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ID104156
Title ProperLong and intricate funeral of Yasin Al-Hashinmi
Other Title InformationPan-Arabism, civil religion, and popular nationalism in Damascus, 1937
LanguageENG
AuthorWien, Peter
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)After his premature death in exile in Beirut in 1937, the body of former Iraqi prime minister Yasin al-Hashimi became a matter of contention between the Syrian and Iraqi governments, as did his legacy as an avid Pan-Arabist. When the coffin with the deceased stopped in Damascus on its promised transfer to Baghdad, the Syrian National Bloc government used the opportunity to stage a solemn republican funeral to bolster its Arab nationalist credentials. Syrian conflicts with the Iraqi government that had removed al-Hashimi in a military coup in the previous year ultimately made Yasin's return impossible, however, and he was buried in Damascus, next to Saladin's mausoleum at the Umayyad Mosque. Unfortunately for the National Bloc, the funeral coincided with the first clashes over the Alexandretta crisis. The resulting street protests destroyed all public confidence that the bloc had gained during the funeral, underlining the volatile nature of nationalist politics at the time.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 43, No. 2; May 2011: p271-292
Journal SourceInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 43, No. 2; May 2011: p271-292
Key WordsYasin-Al-Hashimi ;  Pan-Arabism ;  Civil Religion ;  Nationalism