Hasan Abu Al-Huda | |
Birth Place: | Aleppo, Ottoman Empire |
Death Place: | Jerusalem |
Burial Place: | Amman |
Office1: | 4th Prime Minister of Transjordan |
Predecessor1: | Mazhar Raslan |
Successor1: | Ali Rikabi |
Term Start1: | 5 September 1923 |
Term End1: | 3 March 1924 |
Predecessor2: | Ali Rikabi |
Successor2: | Abdullah Siraj |
Term Start2: | 26 June 1926 |
Term End2: | 22 February 1931 |
Spouse: | Devlet Abu Gabal |
Hasan Khaled Abu Al-Huda (Arabic: حسن خالد ابو الهدى; 1871 – 1937[1]) was a politician who served as the 4th Prime Minister of Transjordan twice in 1923–24 and 1926–1931.[2] He was Minister of Finance from 1924 to 1926.[3]
Hasan Khaled was the son of Abu al-Huda al-Sayyadi, an Islamic scholar from Khan Shaykhun, Syria, who claimed descent from the Sufi saint Ahmad al-Rifa'i. Sayyadi was the leader of the Rifa'i Sufi order, the Sheikh al-Islam, the chief Naqib al-Ashraf and religious adviser of Sultan Abdulhamid II on Arab affairs.[4] [5] [6] Hasan Khaled spent most of his childhood in Istanbul, where his family resided. He married an Egyptian of Turkish origins, Devlet Abu Gabal, with whom he had two daughters, Velia Abdel-Huda (1916-2012), an Oxford-educated socialite and art historian, and Halime Lima Hanımefendi (1919-2000), who married Şehzade Mehmed Nazım, the son of Şehzade Mehmed Ziyaeddin;[7] and a son, Taj al-Din, who, like his grandfather, had been more religiously inclined and was appointed president of the Aleppan Ashraf in 1942.[8]
Following the Young Turk Revolution, Hasan Khaled is said to have escaped Istanbul to Paris, where he funded himself using the proceeds of a company which he sold. Later, he moved to Alexandria to reside with family. For a time, he resided in the house of Hussein al-Qasab. During this period, he is said to have intrigued with al-Qasab and other Arab nationalists.[9]