Abd al-Qadir ibn Muhyi al-Din (between 1806 and 1808 – 26 May 1883; ), known as Emir Abdelkader or ʿAbd al-Qadir al-Hasani al-Jazaʾiri, was an Algerian religious and military leader who led a struggle against the French colonial invasion of Algiers from 1831 to 1847.
As an Islamic scholar and Sufi who unexpectedly found himself leading a military campaign, he built up a collection of Algerian tribesmen that for 17 years successfully held out against one of the most advanced armies in Europe. His respect for what we now call human rights has often been noted, particularly by his Christian opponents.
After his surrender in 1847, he was detained in France for almost five years before being released by Napoleon III and taken to Bursa. Two years later, in 1855, he settled in Damascus. In 1860, his intervention to halt the massacre of the Christian community in Damascus earned him honours and awards from a multitude of countries. It was also in Damascus that he wrote his major work, the Kitab al-Mawaqif (the "Book of [Political] Positions").
Name
His full name is Abdelkader Ibn Mahieddine El-Hasani.
- "Abdelkader" —which is transliterated as ʻAbd al-Qādir ("servant of the Almighty")— can also be spelled "Abd al-Kader", "Abd el-Kader", "Abdul Kader", "Abdel Kader", etc.
- "Ibn Mahieddine" (or "Muhyi ad-Din") means "son of Mahieddine", his father’s name.
- "El-Hasani" refers to his descent from Hasan ibn Ali, grandson of Muhammad, hence his status as sharif.
- During his exile in Syria, he was given the name "El-Djazairi" ("the Algerian"), which was passed on to his descendants.
- He was appointed emir (amîr al-muminîn, "commander of the faithful") in 1832.
The choice of the name Abdelkader, common in the emir’s family tree, pays homage to Abdul Qadir Gilani, the 11th-century founder of the Qadiriyya Sufi brotherhood in Baghdad, to which Abdelkader’s family belongs.
Family background
Abdelkader was born in Ottoman Regency of Algiers between 1806 and 1808 in the hamlet of el Guetna (situated on the El-Hammam wadi, some 15 miles west of Mascara), into a family belonging to the religious and marabout aristocracy.
His family possesses two family trees, both of which trace back to Muhammad. The first includes Idris I of Morocco (8th century), great-grandson of Hasan ibn Ali and founder of the Idrisid dynasty. The second includes Abdul Qadir Gilani (11th–12th centuries), founder of the Sufi Qadiri Order.
Abdelkader's father, Muhieddine al-Hasani, was the muqaddam of the Qadiriyya zawiya of Oued El-Hammam. His religious knowledge and uprightness made him a mediator between the Bey’s authority and the people. His generosity towards the poor was well known, as were his integrity and impartiality, which meant he was regularly called upon to settle disputes between individuals as well as between tribes. He was on good terms with Sultan Abd al-Rahman of Morocco, who opened his borders to the peoples of the West as early as 1830. Abdelkader’s mother, Lalla Zohra, a woman of letters and well-versed in religion, was the daughter of Omar Bendoukha, muqaddam of a zawiya in Hammam Bou Hadjar. Affiliated with the Hachem tribe, this family had lived in the Ghriss plain since Abd el-Kadr ben Ahmed, a learned figure known as Sidi Kada, settled there around 1640; his mausoleum remains one of the most visited religious sites in the region. From a very young age, Abdelkader was steeped in stories about his ancestors, whose piety and learning served as edifying examples to him.
Youth
Abdelkader grew up in his father's zawiya, which by the early nineteenth century had become the centre of a thriving community on the banks of the Oued al-Hammam. Like the hundreds of students supported by the zawiya, he received a traditional education that encompassed the principles and practice of Islam, the rules of etiquette (adab), the practice of virtues, reading and writing, grammar, Quranic exegesis (tafsir), hadith, and jurisprudence (fiqh). It was said that he could read and write by the age of 5. At 12, he was authorized to comment on the Quran and the hadiths. A brillant student, he memorized the entire Quran at the age of 14, thereby receiving the title of hafiz. A year later, his father sent him to Oran, the seat of the Turkish administration, for further education. A gifted orator, he captured the attention of his peers with his poetry and religious diatribes. As for his skill in taming and riding horses, it is the fruit of a practice that dates back to his early childhood.
