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A new and intimate portrait of an iconic world figure by the one who knew him best--his wife
Gamal Abdel Nasser, architect of Egypt's 1952 Revolution, president of the country from 1956 to 1970, hero to millions across the Arab world since the Suez Crisis, was also a family man, a devoted husband and father who kept his private life largely private.
In 1973, three years after his early passing at the age of 52, his wife Tahia wrote a memoir of her beloved husband for her family. The family then waited almost forty years, through the presidencies of Anwar Sadat and Hosni Mubarak, both unsympathetic to the memory of Nasser, before publishing Tahia's book in Arabic for the first time in 2011. Now this unique insight into the life of one of the giants of the twentieth century is finally available in English.
Accompanied by more than eighty photographs from the family archive, many never before published, this historic book tells the story of Gamal and Tahia's life together from their marriage in 1944, through the Revolution and Gamal's career on the world stage, revealing an unknown and intimate picture of the man behind the president.
"At 6:30am on the morning of July 23, 1952 there was a knock on the door. Tharwat Okasha shook my hand and congratulated me: 'The military coup has succeeded.' I asked him about Gamal. 'He is close by, not more than five minutes away at the General Command.' At 9:30am an officer called: he had come from the General Command at Kubri al-Qubba, sent by Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser to tell me that he was fine and would not be home for lunch."
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Date de parution

