][15] His enthusiasm for reading elevated him to the PPA leadership in 1946, where he translated articles into French for the underground newspaper L'Algérie Libre (Arabic: الجزائر الحرة) which were then broadcast in Arabic.[16][17]

Aïchaoui wrote about party activities and transcribed press releases for its leadership, realizing his aptitude for writing.[5][18] The PPA first published his writing in the summer 1949 party journal.[19][20] Aïchaoui then asked the party leadership for permission to study at the French Press Institute in Paris.[21][22][23]

Special Organisation

Aïchaoui met Algerian political leader Mohamed Boudiaf and nationalist activist Mourad Didouche when he was a journalism intern in France in 1950, and they recruited him into the Special Organisation.[24][25][26] He studied journalism abroad for two years, working in the field before his return to Algiers in 1953.[27][28][29] Aïchaoui received his press credentials when he returned to Algeria, which allowed him to work professionally.[30][31][32] As a successful journalist, he no longer needed to do clerical work.[33][34][35] Aïchaoui's militancy allied him with the Messalists, who split from the centrists in early 1954.[36][37][38]

Declaration of 1 November 1954

After the Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action (CRUA) decided to take armed action, the task of drafting the independence proclamation was entrusted to Aïchaoui in the Casbah of Algiers.[28][39][40] The 1954 outbreak of the revolution prompted a group of six people to prepare the final version of the revolutionary declaration after its broad outlines were agreed at a 10 October 1954 meeting in El Mouradia.[41][42][43] When CRUA asked Aïchaoui to write the declaration, the messalists[clarification needed] attempted to physically intimidate him in Belcourt (Belouizdad).[44][45][46]

After he wrote and revised the proclamation, he typed and mimeographed it in the village of Ighil Imoula under the direction of Rabah Bitat.[47][48][49] Bitat introduced Aïchaoui to his friend, Amar Ouamrane, who accompanied him from a Belcourt café to Tizi Ouzou; activist Ali Zamoum then brought him to the targeted village.[50][51][52] Zamoum provided Aïchaoui with the wherewithal for his secret mission (often carried out at night), and the journalist returned to Algiers by the same route to be ready for large-scale distribution of the leaflets on the evening of 1 November 1954.[53][54][55]

Torture and imprisonment

When he returned from Tizi Ouzou, Aïchaoui was arrested by French soldiers just after the outbreak of the revolution.[56][57][58] He distributed leaflets on 2 November (before his arrest) to his acquaintances, including Pierre Chaulet, explaining the seriousness of the revolution.[59] The colonial French police, led by its commissioner, arrived at dawn on 16 November and knocked on the door of Aïchaoui's house. The police ransacked the house without finding incriminating evidence and brought him to the Villa Mahieddine (near the Hacène Harcha Arena), where he was tortured.[2] On the evening of 17 November, 45 minutes of water torture were followed by an interrogation session in Villa Mahieddine. Aïchaoui was forced to swallow dirty water during a one-hour session the following day. A third session used electricity by an inspector who comparing himself to the Gestapo.[5] During a subsequent interrogation, Aïchaoui's ear began to bleed.[60]

Aïchaoui was tortured in Algiers until his 21 November transfer to Tizi Ouzou prison on an 18-month sentence.[61][62][63][better source needed] He was arrested by the French occupation forces with all the people known to belong to the Algerian national movement, and wrote to the judicial authorities and public prosecutor protesting their methods of interrogation and torture.[64]

After Aïchaoui's transfer to Tizi Ouzou, he underwent a three-day interrogation before being presented to the examining magistrate on 24 November. André Mandouze told his family that he was at Villa Mahieddine and then transferred to Tizi Ouzou prison.[65] Aïchaoui served his sentence in the Serkadji and Berrouaghia prisons, and was released in 1956.[66][63][67][failed verification]

National Liberation Army

When Aïchaoui was released from prison, he joined the National Liberation Army (ALN) in the mountainous Wilaya IV[21][68][failed verification] and was promoted to lieutenant in its information service.[69][63][3] A native of the region, which included Bouzegza Keddara, Zbarbar, and Tablat, he inspired confidence in the mountain population who supported the revolution.[70][20][71] Aïchaoui published Guerilla (a newsletter for the region's resistance fighters), and helped investigate the destruction of the village of Djerrah by French aircraft.[1][3][72]

Death

Aïchaoui was killed in a 1959 clash with the French army in the Khachna mountains, between Ammal and Lakhdaria.[73][74][75] He and his group of resistance fighters took refuge in a cave, and the French killed them in a gas attack.[76][77][3][78]

Honours

In June 2012, eight promotions from the El Harrach Higher School of Equipment were named after Aïchaoui.[21][67][8] A public square in Kouba was named for him in 1967,[79][80][81] and a middle school in his hometown of Si Mustapha was named for him in 2003.[82] An annual Algerian journalism prize in Aïchaoui's name was established on 4 May 2011.[83][84][85]

See also

Bibliography

  • La Guerre d'Algérie par les documents: 10 mars 1946 – 31 décembre 1954. Paris: Service historique de l'Armée de terre. 1990. p. 442;530;1005. ISBN 9782863231135.

