Syrian Social Nationalist Party

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Flag of the SSNP

The Syrian Social Nationalist Party or SSNP (Arabic: الحزب السوري القومي الاجتماعي‎, transliterated: al-Hizb as-Sūrī al-Qawmī al-Ijtimā'ī), often referred to in French as Parti Populaire Syrien, is a secular nationalist political party in Syria and Lebanon. It advocates the establishment of a Greater Syrian nation state spanning the Fertile Crescent, including present Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Jordan, Israel, the Palestinian territories, Cyprus, Kuwait, the Hatay Province of Turkey and the Sinai Peninsula of Egypt.[1] Founded in Beirut in 1932, the party has played a significant role in Lebanese politics since its founding, notably being involved in attempted coups in 1949 and 1961. It was active in resistance against the Israeli occupation of Lebanon from 1982 on. It is now part of the Resistance and Development Bloc, along with Amal and Hezbollah (see Politics of Lebanon). In Syria, the SSNP became a major political force in the early 1950s, but was thoroughly repressed in 1955. It remained organised, and in 2005 was legalised and joined the Baath Party-led National Progressive Front. It is thought to be the largest political group in Syria apart from the Baath, with perhaps 90,000 members. The party is modeled after the National Socialist German Workers' Party.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

Contents

[edit] Foundation and early years

The SSNP was founded by Antun Saadeh, a Syrian nationalist philosopher from a Greek Orthodox family in the town of Dhour el Shweir. Saadeh had emigrated to South America in 1919 (via the USA where he stayed for about a year before continuing on to Brazil), at the age of fifteen, and in the years he lived there engaged in both Arabic-language journalism and Syrian nationalist political activity. On his return to Lebanon some ten years later he continued working as a journalist and also taught German in the American University of Beirut. In November 1932 he established the first nucleus of the Syrian Social Nationalist Party. It was deliberately modeled on Hitler's Nazi Party.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10] The party operated underground for the first three years of its existence. After it began overt activity, it was the object of harsh repression by the French mandatory authorities. Saadeh himself was arrested several times, and in 1938 was forced to remain in South America after a visit he made there before the outbreak of World War II.[11] Saadeh, the party's 'leader for life', was an admirer of Adolf Hitler influenced by Nazi and fascist ideology.[4][7] The party adopted a reversed swastika as the party's symbol, sang the party's anthem to Deutschland über alles, and included developing the cult of a leader, advocating totalitarian government, and glorifying an ancient pre-Christan past and the organic whole of the Syrian Volk or nation.[2][4][9][unreliable source?]

The party he founded was organised with a hierarchical structure and a powerful leader. Its ideology was an entirely secular form of nationalism; indeed, it posited the complete separation of religion and politics as one of the two fundamental conditions for real national unity. The other condition was determined economic and social reform.[12]

Saadeh's concept of the nation was that it was shaped by geography, not by ethnic origins, language or religion, and this led him to conclude that the Arabs could not form one nation but many nations could be called Arab. Arab nationalist thinker Sati' al-Husri considered that Saadeh "misrepresented" Arab nationalism, incorrectly associating it with a Bedouin image of the Arab and with Muslim sectarianism. Palestinian historian Maher Charif sees Saadeh's theory as a response to the religious diversity of Syria, and points to his later extension of his vision of the Syrian nation to include Iraq, a country also noted for its religious diversity, as further evidence for this.[13] The party also accepted that due to "religious and political considerations", the separate existence of Lebanon was necessary for the time being.[12]

Lebanese historian Kamal Salibi gives a somewhat contrasting interpretation, pointing to the position of the Greek Orthodox community as a large minority in both Syria and Lebanon for whom "the concept of pan-Syrianism was more meaningful than the concept of Arabism" while at the same time they resented Maronite dominance in Lebanon. Saadeh, according to Salibi,

found a ready following among his co-religionists. His idea of secular pan-Syrianism also proved attractive to many Druzes and Shiites; to Christians other than the Greek Orthodox, including some Maronites who were disaffected by both Lebanism and Arabism; and also to many Sunnite Muslims who set a high value on secularism, and who felt that they had far more in common with their fellow Syrians of whatever religion or denomination than with fellow Sunnite or Muslim Arabs elsewhere. Here again, an idea of nationalism had emerged which had sufficient credit to make it valid. In the Lebanese context, however, it became ready cover for something more archaic, which was essentially Greek Orthodox particularism.[14]

