Husayn Muruwwa | |
Birth Date: | 1908 or 1910 |
Birth Place: | Haddatha, Lebanon |
Death Date: | February 17, |
Death Place: | Beirut, Lebanon |
Death Cause: | Assassination by gunshot |
Notable Works: | Materialist Tendencies in Arabic-Islamic Philosophy |
Main Interests: | Philosophy, Marxism |
Influences: | Karl Marx |
Husayn Muruwwa (also spelt Hussein Mroue or Mroueh; Arabic: حسين مروة) (c. 1909 – 17 February 1987) was a Lebanese Marxist philosopher, journalist, author, and literary critic. His longest and most famous work, "Materialist Tendencies in Arabic-Islamic Philosophy" (2 vols., 1979), was a Marxist interpretation of traditional Arab texts.[1] Muruwwa was born in Haddatha, a small village in Lebanon, studied in Iraq, taught in Syria, completed his higher education in the USSR, and was martyred in Lebanon. Up to his adulthood, he was groomed to be a sheikh like many generations of men before him, but after years, even decades, of intellectual reconciliation, he converted to Marxism which led to his expulsion from Iraq. He spent the second half of his life in between Beirut and Moscow. In Beirut he published books and wrote hundreds of articles for newspapers and magazines on numerous issues from a Marxist point of view. Muruwwa completed his doctoral thesis in Moscow. He also played a key role in the Lebanese Communist Party (LCP) and many of its administrative branches. However, due to his revolutionary activity, he was assassinated in his house in Beirut on 17 February 1987 during the Lebanese Civil War.
Husayn Muruwwa was born either in 1908 or 1910, in the southern Lebanese village of Haddatha, which was at the time part of the Ottoman Empire. His father, Ali Muruwwa, was a sheikh, a prominent religious scholar, and a well-respected man in his community who received his education in Najaf (modern-day Iraq). His mother, referred to as Om Husayn, ("Husayn's mother" in Arabic) was a kind woman, who despite having Husayn as her only child, raised him strictly just like her husband, who brought up Husayn in the hope that he would succeed him in his work as a religious cleric. Husayn described his father's upbringing as depriving him of his childhood; he was forced to wear the traditional robe of a Shi'i scholar (black robes and a turban) at the age of eight, which his classmates constantly ridiculed him for. Before receiving his elementary education in the public school of Haddatha where he learned how to read and write, Husayn studied the Qu'ran for three months. Ali Muruwwa died when Husayn was 12 and Om Husayn died in his arms when Husayn was 20.
After Ali Muruwwa’s death, which left the family in financial ruin, Husayn's hopes of pursuing his religious studies in Najaf seemed non-existent. But eventually, in 1924, at the age of 16, following the intervention of Shaykh ‘Abd al-Husayn Sharraf al-Din, and the help of Muruwwa's cousin Ahmad, enough money was gathered from family members to send Muruwwa to study in Iraq. On his trip to Najaf, Muruwwa recalled his first visit to Beirut at the time. After that, he stayed in a hotel in Damascus near the Snjakdar Mosque, then he headed to Baghdad where he spent 2 weeks after which he finally arrived in Najaf. His education in there was cut short when his professor sheykh Ali Al Zein, whom he deeply admired, had to return to Lebanon due to illness. After that, he headed to Badkoobeh School where he met up with 2 of his fellow students from Bint Jbeil and stayed with Sheykh Muhammad Al Kanji whom Muruwwa described as having changed the course of his entire life. One of these changes was a sudden realization that he was unwillingly thrown into a series of conflicts he wasn't prepared for; the other was his participation in a weekly book auction which led him to purchase a collection of works and poems (Arabic: ديوان) belonging to 19th-century Iraqi poet Ibrahim Al Tabtaba'ee. However, when he was seen reading the book by his colleagues and professors, Muruwwa was met with harsh criticism and resistance. Despite this, his interest in literature deepened, and the more it deepened, the more he was shamed for it. Also around this time, Muruwwa was acquainted with many ideas that conflicted with his teachings such as Marxism, atheism, and Darwinism introduced to him by authors such as Taha Husayn and Shibli al-Shumayyil. These ideas sowed the first seeds of doubt within his worldview which is when he started to wear white clothing in the summer instead of the required yellow clothing; additionally, a year after arriving in Najaf, on one of his short visits to Bint Jbeil, he met and expressed his love for his future wife, Fatima Bazzi. On top of that, during this period he also expressed public support for the controversial al-Shabiba al-‘Amiliyya al-Najafiyya (the Najafi-‘Amili Youth), which even further alienated him from his peers. All of this combined with his rough mental state developed into another internal conflict, but rather than being based on his studies, this conflict challenged and shook his entire belief system to its core. He was chosen to take part in a campaign to diminish the influence of the Protestant church in Al-Amarah (Damascus) by running a library in the area. He took his new job as an opportunity to cope with his struggles. However, not long after, he was fired from this job for "spreading heresy and atheism across the student body". This devastated him, and shortly after his return to Baghdad, he planned to end his studies. He started teaching in several schools, first in Baghdad and Damascus, then back in Lebanon where he married his wife Fatima Bazzi in 1929, but after due consideration and persuasion from his peers in addition to receiving financial support from family in Argentina, he decided to commence his studies in 1934 and after 4 gruelling years, he completed his education in 1938, officially becoming a mujtahid.[2]
