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AMERICAN DIASPORA (1) answer(s).
 
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ID:   131561


Sound minds in sound bodies: transnational philanthropy and patriotic masculinity in Al-Nadi Al-Homsi and Syrian Brazil, 1920-32 / Fahrenthold, Stacy   Journal Article
Fahrenthold, Stacy Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract Established in 1920, al-Nadi al-Homsi in São Paulo, Brazil was a young men's club devoted to Syrian patriotic activism and culture in the American mahjar (diaspora). Founded by a transnational network of intellectuals from Homs, the fraternity committed itself to what it saw as a crucial aspect of Syrian national independence under Amir Faysal: the development of a political middle class and a masculine patriotic culture. Al-Nadi al-Homsi directed this project at Syrian youth, opening orphanages, libraries, and schools in both Syria and in Brazil. In these spaces, men and boys congregated to celebrate a polite male culture centered on secular philanthropy, popular education, and corporeal discipline through sports. This article argues that during the 1920s and 1930s, al-Nadi al-Homsi's politics of benevolence was part of a larger social milieu that drew analogies between strong Syrian minds and bodies and a sovereign, independent Syrian homeland.
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