Raised in faith, morality, and moderation, Abdelkader found it difficult to cope with the lax atmosphere in Oran and returned to El Guetna before the end of the school year. There he continued his studies for two years with his cousin Mustapha ben Thami, son of the mufti of Oran.
In 1825, he set out on the Hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca, with his father. He then stayed in Medina, before travelling to Damascus and Baghdad, where he visited the graves of noted Muslims such as ibn Arabi and Abdul Qadir Gilani (called "al-Jilālī" in Algeria). Returning to Mecca a year after his first visit, he undertook a second pilgrimage. This experience cemented his religious consciousness. On his way back home, he was impressed by the reforms carried out by Muhammad Ali of Egypt. He arrived in his homeland in 1827 and, that same year, married his cousin Kheira bint Boutaleb
French invasion and resistance
1830–1833: French invasion, election of Abdelkader
At the beginning of the 19th century, the Ottoman Regency of Algiers was a weakened state. Numerous rebellions were brutally suppressed. Relations with France, which for some forty years had been delaying repayment of a substantial debt owed to the Regency, were strained, and the ”fly-whisk incident” (April 1827) served as a pretext for the French navy to blockade the port of Algiers. It lasted until June 1830, followed by the invasion of Algiers and the exile of Hussein Dey (10 July 1830), preludes to the colonial offensive. In France, the July Revolution (27–29 July 1830) brought an end to the Restoration (Charles X), which was replaced by the July Monarchy (Louis-Philippe I).
In January 1831, the French army took Oran, the capital of the Western Province, and drove out the Bey and his garrison. Left to their own devices, the tribes of the West descended into anarchy: rival powers and recurring wars between tribes, the law of the jungle, looting, the collapse of trade due to a lack of security, no laws, no justice, no taxes.
In April 1832, Abdelkader's father was asked to lead a resistance campaign against the occupiers.
Abdelkader was seen as an appropriate candidate not only because of his age but also because of his own learning, devoutness and saintly bloodline. Despite the reluctance of certain other tribes, the appointment was confirmed five days later at the great mosque of Mascara, and then by Sultan Abd al-Rahman of Morocco, whose pre-eminence Abdelkader was careful to acknowledge. The result, after protracted negotiations, was the Treaty of Tafna, signed on 30 May 1837. This treaty gave even more control of interior portions of Algeria to Abdelkader, who won control of all of Oran Province, the neighbouring province of Titteri, and even beyond.
Both his military strategy and the peace treaties cemented Abdelkader’s reputation, and his titles of Commander of the Believers and Sultan —albeit against his will— were confirmed by the treaties, which made him an undisputed sovereign, without even having to pay tribute to the French. In his correspondence with the Sultan of Morocco, he used only the title of emir so as not to upset the monarch, who supported him.
Both allies and enemies of the time noted Abdelkader’s philosophical and theological erudition; in times of peace, he would never leave his library. He demonstrated political and military leadership, was known for his chivalrous spirit, and acted as a competent administrator and persuasive orator. His fervent faith in the doctrines of Islam was unquestioned.
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1837–1839: Period of peace, formation of a State
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The period of peace following the Treaty of Tafna benefited both sides, and the Emir Abdelkader took the opportunity to consolidate a new functional state, with a capital in Tagdemt. He played down his political power, however, repeatedly declining the title of sultan and striving to concentrate on his spiritual authority, through obtaining a fatwa which gave him firm authority to call for jihad and make tax avoidance a "crime against the Muslim community as a whole".