References

  1. Faivre, Maurice (31 March 2006). Le renseignement dans la guerre d'Algérie. Lavauzelle. ISBN 9782702513149 via Google Books.
  2. "Guerres mondiales et conflits contemporains". Presses universitaires de France. 31 March 2002 via Google Books.
  3. Mabrūk, Bilḥusayn (31 March 2004). "المراسلات الثورة الجزائرية : بين الجزائر والقاهرة،". دار القصبة للنشر، via Google Books.
  4. محمد, عباس، (31 March 2005). ثوار ... عظماء. دار هومة للطباعة والنشر والتوزيع،. ISBN 9789961667286 via Google Books.
  5. Ighil-Imoula, Ramdane ASSELAH né le 11 April 1926 à (25 June 2015). "Ighil Imoula Haut lieu de Mémoire et d'Hisoire".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. شوقي, عبد الكريم، (31 March 2004). دور العقيد عميروش في الثورة الجزائرية، 1954. دار هومة،. ISBN 9789961667477 via Google Books.
  7. "À Ighil Imoula où la déclaration du 1er-Novembre a été imprimée (Vidéo)". 1 November 2016. Archived from the original on 17 January 2020. Retrieved 4 March 2021.
  8. محمد, عباس، (31 March 2004). مثقفون .. في ركاب الثورة. دار هومة للطباعة والنشر والتوزيع،. ISBN 9789961667828 via Google Books.
  9. Ageron, Charles-Robert (2005). "Aux origines de la Toussaint 1954". Histoire du Maghreb: 501–516. ISBN 978-9961-9662-7-3.
  10. يحيى, بوعزيز، (31 March 2004). الثورة في الولاية الثالثة التاريخية: أول نوفمبر 1954-19 مارس 1962. دار الأمة،. ISBN 9789961671757 via Google Books.
  11. "Horizons - Quotidien national d'information". Horizons.dz. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
  12. Saadi, Yacef (31 March 2002). La bataille d'Alger. Publisud. ISBN 9782866009458 via Google Books.
  13. Vince, Charlène; Linternaute.com, Mis à jour le 10/11/20 09:12 (29 November 2022). "Guerre d'Algérie : résumé de la guerre d'indépendance de 1954 à 1962". www.linternaute.fr.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  14. "La Révolution du 1er novembre 1954, un affront pour la France orgueilleuse". Aps.dz. 30 October 2020. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
  15. "1er Novembre 1954 : ses vrais initiateurs et… les autres: Toute l'actualité sur liberte-algerie.com". www.liberte-algerie.com/. Archived from the original on 24 September 2017. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
  16. "La proclamation du 1er novembre 1954". Le Monde.fr. 2 November 1974 via Le Monde.
  17. "Déclaration du 1er novembre 54, un document fondateur". Aps.dz. 30 October 2019. Retrieved 4 September 2022.
  18. "PROCLAMATION AU PEUPLE ALGÉRIEN | Perspective Monde". perspective.usherbrooke.ca. Archived from the original on 29 September 2013.
  19. "Que savez-vous sur la Déclaration du 1er Novembre ? | El Watan". www.elwatan.com. Archived from the original on 5 July 2022. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
  20. "La guerre d'Algérie (1954–1962)". LExpress.fr. 19 March 2014.
  21. Rédaction, La (24 June 2012). "Sortie de huit nouvelles promotions de l'Ecole supérieure du matériel d'El Harrach". www.algerie1.com (in French). Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  22. الحوار, موقع (6 March 2016). "سي لخضر .. أو نفس الثورة".
  23. "L'histoire de la Wilaya IV". Djazairess. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  24. "CHOUHADA SANS TOMBES". Djazairess. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  25. نور, مكتبة. "كتب جائزة محمد العيشاوي للصحافة". www.noor-book.com (in Arabic). Retrieved 7 March 2021.

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