Prof. Salibi remarks on the beginnings of Saadeh's party in the 1930s: "[A]mong its first members were students and young graduates of the American University of Beirut." This early party was "mainly Greek Orthodox and Protestants with some Shi'ites and Druzes... ." In Lebanon as a whole the party was not popular. "Christians were generally opposed to their Syrian unionism, while Moslems were suspicious of their reservations with regard to pan-Arabism. [T]he Lebanese authorities were able to suppress them without difficulty."[15]

From 1945 on, the party adopted a more nuanced stance regarding Arab nationalism, seeing Syrian unity as a potential first step towards an Arab union led by Syria.[12]

According to historian Stanley G. Payne, the Arab nationalism was influenced by European fascism, with the creation of at least seven Arab nationalist shirt movements similar to the brown shirt movement by 1939, with the most influenced ones being the SSNP, the Iraqui Futawa youth movement and the Young Egypt movement.[10] These three movements would share characteristics like being territorially expansionist, with the SSNP wanting the complete control of Syria, belief in the superiority of their own people (with Saadeh theorizing a "distinct and naturally superior" Syrian race), being "nonrationalist, anti-intellectual, and highly emotional" and "[emphazising] military virtues and power [and stressing] self-sacrifice".[10] Also according to Payne, all these movements received strong influence from European fascism and praised the Italian and German fascism but "[they never became] fully developed fascist movements, and none reproduced the full characteristics of European fascism"; the influence in Arab nationalism remained long after 1945.[10] Also, Saadeh's superior race was not a pure one, but a fusion of all races in Syrian history.[10] The SSNP would be "[a] elite group, with little structure for mobilization".[10]

[edit] The SSNP Emblem and Flag

The SSNP emblem is a combination of the crescent and the cross.[16] The party flag features a red hurricane called the zawba'a modeled after the National Socialist German Workers' Party swastika,[2][3][4][5][6][9][unreliable source?] within a white circle on a black background.

[edit] The SSNP in Lebanon

Lebanon

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Politics and government of
Lebanon



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[edit] 1947 - 1975

Saadeh returned to Lebanon in 1947. Upon his arrival, Saadeh made a famous speech declaring his opposition to the government. The government retaliated by arresting members of the party and tensions remained between the two sides until it culminated in a failed coup d'état attempt.

In 1949, members of the pro-government Phalanges Party attacked and burned the SSNP's newspaper office in The Gemayze area, seconds after Saadeh left the place. The government response to the attack was to withraw both parties' licenses and declare both parties illegal, but only SSNP members were arrested (including top officials), before a memo was issued reinstating the Phalange's license. Police broke into Saadeh house to arrest him, but he had already left. In the midst of these events, Saadeh declared a coup d'état against the government and starting organizing the party's members. He received a message from the Syrian military dictator Husni al-Za'im offering him weapons to support his coup d'état, and asked to meet him in his palace. Saadeh accepted the invitation and traveled to Syria to meet the president. When he arrived to the palace, he was instantly apprehended and handed over to the Lebanese authorities who tried and executed him within 8 hours.[17]

[edit] 1950 - 1960

The party was seen in these years as a right-wing, anti-Communist organization.[18]. The party opposed Nasserite influences and objected to the declaration of The United Arab Republic. This opposition was based on ideological beliefs.

During the Lebanon crisis of 1958, party members participated on the Government side, fighting against the Arab nationalist rebels in northern Lebanon and in Mount Lebanon.[19][citation needed] The party was subsequently legalized.

Notable Members: Samaan Nader

[edit] 1961 - 1975

In 1961 the party launched an abortive coup attempt in Lebanon, resulting in renewed proscription and the imprisonment of many of its leaders.[20] In prison the SSNP militants read and discussed politics and reconsidered their ideology, coming under the influence of Marxism and other left-wing ideas.[citation needed] By the beginning of the 1970s, the party had undergone a considerable ideological transformation, and was seen as decidedly left-wing and no longer deeply inimical to pan-Arab nationalism. These ideological turns, however, resulted in splits, and there are now two rival groups laying claim to Saadeh's mantle.[citation needed]

[edit] Lebanese Civil War

With the outbreak of the Lebanese Civil War in 1975. SSNP militias fought alongside the nationalist and leftist forces, against the Phalangists and their right-wing allies. An important development followed with the renewal of contact between the party and its former bitter enemy, the Syrian Baath Party.[citation needed]