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This event was followed by further significant setbacks for the Algerian side and, by the end of the year, Abdelkader withdrew with his troops and supporters to Morocco, which was ruled by Sultan Abd al-Rahman ben Hicham, who supported him. Infuriated in particular by Morocco’s support for their enemy, the French bombarded, in August 1844, Tangier, then Mogador, whilst Bugeaud, promoted to marshal, crossed the border with 11,000 men and defeated the Moroccan army at the Battle of Isly. Under the Treaty of Tangier, signed on 10 September 1844, France forced Abd al-Rahman to banish the Emir from his territory.
1845–1846: War crimes
In June 1845, more than 500 men, women and children from the Oulad Riah tribe, pursued by Lieutenant-Colonel Aimable Pélissier’s column, took refuge in a cave in the Dahra Range. After unsuccessfully ordering them to surrender, the soldiers blocked the entrance with branches, which they set alight, filling the cave with smoke and using up the oxygen; only 40 of them survived. This smoking out had been preceded a year earlier by one carried out by Colonel Louis-Eugène Cavaignac against members of the Sbehas tribe, who were accused of murdering settlers and French-appointed qaids; hunted down, they took refuge in a cave where they all perished. In August 1845, Colonel Jacques Leroy de Saint-Arnaud discovered 500 Algerians hiding in a cave; as they refused to surrender, he had the entrance blocked until they all perished.
A month later, Abdelkader defeated the French at the Battle of Sidi-Brahim, taking around a hundred prisoners. A few days later, at Aïn Témouchent, he captured without a fight a French column of 200 soldiers who had been called up as reinforcements. Continuing the offensive, the Emir reached the Hautes Plaines and asked a lieutenant to escort these 300 prisoners to his deira (former smala), his mobile capital encamped in Moroccan territory on the banks of the Moulouya River, near the Algerian border. Exposed to both French and Moroccan troops and running short of food, the deira, comprising some 200 tents, regarded these prisoners as an excessive burden. Abdelkader made repeated proposals for an exchange, but Bugeaud refused, banking on a release which he believed the Emir would be compelled to grant in order to alleviate the hardships of his community. But on 24 April 1846, whilst Abdelkader was fighting 300 miles away, one of his lieutenants, after consulting with the other camp authorities, ordered their execution. He spared 11 officers, confident that their presence would prevent French reprisals. The Emir heard the news, but due to the fighting, he did not return to his deira until three months later. He proposed to Bugeaud that the 11 prisoners be exchanged. As this offer came to nothing, he planned to propose their release in exchange for a ransom, but his officers believed that their own safety depended on the hostages’ continued presence and would only agree to his plan on condition that the Emir took responsibility for the crime. Abdelkader agreed and wrote to King Louis Philippe to this effect. The prisoners were returned in exchange for 33,000 francs. As far as France was concerned, the Emir had discredited himself through this massacre, even though certain authorities in the country, having cross-checked the evidence, concluded that he was innocent.
1847: End of the resistance
In January 1847, in order to drive the Algerians from his territory, Sultan Abd al-Rahman ordered the Moroccan tribes neighbouring Abdelkader’s deira to stop selling it food, and to harass those who attempted to obtain supplies. Abdelkader endured this situation for six months, then went on the offensive, which had the effect of rallying several Moroccan tribes to his cause and facilitating the supply of his camp.
Following this failure by the Moroccans, an assassin was sent to kill Emir Abdelkader. One evening, while he was reading, a tall, burly man entered his tent, a dagger in his hand. Abdelkader looked up, and the man immediately threw himself at his feet: "I was going to strike you, but the sight of you disarmed me. I thought I saw the halo of the Prophet around your head."
In July 1847, the nephew of Abd al-Rahman, Moulay Hashim, was sent along with the governor of the Rif, El Hamra, in command of a Moroccan army to attack the Emir and his deira in Oued Aslaf. The Moroccans were defeated, El Hamra killed, and Moulay Hashim had barely escaped with his life. The Emir then sent his deputy Bou Hamedi to negotiate with the Moroccan sultan. Abd al-Rahman refused to see him, threw him in prison, where he died of poisoning.