01 août 2013

Nombre de lectures

1

EAN13

9781617973680

Langue

English

NASSER
MY HUSBAND
NASSER
MY HUSBAND
Tahia Gamal Abdel Nasser
Translated by
Shereen Mosaad
Edited by
Tahia Khaled Abdel Nasser
Foreword by
Hoda Gamal Abdel Nasser
The American University in Cairo Press Cairo New York
This English translation first published in 2013 by
The American University in Cairo Press
113 Sharia Kasr el Aini, Cairo, Egypt
420 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10018
www.aucpress.com
Copyright 2011, 2013 by the estate of Tahia Gamal Abdel Nasser
First published in Arabic in 2011 as Dhikrayat ma ahu by Dar el Shorouk Protected under the Berne Convention
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Exclusive distribution outside Egypt and North America by I.B. Tauris & Co Ltd., 6 Salem Road, London, W2 4BU
Dar el Kutub No. 22319/12
ISBN 978 977 416 611 2
Dar el Kutub Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Abdel Nasser, Tahia Gamal
Nasser: My Husband / Tahia Gamal Abdel Nasser.-Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2013.
p. cm.
ISBN 978 977 416 611 2
1.
Abdel Nasser, Gamal (president), 1918-1970
2.
Egypt - History, 1919-1952
3.
Egypt - History, 1952-1970 962.053
1 2 3 4 5 17 16 15 14 13
Designed by Adam el-Sehemy
Printed in Egypt
Contents
Foreword by Hoda Gamal Abdel Nasser
Prologue: Dearly Departed
Early Years
Gamal Proposes to Tahia
Our First Home
Early Married Life
Preparing for the Entrance Exam to the Staff Officers Academy
The Hated Murasala System
Hoda s Birth
Gamal the Man
Mona s Birth
The Firing of Unloaded Guns
To Palestine
A Bullet Wound
The Siege of al-Faluja
Return from al-Faluja
A Telephone Call from Arish
Moving to a New House
Ibrahim Abdel Hadi Questions Gamal
Khaled s Birth
The Passing of My Brother Abdel Hamid
The Jewish Dead in al-Faluja
Continual Meetings with the Officers
Life at Home in Kubri al-Qubba in 1950
Weapons Hidden in Our House
The Guns Are Moved
The Typewriter and More Caution with Visitors
1951
Abdel Hamid s Birth
More Visitors to the House
January 1952
Gamal Armed and in Uniform
Prelude to the Revolution
The Start of Summer 1952
The Last Week before the Revolution
The 23 July Revolution
The Eve of the Revolution
Congratulations
The First Days
The First Issue of al-Gumhuriya Newspaper
Moving to the House in Manshiyat al-Bakri, October 1952
The Declaration of the Republic
A Slight Pain, May 1953
Mohamed Naguib at Our House
Conspiracies
The Cavalry Conspiracy, May 1954
The Assassination Attempt at al-Manshiya
News of the Premiership from Mohamed Hassanein Heikal
At Home after the Revolution
Abdel Hakim s Birth
Summer 1955
Jovanka Broz Tito
The Nationalization of the Suez Canal Company
Changes to the House at Manshiyat al-Bakri
The Tripartite Aggression
Life at Manshiyat al-Bakri after the Evacuation
Eating Habits at the House
The Children
Presidential Duties
Yugoslavia, 1958
Together in a Car
Dining with an Emperor
A State Visit to Greece
End of the Union
The Family Man
Sons, Daughters, and Grandchildren
1967
The June War
Spa Treatment
Abdel Hamid at the Naval Academy
Preoccupied with the Armed Forces
The First Heart Attack
Recovery
Back to Heavy Work
Summer 1970
Marsa Matruh
The Arab Summit Conference
The Final Moments
Index
Foreword
Hoda Gamal Abdel Nasser
After my father s funeral period, which lasted forty days, as was the custom, my mother Tahia found herself in a difficult situation: the house had been full of mourners from Egypt, the Arab world, and foreign countries, who had come to express their deepest sympathy and share the family s sorrow (I still have the funeral notes and letters of condolence from statesmen and friends); now each one of us returned to his or her work and family. But fortunately for Tahia, her eldest son Khaled, who was still a student in the Department of Engineering at Cairo University, and her youngest son Abdel Hakim, who was still at school, were living at home. Abdel Hamid was a student at the Naval Academy in Alexandria and would come to Cairo at the end of every week. My sister Mona worked at Dar al-Ma arif publishing house, and I had been my father s secretary since September 1969. It was then that President Sadat said to me: My daughter, I would be happy if you worked with me. I thanked him, and preferred to work as a researcher at al-Ahram newspaper with my father s friend Mohamed Hassanein Heikal.
There were no problems in my mother s life in general, and she had no wishes. After Gamal Abdel Nasser, her life was devoted to family, friends, and acquaintances who had strong attachments to my father and thus never left her alone. And at that most difficult of moments, her grandchildren Hala and Gamal were the joy in her life.
During the eleven-year rule of President Sadat, relations were good until the policy change that followed the 6 October 1973 War, when the regime turned against the principles and policies of Gamal Abdel Nasser, and attacks were launched against him in the media seeking to distort his legacy. An organized campaign of character assassination began after 1973, extended to the Camp David Accords, and lasted until Sadat s assassination on 6 October 1981.
The sorrow my mother endured at that time cannot be forgotten, and what shocked her the most was that the campaign had been launched in the presidency of Anwar Sadat, Gamal s friend. On many occasions, she visited me in tears after reading a newspaper article full of allegations against her beloved husband, and she would say to me: Now I feel better. On the way, people in their cars waved at me in solidarity: to tell me to carry on and endure, we are with you. Gamal Abdel Nasser left Tahia an exceptional legacy-the love, appreciation, and respect of the people.
Neither Sadat nor Mubarak placed any limits on the activities or movements of the family, because none of its members pursued any political activity or ambitions, and Gamal s children remained distant from politics in spite of the many opportunities to become politically involved.
One year after my father s passing, I began the project of collecting, archiving, and publishing his papers, photographs, and speech and film recordings. I enrolled in the PhD program in the Department of Political Science and Economics at Cairo University, having decided to obtain a PhD in the philosophy of political science in order to attain the level of training necessary to undertake such a project. I defended my dissertation at Cairo University in 1985, and became an assistant professor in my department.
I began to consider the traditional idea of establishing a foundation in my father s name, but could not because of the lack of funds needed for such a venture. After that, I began collecting his speeches, with the aim of transcribing the recordings for the sake of accuracy. Abdel Hakim had already requested them in Sadat s era, but to no avail. In 1995, I met the minister of information, Safwat al-Sherif, who granted permission for me to record all the television and radio archives on the President, and my joy was unparalleled.
In my documentary project, as I worked from home, I was helped by the considerable advancement that took place in electronic media, in terms of efficiency and scope. With the advent of the Internet, I was able to establish the foundation that I had envisioned, on the digital archive www.nasser.org , hosted by the Alexandria Library, in 2005. This includes an extensive collection on my father s life and work: private papers, letters, communiqu s, official documents, presidential decrees, photographs, documentary films, texts and sound files of speeches, coins, and medals. I continue to add historical documents to this digital collection. So finally, material on the life and work of Gamal Abdel Nasser is now available to any researcher and everyone who wishes to consult his legacy and this major period in Egypt s modern history.
The publication of my mother s memoir was delayed because the prevailing political mood was hostile to Nasser in Egypt under the Sadat regime and to a lesser extent during Mubarak s rule. Two months before the 25 January Revolution of 2011, we decided to publish the memoir, as a different mood was just beginning to form. That was the first Arabic edition; now it has been translated into English.
Translated by Tahia Khaled Abdel Nasser
Prologue
DEARLY DEPARTED
The date is 24 September 1973. In four days time it will be three years since the death of Gamal Abdel Nasser-the great leader, my beloved husband. There is not a minute that passes when I do not feel the sadness, when every moment I lived with him is not in my mind s eye: his voice, his always radiant image, his humanity, his struggles, his challenges, his words, his speeches.
With the memories come the tears; even when I laugh I feel the tears constantly choking me.
I lived with Gamal Abdel Nasser for eight years before the Revolution, and for eighteen years after it began on 23 July 1952.
We were married on 29 June 1944, which means I lived with him for twenty-six years and three months, and now I am living and counting the days since his death.
There were two phases of my life with Gamal Abdel Nasser, one before the Revolution and one after, and now I am living the third phase to which he is not witness-how difficult it is; a cruel phase in all ways.
It is only him I miss. I was not affected by those eighteen years: to me he was only my beloved husband; he was not the President of the Republic or I the President s wife.
The long years I lived before the death of the President (I was used to saying the President, and I feel that I can say nothing else, so I will continue to use it) were filled wi

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