Shortly after completing his education, he removed his religious garb, started teaching Arabic literature in Baghdad, and expressed interest in Marxist ideas after being lent The Communist Manifesto and The State and Revolution by Husayn Muhammad Al-Shabibi, who was one of the founders of the Iraqi Communist Party (ICP). However, Muruwwa's proper transition into communist thought began in 1948 after observing the essential role of the ICP in the success of the Al-Wathbah uprising which was an uprising against the Portsmouth Treaty in Iraq. During these protests, Muruwwa wrote in the newspaper Al-Ra'iy Al-'am about the martyrs of the uprising, which for him was the tipping point to his proper transition to communism. During this time he read Stalin's Dialectical Materialism and taught in a Jewish high school where one student described Muruwwa as a "progressive gentleman who showed no ethnic discrimination" who was "a nationalist who hated the British influence in Iraq". However, one year after the success of Al-Wathbah uprising, the pro-British government in Iraq took back power and executed many members and associates of the ICP (including the aforementioned Husayn Muhammad Al-Shabibi who was hanged), consequently, Muruwwa was expelled from Iraq and stripped of his nationality.
With help from the Lebanese ambassador in Iraq, Muruwwa returned to Lebanon in 1951 where he found a job as a writer at the magazine Al-Hayat, and later with assistance from Muhammad Dakroub and Faraj Allah Al-Hilo, Muruwwa launched the newspaper Al-Thaqafah al-Wataniyyah (Arabic: الثقافة الوطنية) which was sold around the Arab world and sold thousands of copies in Cairo alone. After launching the newspaper, he formally became a member of the Lebanese Communist Party (LCP), and later, a partisan of peace (a movement in collaboration with the World Peace Council). For 7 years Muruwwa wrote regularly for both Al-Hauat and Al-Thaqafah al-Wataniyyah until 1957, when he quit his job at Al-Hayat after the assassination of Nasib Al Matni. Although essential, Muruwwa's work in the LCP was mostly intellectual and relating to the partisans of peace so he rarely took part in administrative issues.
In December 1954, Muruwwa attended the Second Congress of Soviet Writers in Moscow as a representative of the Lebanese branch of the Arab Writers’ Association. This was his first trip to the USSR and it deeply resonated with him: he remarked that the relationship between the people and literature that he had witnessed there constituted “a unique interaction unprecedented in the history of humanity”, he was struck by how Soviet writers were “of the people” and therefore their essential style was that of socialist realism. In 1968 he would visit Moscow again, but this time he would begin work on his doctoral thesis, an accumulation of decades worth of knowledge, a historical materialist interpretation of Arabic-Islamic heritage. He returned to Moscow again in 1971 with his wife and spent 3 more years finishing up his thesis in the USSR which he would complete in 1974. Muhruwwa's work on his thesis would ultimately develop into his most famous work, what he described as his magnum opus, the 2-volume book entitled Materialist Tendencies in Arabic-Islamic Philosophy (Arabic: النزعات المادية في الفلسفة العربية الإسلامية).
Like most Lebanese-Marxist intellectuals at the time, Muruwwa remained in Beirut throughout the Lebanese Civil War (1975-1990). At the time, the LCP was allied with Kamal Jumblatt's Lebanese National Movement which made it a target of other factions. Despite this, Muruwwa continued writing even in the harshest circumstances and conditions in the LCP-owned newspaper Al Nida. Additionally, in the early 80s Muruwwah played a key role in establishing the Lebanese National Resistance Front following the Israeli invasion in 1982 which until Hezbollah was the only armed resistance group to Israel.
On 17 February 1987, two well-dressed, armed men knocked on Muruwwa’s door to which his wife answered; she was told they had important news from the LCP. She reluctantly told them he was ill in bed and led them to his room where one of the men sat him up, put a silenced pistol to his head, and shot; Muruwwa died instantly. The men fled and were never charged. Prior to and after his assassination, over 40 other members of the LCP were also killed in similar conditions.
With his wife Fatima Bazzi, Muruwwa had nine children and thirty grandchildren, many of whom have worked in similar fields ranging from the arts, such as music, theatre and film (see Rabih Muruwwa and Nizar Muruwwah), to the sciences such as math and physics.