Zoubi family


The Zoubi, also called Al al-Zu'bi and al-Zu'biyya, is a large Arab clan or tribe with a significant presence in southern Syria, northern Jordan and northern Israel. The family traditionally provided the leaders of the Sufi order of Qadiriyya in the Hauran, from which they derived their political presige in that region, even after the decline of Sufism in the early 20th century. Members of the family have frequently served in political office in Syria, Jordan and Israel until the present day.

Locations

The Zoubi are the largest of the many extended, agricultural clans of the Hauran plains in southern Syria and northern Jordan. They also settled in the adjoining Beisan valley and in and around Nazareth in modern Israel. Although the Zoubi have been settled cultivators for centuries, they share much in culture with the Bedouin. They number some 160,000 members in southern Syria and northern Jordan, not including those in Israel.
The clan inhabits some sixteen villages in the Daraa and Izra districts of the Daraa Governorate in southern Syria. They are predominant in the governorate capital of Daraa and the surrounding villages of Ataman, Da'el, al-Jiza, Khirbet Ghazaleh, al-Musayfirah, Muzayrib, Nasib, al-Na'ima, Saida, al-Ta'iba, Tafas and al-Yadudah. In Jordan, they have an extensive presence in the Irbid Governorate, particularly in the cities of al-Ramtha and Irbid. In Israel, the Zoubi clan are predominant in the villages of Nein, Na'ura, Sulam, Tamra, ed-Dahi, Taybeh, all east of the city of Afula in the Jezreel and Beisan valleys. The Zoubi are also one of the principal Muslim families in the nearby city of Nazareth.
In Syria, the traditional seat of the Zoubi from the time of its mid-20th-century paramount sheikh, Muhammad Muflih al-Zoubi, was Khirbet Ghazaleh. Before him, under the leadership of his predecessor, Faris al-Zoubi, its main political seat was Deir al-Bukht. Its religious center was at al-Musayfirah, the burial place of its . In Jordan, its chief center is Ramtha. The Zu'bis of Ramtha were traditionally responsible for the tomb of another of the family, the sheikh Rashid Ibrahim Mustafa al-Zu'bi.

History

Syria

The Zoubi family claims descent from the family of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. From their family came the leaders of the Qadiriyya, the Sufi order of the 11th-century mystic and purported descendant of Muhammad, Abdul Qadir Gilani, in the Hauran. The leaders of the Zoubi family derived their prestige and influence from this role in the villages of the Hauran where the Qadiriyya was present. This influence continued even after Sufi practicies and identity in the region were shed in the first half of the 20th century. Similarly, in the part of the Hauran that became Jordan, the Zu'bis of Ramtha had originally derived their political and economic influence from their role as Sufi leaders.
During the French Mandatory period in Syria, the Zoubi were rivals of the Hariri clan, which inhabited many of the same villages where they resided. The paramount leaders of the Hariri were more identified with Syria's nationalist movement, while those of the Zoubi aligned with the French authorities. This was at least partly due to the Sufi inclination toward the governing authorities. Consequently, during the post-independence period, the Hariri gained advantage with the Syrian nationalist governments. With the rise of the Ba'ath Party to power in 1963 the political influence and economic power of the traditional leaders of both the Zoubi and Hariri diminished. The lower-ranking members of the Zoubi became the predominant local influence under the Ba'ath, with members serving in all the major factions of the party since 1963. Among these were Musa Al-Zoubi, a close ally of President Amin al-Hafiz in 1963–1965, Muhammad Al-Zoubi, an ally of strongman Salah Jadid and member of the powerful Regional Council in 1964–1966, and most prominently, Mahmoud Al-Zoubi, a top ally of President Hafez al-Assad, who served as Speaker of the People's Assembly in 1986–1987 and Prime Minister in 1987–2000. The political influence of the Zoubi subsequently declined under President Bashar al-Assad, who showed more favor to the Hariri.

Palestine/Israel

The head of the Zoubi family in the 1930s, during the period of Mandatory Palestine, was Muhammad Said, who was based in the village of Nein. During the 1936-1939 Palestinian revolt, members of the Zoubi largely sided with the opposition to Amin al-Husayni. The British authorities arrested Muhammad Said but released him after the intercession of the Emir of Transjordan, Abdullah, with whom Muhammad had close ties.
Muhammad Said and his brother and son, Seif el-Din el-Zoubi, facilitated the sale of Zoubi family-owned lands east of Mount Tabor to the Jewish National Fund. In retaliation for this and his opposition to Amin al-Husayni, two abortive attempts were made to assassinate Seif el-Din in 1947. During the 1948 Palestine war, a peace agreement was forged between the leaders of the Zoubi family and the neighboring Jewish settlements, leading to accusations by the Arab Liberation Army that Seif el-Din was a Zionist agent. Following the Israeli victory in the war, he served as an intermediary between the Israeli authorities and the Arab inhabitants of the Nazareth area.

Notable members