Samira Abu Ghazaleh


Samira Abu Ghazaleh was a Palestinian poet, scholar, professor, political activist, and soldier advocating for the liberation and statehood of Palestine.

Early life

Born in Nablus in 1928, she completed her primary and secondary schooling in Ramla. She later graduated from the Female Teachers' Training College in Jerusalem in 1947.

Education

She attended the American University of Beirut in 1952 working on a bachelor's in education and psychology, but was expelled in 1955 because of her political protests against the Baghdad Pact. She later attended Cairo University and graduated with her bachelor's in Arab Literature in 1952.
Fearing arrest, she returned to Cairo University and finished her MA in Arabic LIterature in 1962. Her thesis was titled "Nationalist Poetry in Egypt and the Levant between the First and Second World Wars".

Employment

While on the run during the Nakba, Abu Ghazaleh and her family returned to Nablus and the sisters all taught children in the neighborhood out of their uncle's house to support the family. She worked as a secretary for the Jordanian Red Crescent in Jerusalem in 1950 but stopped in 1952 when she got a scholarship to study at the American University in Beirut.
After attaining her MA, she worked at the Supreme Council for Arts and Literature in Cairo teaching Arabic to foreigners at American University in Cairo.

Political activism

While at the Female Teachers' Training College, she and some of her cohort protested the British forces and Zionist groups by leaving class and throwing stones at the buses going from Jerusalem to Jaffa. In 1948 she volunteered to gather supplies to help support the Palestinian fighters and advocated youths to learn how to fight. She volunteered at the Egyptian Red Crescent based in Ramla in 1948.
While in Beirut studying for her BA, Abu Ghazzaleh was outspoken at meetings of the Arab Nationalist Movement, al-Urwa al-Wuthqa, and her fellow AUB female students interacting with US Marines who were 'visiting' Lebanon's beaches.
In 1955, she protested against the Baghdad Pact, was expelled from AUB, and went into hiding for ten days and later returned to Nablus. At home, she worked to advocate for women to participate in the protests and she participated in rallies for political and voting rights during that time.
In 1963, she tried to establish the Palestinian Women's League in Cairo and joined the Popular Mobilization Department of the Palestine Liberation Organization and the General Union of Palestinian Women in 1964. From 1965 to 1985 she remained a member of the Palestine National Council and was elected to the PLO Central Council in 1985.
As a part of her work with the PLO she founded the House for Palestinian Female Students in Cairo and helped open several Palestinian home projects that employed women and families.
She hosted the Fatat Filastin radio program on Radio Palestine and had a weekly column in al-Difaaʿ newspaper in Jerusalem.

Publications

  • Abu Ghazaleh, Samira مذكرات فتاة عربية". القاهرة،
  • Abu Ghazaleh, Samira دراسات في الشعر القومي". القاهرة،
  • Abu Ghazaleh, Samira نداء الأرض"، شعر. القاهرة،