Michel Chiha Explained

Birth Date:1891
Birth Place:Bmakine, Ottoman Syria
Death Date:29 December 1954
Death Place:Beirut, Lebanon
Occupation:Banker, Politician, Writer and Journalist
Spouse:Marguerite Philippe Pharaon
Father:Antoine Chiha
Children:3 daughters: Micheline (d. 1940), Madeleine and Marie-Claire

Michel Chiha (1891–1954) was a Lebanese banker, a politician, writer and journalist. Along with Charles Corm, Petro Trad and Omar Daouk, he is considered one of the fathers of the Lebanese Constitution. His ideas and actions have had an important influence on the shaping of the modern Lebanon.

Biography

Early life and Studies

Michel Chiha was born in 1891 in a Christian family of Bmakine, in the Aley District, in the Mount Lebanon Governorate. He hails from a Chaldo-Assyrian family which have migrated from modern day Iraq.[1] His father, Antoine, was a banker who has founded in 1876 the Pharaon and Chiha Bank in Beirut, Lebanon. His mother belonged to a rich Melkite family of Beirut, the Pharaons.

After completing his studies in the Université Saint-Joseph, he joined in 1907 the family business, the Banque Pharaon & Chiha in Beirut. With the outbreak of the First World War and the Ottoman occupation of the autonomous Mount Lebanon, Chiha left Beirut to settle in Cairo, Egypt, in 1915. In addition to pursuing Law studies, he started there with a group of friends his political career and developed his political view about the future of Lebanon.

At the end of the war, he returned to Lebanon to lead the family bank. But soon afterwards, the French Mandate of Lebanon gave him the opportunity to put into practice his vision for Lebanon. In 1919 he contributed to La Revue Phénicienne which was established by Charles Corm in Beirut.[2]

Political life

In August 1920 the state of Lebanon was created out of Ottoman Syria.

On 1 September 1920, the Greater Lebanon was proclaimed by the French High Commissioner. Michel Chiha played an important role in this proclamation, especially concerning the setting up of its borders and the establishment of its first institutions. In 1925, Chiha was elected as the representative of Beirut in the Lebanese parliament. During his mandate that ended in 1929, he was very instrumental in the establishment of the Lebanese Constitution and the Monetary and fiscal systems.

In 1926, he married his cousin Marguerite Pharaon, the sister of Henri Pharaon. They had three daughters, Micheline (d. 1940), Madeleine and Marie-Claire. In 1929, Michel Chiha left all his political responsibilities without, however, stopping the promotion of his vision of Lebanon.

In 1937, he acquired with a group of friends the French language newspaper Le Jour. Until his death in 1954, Michel Chiha delivered daily his editorial du Jour, exposing his political views and vision.[3] During this period he started publishing poems, essays and lectures in French. In 1940, he participated in the foundation of the Beirut Stock Exchange and founded a newspaper in English, the Eastern Times.

In 1943, his brother-in-law, Bechara El Khoury, became the president of the newly independent Lebanese Republic. Chiha served as an advisor during Khoury's Mandate (1943–1952).

One important cause interested him until his death, the Palestinian cause especially after 1948 Arab-Israeli War. He took an active role in defending this cause. He died in Beirut, Lebanon, on 29 December 1954.

Political views

The Palestinian Question

In May 1948, the State of Israel was proclaimed on a portion of the land of Palestine. This debacle was repeatedly commented by Michel Chiha in his editorials. In 1945 he had already written:

“No political preoccupation should turn our attention from Palestine! In our backyard, is currently developing one of the most anguishing questions of this world.”

For him this problem represents a direct menace for Lebanon, Michel Chiha writes in December 1947:

“(…) The decision to partition Palestine by creating the Jewish State, is one of the most serious mistakes of world politics. The most surprising consequences are going to result from an apparently small thing. Nor is it offensive to reason to state that this small thing will have its part to play in shaking the world to its foundations.”

In his editorials, the question of Palestine would recur often. Michel Chiha insists relentlessly on the dangers that would jeopardize the newly born state of Lebanon. We find in his editorials the following phrases:

A text from 1946 would take today a particular value in the sense that it relates directly to current events:

“…The American interventions in Palestine are increasingly looking like they’re dealing with a purely American question. It’s a pity that the people of the United States, today the most powerful in the world, would cover-up from their vantage point such an adventure; they are putting themselves in a definitive contradiction with their most sacred moral and political principles.”

Works

Published works

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: A House of Many Mansions: The History of Lebanon Reconsidered. I.B.Tauris. Kamal S. Salibi. Kamal Salibi. 2003. 179. 9781860649127.
  2. Book: Fawwaz Traboulsi. A History of Modern Lebanon. 2012. Pluto Press. London. 10.2307/j.ctt183p4f5. 93. 9780745332741. 2nd.
  3. Eyal Zisser. The Maronites, Lebanon and the State of Israel: Early Contacts. Middle Eastern Studies. October 1995. 31. 4. 896. 4283765.