Early December, two of Abd al-Rahman’s sons, commanding 50,000 soldiers, were defeated at the Battle of Agueddin by Abdelkader’s army, consisting of 1,200 cavalrymen and 800 infantrymen. Soon after, Abdelkader made the choice to withdraw from Morocco. Whilst he and his men were repelling a new battalion of Moroccan soldiers sent in his pursuit, his deira, comprising some 5,000 people, managed to safely cross the River Kis, and enter French territory.
By the end of 1847, Abdelkader deemed the situation hopeless and, preferring to fall into the hands of those who had fought him—whom he considered loyal—rather than into those of Moulay Abd al-Rahman, who had betrayed him, on December 22 he proposed to General Louis Juchault de Lamoricière the laying down of his arms in exchange for a safe conduct to Alexandria or Acre..<br>
Oil on canvas by Ange Tissier, 1861.]]
Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte was a relatively new president, having come to power in the Revolution of 1848 while Abdelkader was already imprisoned. He was keen to make a break with several policies of the previous regime, and Abdelkader's cause was one of them. Eventually, on 16 October 1852, the Emir was released by the President. Abdelkader remained in France for a further two months. On two occasions he visited Paris, where he met his liberator once again; the first time at the Château de Saint-Cloud, where the Emir, of his own free will, swore an oath never again to stir up unrest in Algeria; the second time, on 2 December, at the Tuileries Palace, where Louis-Napoléon was proclaimed emperor under the name of Napoleon III. Two weeks later, Abdelkader and his entourage were about to leave the country for Bursa (now in Turkey), when the Emir spotted his future biographer, Alexandre Bellemare, and asked him to refute, in writing and in speech, the belief still held by many French people that he was responsible for the massacre of the French prisoners on 24 April 1846. France granted him an annual pension of 100,000 francs.
1853-1883: Exile in the Near East
Shortly after settling in Bursa, Abdelkader received a valuable sabre with the following words engraved on the scabbard: ‘Sultan Napoleon III to Emir Abd-el-Kader-ben-Mahhi-ed-Dīn’. As he had promised in Paris, the Emir sent the emperor three Arabian horses. Surrounded by a population generally hostile towards Arabs, whose language and customs were alien to him, and despite close ties with scholars and religious leaders, his situation in Bursa weighed heavily on him, though he dared not inform the emperor. The opportunity, however, arose in early 1855, when a violent earthquake devastated the city, prompting the Emir to travel to Paris to seek, and receive, the emperor’s permission to settle in Damascus. Before leaving Paris, he visited the Paris Exposition and presented the president of the Asiatic Society with the Arabic manuscript of his Rappel à l’intelligent, avis à l’indifférent (Reminder to the intelligent, notice to the indifferent). This manuscript was translated into French and published in 1858, then retranslated into French in 1977 under the title Lettre aux Français (Letter to the French).
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From 9 July onwards, a majority of Druze, but also Kurdish militiamen and other Muslims –tens of thousands of men in total– poured in from all directions and attacked the Christian quarter, massacring men, women and children, and looting and setting fire to houses. The soldiers of the Pasha were unable to quell the riot; some even joined the mob. Abdelkader and his comrades-in-arms swept through the neighbourhood, urging the survivors to take refuge in his home and in those of his compatriots, thereby saving thousands of lives. Among them were the heads of several foreign consulates as well as the Daughters of Charity and the Lazarists, along with the 400 children in the care of these two religious orders. During a lull, the Emir spread the word throughout the city that anyone who brought him a living Christian would receive 50 piastres. The lure of money enabled him to save a large number of additional Christians. They all finally found refuge in the citadel, which the Pasha, ashamed of his role, agreed to make available to them. Accounts of the death toll vary widely: between 3,000 and 15,000.
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A French doctor reports:
Reports coming out of Syria as the rioting subsided stressed the prominent role of Abdelkader, and considerable international recognition followed. The French government increased his pension to 150,000 francs and presented him with the grand cross of the Order of the Legion of Honour. He also received the grand cross of the Order of the Redeemer from the Kingdom of Greece, the grand cross of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus from the Kingdom of Italy, the grand cross of the Order of the White Eagle from the Russian Empire, the medal of knighthood of the Order of the Black Eagle from the Kingdom of Prussia, the First Class Medjidie from the Ottoman Empire, the grand cross of the Order of Pope Pius IX from the Vatican, and a Blazing Star from the Masonic obedience Grand Orient de France. Abraham Lincoln sent him a pair of gold-inlaid pistols and Great Britain sent him a likewise gold-inlaid hunting rifle.