After the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982 and subsequent rout of the leftist forces, a number of the leftist organizations regrouped to engage in resistance to the Israeli occupation. Along with the Lebanese Communist Party, the Communist Action Organization, and some smaller leftist groups, the SSNP played a prominent role in this. One of the best-known early actions of the resistance was the killing of two Israeli soldiers in the Wimpy Cafe on west Beirut's central Rue Hamra by party member Khalid Alwan. The party continues to commemorate this date. The FBI blames them for the assassination of Bashir Gemayel in 1982.[21]

In 1983 the party joined the National Salvation Front established to oppose the abortive accord with Israel signed by Gemayel's brother and successor Amine Gemayel.[citation needed]

Some party members were willing to sacrifice their lives through suicide attacks in resistance against Israel, the first being in 1985.[22] A party member Sana'a Mehaidli, who martyred herself at age 16 against an Israeli checkpoint in Lebanon, is considered "the progenitor of all female martyrs for the Palestinian cause".[22] Diego Gambetta says that they can't be considered a terrorist organization because they only act against military targets, and that they should be considered a guerrilla organization.[22]

The Israelis hit the SSNP hard since the group was highly active in the Lebanese National Resistance. They bombed one of their main headquarters in Bekaa Valley after the kamikaze operation of Malek Wehbe. The Israeli intelligence also played a major role in dividing the party in 1987 (official division of the SSNP) and assassinating most of its prominent leaders such as Habib Keyrouz who was a popular leader among SSNP students, SSNP comrades and board members also knows as "oumana". Not to mention that Keyrouz was a very close politician to President Hafez Assad.

[edit] The SSNP in Syria

Syria

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
Syria



Other countries · Atlas
 Politics portal

In Syria the SSNP grew to a position of considerable influence in the years following the country's independence in 1946, and was a major political force immediately after the restoration of democracy in 1954. It was a fierce rival of the Syrian Communist Party and of the radical pan-Arab Baath Party, the other main ideological parties of the period. In April 1955 Colonel Adnan al-Malki, a Baathist officer who was a very popular figure in the Syrian army, was assassinated by a party member. This provided the Communists and Baathists with the opportunity to eliminate their main ideological rival, and under pressure from them and their allies in the security forces the SSNP was practically wiped out as a political force in Syria.

The SSNP's stance during the Lebanese civil war was consistent with that of Syria, and that facilitated a rapprochement between the party and the Syrian government. During Hafez al-Assad's presidency, the party was increasingly tolerated. After the succession of his son Bashar in 2000, this process continued. In 2001, although still officially banned, the party was permitted to attend meetings of the Baath-led National Progressive Front coalition of legal parties as an observer. In Spring 2005 the party was legalised in Syria, as the first non-socialist and non-Arabist party. It is considered to be one of the largest political parties in the country, after the ruling Baath Party, with perhaps 90,000 members.[23]

In the 22 April 2007 People's Council of Syria election the party was awarded 2 out of 250 seats in the parliament.

[edit] The SSNP Worldwide

The party enjoys considerable support among the large Lebanese diaspora and Syrian diaspora. It has overseas branches in a variety of countries, including Australia, the United States, Brazil, Argentina and several Western European countries. The party has a smaller following in Jordan, Iraq and the Palestinian territories.

