University of Algiers 1
The University of Algiers 1, commonly called Benyoucef Benkhedda, is a public research university based in Algiers, Algeria. Founded in 1909 from the amalgamation of different French colonial educational institutions, it has become the oldest and most prestigious university in the country.
History
The University under French Colonialism, 1830-1962
The historical tradition of higher education in Algeria began in 1832, with the creation of the Higher School of Letters of Algiers, as a way to guarantee the teaching of Arabic and French languages, in the context of the French conquest of Algeria. In 1849 the institution opened campuses in Oran and Constantine, and was formally integrated into the regular French education system on 20 December 1879. Subsequently, the Superior School of Medicine and Pharmacy was created in 1833 ; in 1868 the School of Sciences, and; in 1879 the School of Law. All were based in the city of Algiers.In 1909, these Superior Schools were turned into the Faculties of Letters, Law, Medicine and Pharmacy, and Sciences. Soon after, in the same year, the faculties were united to form the University of Algiers. With this change, the University of Algiers became the only colonial French higher education institution on par with a metropolitan universities.
Throughout the French colonial period, the majority of student were European. Arab and Berber Algerians only made up a small minority, ranging from 1.2% to 18.1% of the total student body.
On 19 May 1956, the General Union of Algerian Muslim Students called an indefinite student strike, which halted the academic courses and examinations at the University of Algiers, rallying support from the National Liberation Front.
On 7 June 1962 – just a month ahead of the Algerian independence referendum – the Organisation Armée Secrète, the movement of colonists opposing Algerian independence, set fire to the library building, destroying 500,000 books. The destruction of these books and the library was reported in the Arab world as a tactic of war or dirty war, known as scorched earth. Egypt, Iraq and Jordan condemned the arson and issued repudiation notes. It showed the savagery of the anti-independence movement would extend to removing and indeed destroying culture so long as Algeria intended to create its own national culture.
The University of Algiers since Algerian Independence, 1962-Present
The 1971 higher education reform abolished the college system and grouped the different disciplines by affinities into departments and institutes. The reform decrees the progressive Arabization of the disciplines, starting with certain classes in the social sciences. On 12 December 1998, the college system was re-established.In 2009 the university was subdivided into three new institutions. The most important, the University of Algiers Benyoucef Benkhedda, stands as heir to the historical-academic tradition. The other two institutions created were:
- Abou El Kacem Saadallah University ;
- Brahim Soltane Chaibout University.
Library
The library holds 800,000 volumes.Notable faculty
- Fernand Braudel – French historian
- John Peters Humphrey – Canadian legal scholar
- André Chastagnol – French historian
- Assia Djebar – novelist, translator, film maker
- Ahmed Zaoui – Islamic scholar, obtained refugee status in New Zealand in 2014
Notable alumni
Arts and Science
- Jean Baptiste Paulin Trolard – physician; the "vein of Trolard" was named after him
- Albert Camus – writer and the awardee of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1957.
- Paul Coste-Floret law professor and politician
- Albert Memmi – Tunisian scholar
- Suzanne Carrell – educator
- Gabriel Camps – archaeologist and social anthropologist
- Maurice Audin – mathematician and political activist
- Fadéla M'rabet – writer and feminist.
- Fatima Gallaire – author and playwright
- Youcef Saad – mathematician
- Bernard Picinbono – applied statistician
- Elias Zerhouni – Algerian-born American physician scientist radiologist and biomedical engineer.
- Saddek Rabah – University Professor and academic researcher.
- Kaouther Adimi – writer
- Abdelkader Rezig Elmokhadimi – author and journalist.
Politics and Diplomacy
- Ferhat Abbas – politician
- Mohamed Lamine Debaghine – political activist
- Mehdi Ben Barka – Moroccan politician; disappeared in 1965
- Lakhdar Brahimi – UN diplomat and Algerian Minister of Foreign Affairs.
- Hassiba Ben Bouali – political activist
- Ferhat Mehenni – political activist
- Ahmed Djoghlaf – executive secretary of the Convention on Biological Diversity
- Said Djinnit – United Nations diplomat
- Brahim Djamel Kassali – Algerian Minister of Finance
- Khalida Toumi – feminist activist