Saïd bin Saïd Tabbara | |
Native Name: | سعيد سعيد طبارة |
Native Name Lang: | ar |
Birth Place: | Beirut, Lebanon |
Death Date: | November 27, 2016 |
Death Place: | Manama, Bahrain |
Resting Place: | Manama Cemetery |
Alma Mater: | American University of Beirut |
Occupation: | educator |
Years Active: | 1940—2016 |
Known For: | pioneering Technical education in Bahrain |
Saïd bin Saïd Tabbara (Arabic: سعيد سعيد طبارة, born in Beirut February 11, 1919, Lebanon, died November 27, 2016, in Manama, Bahrain)[1] was a Bahraini-Lebanese educator.
Tabbara was born orphaned when his merchant father died in a Mediterranean Sea storm on return from Acre, Israel, leaving his pregnant wife to raise six children, of which he was named after his father. His siblings were Sobhi, Wadad, Sania, Wafiqah, Hind, and Naamat.[2]
He attended and graduated from the American University of Beirut.
Tabbara applied at first to work at Bahrain Petroleum Company (Bapco) but was turned down due to a lack of vacancies, continuing to make an effort to move there by relocating to Basra. Finally, with the help of a recommendation letter from his sister Wafiqah Sawaf-Nairt o the Bahraini emir’s advisor Sir Charles Belgrave, Saïd Tabarra was granted permission to land at the merchant section of Bahrain International Airport (then in the Gudaibiya neighborhood of Manama) in 1940 after taking English classes in Baghdad.[3]
A teacher at the Manama Technical School in the Department of Machinery from 1940 to 1942, he was promoted to a senior teaching post that he held until 1944, doing most of the work of Principal Geoffrey Edward Hutchings while the latter was away on other duties. Tabbara directed the School from 1944 to 1976, reorienting Technical education in Bahrain toward cooperation with companies such as Bapco. He helped found Jidhafs Secondary Technical School for Boys in 1969 and was appointed to a series of posts at the Ministry of Education, including director of industrial technical education from 1967 to 1972, director of Technical education from 1972 to 1975, and assistant deputy director for general and technical education from 1975 to 1982.[4] From 1982 to 1984, he served as a consultant for technical higher education. Tabbara participated in many technological and technical education projects in Bahrain, Kuwait, and elsewhere in the Gulf, and he was a member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Bahrain for ten years.
Tabbara was married to Aisha Muhammad Fahmi Ibo[5] and had the children Khaled (born 1950), Jumana(1945), Sajida(1952), and Huda (1954).[6]
He died on November 27, 2016, in the Bahraini capital of Manama.