[edit] See also

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Irwin, p. 24; ssnp.com "Our Syria has distinct natural boundaries…" (accessed 30 June 2006).
  2. ^ a b c d Ya’ari, Ehud (June 1987). "Behind the Terror". Atlantic Monthly. http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/87jun/yaari.htm. "[The SSNP] greet their leaders with a Hitlerian salute; sing their Arabic anthem, "Greetings to You, Syria," to the strains of "Deutschland, Deutschland über alles"; and throng to the symbol of the red hurricane, a swastika in circular motion." 
  3. ^ a b c Pipes, Daniel (1992). Greater Syria. Oxford University Press. pp. 100-101. ISBN 0195060229. http://books.google.com/books?id=J3PsAb1uV94C. "The SSNP flag, which features a curved swastika called the red hurricane (zawba'a), points to the party's fascistic origins." 
  4. ^ a b c d e Johnson, Michael (2001). All Honourable Men. I.B. Tauris. p. 150. ISBN 1860647154. http://books.google.com/books?id=Zydtz0dDntQC. "Saadeh, the party's 'leader for life', was an admirer of Adolf Hitler and influenced by Nazi and fascist ideology. This went beyond adopting a reversed swastika as the party's symbol and singing the party's anthem to Deutschland über alles, and included developing the cult of a leader, advocating totalitarian government, and glorifying an ancient pre-Christan past and the organic whole of the Syrian Volk or nation." 
  5. ^ a b c Becker, Jillian (1984). The PLO: The Rise and Fall of the Palestine Liberation Organization. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 0297785478. http://books.google.com/books?id=sgu7AAAAIAAJ&q=SSNP+swastika&dq=SSNP+swastika&pgis=1. "[The SSNP] had been founded in 1932 as a youth movement, deliberately modeled on Hitler's Nazi Party. For its symbol it invented a curved swastika, called the Zawbah." 
  6. ^ a b c Yamak, Labib Zuwiyya (1966). The Syrian Social Nationalist Party: An Ideological Analysis. Harvard University Press. http://books.google.com/books?id=98tBAAAAIAAJ&q=The+Syrian+Social+Nationalist+Party:+An+Ideological+Analysis&dq=The+Syrian+Social+Nationalist+Party:+An+Ideological+Analysis&pgis=1. 
  7. ^ a b c Simon, Reeva S. (1996). Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East. Macmillan Reference USA. ISBN 0028960114. http://books.google.com/books?id=vKptAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Syrian+Social+Nationalist+Party%22+nazi&dq=%22Syrian+Social+Nationalist+Party%22+nazi&pgis=1. "The Syrian Social Nationalist party (SSNP) was the brainchild of Antun Sa'ada, a Greek Orthodox Lebanese who was inspired by Nazi and fascist ideologies." [unreliable source?]
  8. ^ a b Nikki R. Keddie (2006). Princeton University Press. ed. Women in the Middle East: Past and Present (illustrated ed.). p. 97. ISBN 0691128634. "The leading Nazi-influenced group was the Syrian National Party" 
  9. ^ a b c d Matthias Küntzel, Colin Meade (2007). Telos Press Publishing. ed. Jihad and Jew-hatred: Islamism, Nazism and the Roots of 9/11. p. 26. ISBN 0914386360. http://books.google.com/books?id=q9Y8E-AYVeoC&pg=PA26&dq=Syrian+Social+National+Party+swastika&lr=&as_brr=3&as_pt=ALLTYPES&hl=es. "Back in 1932 Antun Saadeh had founded the Syrian People's Party which asserted the superiority of Syrians over other peoples and followed Nazi models even in its outward expressions, a swastika-like flag, the open-handed salute, etc." [unreliable source?]
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Stanley G. Payne (1996). A history of fascism, 1914-1945 (illustrated, reprint ed.). Routledge. p. 352-354. ISBN 1857285956, 9781857285956. http://books.google.com/books?id=9wHNrF7nFecC&pg=PA353&dq=Antun+Saadeh+fascism. 
  11. ^ Charif, pp. 243-244n
  12. ^ a b c Hourani, p. 326
  13. ^ Charif, p. 216
  14. ^ Salibi, pp. 54-55
  15. ^ K. S. Salibi, The Modern History of Lebanon (New York: Praeger 1965) at 180.
  16. ^ "SSNP website". http://ssnp.net/content/view/378/100. 
  17. ^ Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation Pierre Gemayel Documentary
  18. ^ Seale, p. 50
  19. ^ Article on pro-SSNP website on the party's role in the 1958 civil war accessed 19 January 2006.
  20. ^ U.S. Department of State, Foreign Relations of the United States Volume 17, Near East,1961-1963, (Washington, DC: GPO 1993), 383-384.
  21. ^ Neil A. Lewis (1988-05-18). "U.S. Links Men in Bomb Case To Lebanon Terrorist Group". The New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE6D81039F93BA25756C0A96E948260&n=Top/Reference/Times%20Topics/Subjects/B/Bombs%20and%20Explosives. 
  22. ^ a b c Diego Gambetta (2006). Oxford University Press. ed. Making Sense of Suicide Missions (illustrated ed.). pp. 262,288 for suicide attacks; 87,344 for Sana Mehaidli; 80 for guerrilla. ISBN 0199297975. http://books.google.com/books?id=eciSejVv-YoC&pg=PA262&vq=ssnp&dq=Syrian+Social+Nationalist+Party+terrorist+organization&client=opera&hl=es&source=gbs_search_s&cad=0. 
  23. ^ Asia Times article by Syrian political analyst Sami Moubayed. Accessed 19 January 2006

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