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Written by Tim Llewellyn. guardian.co.uk Tim Llewellyn. guardian.co.uk
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Category: News News
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Published: 07 August 2009 07 August 2009
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Last Updated: 07 August 2009 07 August 2009
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Created: 07 August 2009 07 August 2009
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Shafiq al-Hout
PLO founder member and staunch defender of Palestinian rights
Al-Hout was a larger-than-life figure who represented the PLO in Lebanon. Photgraph: Al Quds Al Arabi
Shafiq al-Hout, who has died aged 77 in Beirut, was a founding member
of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), its representative in
Lebanon and a larger-than-life figure who championed the Palestinians'
right of return to their homeland and a unified, democratic state there
for Muslims, Jews and Christians. He was also a strong advocate of
armed resistance.
Al-Hout has died a disappointed and frustrated man, his life's work,
for the foreseeable future, buried in a divided and moribund PLO and a
Palestinian national movement in the worst straits in its 50-year
history.
He once wrote: "If I were asked after all these years, after that evil
day I was wrenched from Palestine, if I remained convinced of my right
to return, I would never hesitate to say 'yes'. It is not just that I
will return to Palestine, but Palestine will return to me and to what
it once was." He died still believing that, but the past 15 or so years
gave him strong reason to doubt that his dream would be realised soon.
Al-Hout was born and raised in Jaffa, his secondary education at the
Amiriyya high school ending abruptly in April 1948, when Jewish
irregulars seized the city from under the noses of the British army,
forcing most of the Arab population to flee. His own family sailed to
Lebanon, from where they originated (though al-Hout never regarded
himself as anything but Palestinian).
After a rumbustious five years studying politics at the American
University of Beirut, the region's prime academy for Arab nationalists,
and taking part in student politics and demonstrations, Al-Hout taught
at schools in Beirut and Kuwait, another centre of Palestinian ferment,
where he fell in with Yasser Arafat and other adherents of the cause.
In the early 1960s he became a journalist on – and later editor of –
the radical weekly Al-Hawadith (Events), and also wrote a satirical
column for the equally radical daily Al-Moharrer (the Editor), whose
days were ended in early 1976 by a bomb planted in its printing shop by
Syrian agents.
Al-Hout left journalism for full-time Palestinian politics in 1963, and
helped found first the leftist Palestine Liberation Front and then the
PLO in May 1964. He was soon appointed full-time PLO representative in
Lebanon, a post in which he survived 10 Israeli assassination attempts,
the Lebanese civil war, the Israeli invasion in 1982 and the
Sabra-Shatila massacre (the subject of the definitive oral and
victim-sourced history by his wife, Bayan Nuwayhed). Al-Hout remained
in Beirut after the PLO was forced to leave Lebanon in 1982. From 1974,
he had also been the PLO's representative at the annual UN general
assembly meetings.
He was twice a member of the PLO executive, before Arafat took over
from Ahmed Shukairy, from 1966 to 1968, and – appointed by Arafat, who
wanted his antagonistic but admired friend inside the tent – from 1991
to 1993. Al-Hout left the executive over what he, like many, regarded
as the disaster of the Arafat-orchestrated PLO recognition of Israel
under the Oslo accords, and the movement's effective return to the
occupied territories under the control and aegis of Israel.
In that great division in the Palestinian movement between the
"outside" – the diaspora of the refugee camps and the millions of
exiles worldwide – and the "inside"– the Palestinian authority and its
constituents – Al-Hout was a devout outsider. He believed that all of
Palestine belonged to all Palestinians, in one state. In later years,
he remained a member of the Palestine National Council, the
parliament-in-exile, but stayed out of politics, writing his memoirs,
spreading the word in his articulate and forceful way, in that familiar
and formidable deep smoker's growl, usually alongside a rapidly
diminishing bottle of Black Label whisky. He viewed recent Palestinian
developments with dejection and pessimism, though never despair.
In all those years, from the early 1960s onwards, he was one of those
rare senior Palestinian interlocutors who could, and would, make a
decent stab at unravelling for baffled outsiders the machinations of
Palestinian politics, and he wrote several books on Arab nationalism.
After Al-Hout's death had been announced, a contributor to the Angry
Arab website recalled: "He had that voice that betrays long years of
smoking and drinking … he was blunt and truthful when lying was a job
description in Arafat's apparatus." He was not far off the mark.
Al-Hout is survived by Bayan Nuwayhed, his son, Hader, and his daughters, Hanin and Syrine.
• Shafiq al-Hout, politician and writer, born 13 January 1932; died 2 August 2009