In France, the episode represented the culmination of a remarkable turnaround, from being considered as an enemy of France during the first half of the 19th century, to becoming a "friend of France" after having intervened in favour of persecuted Christians. "What I did," the Emir replied to Imam Shamil, "I had to do in the name of Islam and respect for human rights".
Last decades
thumb|<div style="text-align:center;">Abdelkader in Damascus ca. 1862</div>
When he has no other commitments, Abdelkader devotes his day to his religious and spiritual vocation. According to his British biographer Charles Henry Churchill, who knew him well in Bursa and Damascus, the Emir rises two hours before sunrise to meditate and pray at home and at the mosque, has breakfast, then works in his office until midday. He then goes to the mosque for the midday prayer (dhuhr), followed by three hours of religious instruction for his group of pupils. After the afternoon prayer (asr), he returns home and spends a good hour with his eight sons. He has dinner and then returns to the mosque for the last two prayers of the day, between which he teaches again. He then spends about two hours in his study, before going to bed. Every month he distributes at least the equivalent of 4,000 francs to the needy.
In January 1863, Abdelkader left Damascus for the Hejaz. He performed the pilgrimage to Mecca, spent three months in Taif, and returned to Mecca, where he joined the Darqawi sheikh Muhammad al-Fasi al-Shadhilî. He remained there for eight months and then spent three months in Medina.
thumb|left|upright=0.90|<div style="text-align:center;">Abdelkader photographed in Paris by<br />[[Étienne Carjat in 1865</div>]]
On 18 June 1864, after leaving Medina to return to Damascus, Abdelkader was initiated into Freemasonry by the "Les pyramides d’Égypte" lodge in Alexandria, acting on behalf of the Parisian "Henri IV" lodge. His first contact with Freemasonry dates back to September 1860, following the rescue of the Christians of Damascus, when he was approached by Freemasons from the Henri IV lodge, affiliated to the Grand Orient de France. Keen to forge humanitarian ties, the Emir welcomed the principles and ideals of the GOF: the existence of God ("Great Architect of the Universe"), the immortality of the soul, the love of humanity, the practice of tolerance, and universal brotherhood. But already a year after his initiation —which was confirmed at the Henri IV lodge in Paris in 1865— he observed among his Masonic "brothers" a gradual erosion of belief in the existence of God and the immortality of the soul. Unable to accept this relativisation of what he regarded as immutable, he left Freemasonry.
In 1865, he travelled to Constantinople, London and Paris. In 1867, on the occasion of the Paris Exposition, he returned to France at the invitation of Napoleon III.
He was invited to the opening of the Suez Canal on 17 November 1869 because of his connections with the Viceroy of Egypt, Ismail Pasha, and with Ferdinand de Lesseps, the promoter and director of the canal project, of whom he had been one of the most active supporters. That same year, whilst still in Egypt, he met Imam Shamil, whose life story —in the North Caucasus, a region coveted and subsequently annexed by the Russians—mirrored that of the Emir: Sufi, elected leader of the jihad, surrender after years of struggle, imprisonment in the occupier’s country.
Death and burial
Abdelkader died in Damascus on 26 May 1883. After receiving military honours, in the presence of his "brothers in God", the city authorities, consular representatives and a vast crowd, he was laid to rest in the mausoleum of Ibn Arabi, whose teachings he embodied six centuries later. This spiritual connection between Ibn Arabi and Abdelkader is evident both in the commentaries transcribed by his Damascene listeners and in those written in his own hand, which form the voluminous Kitab al-Mawaqif, the "Book of Halts", the Emir's major work that bears witness to his spiritual insight.
In 1965, in an effort to strengthen national unity, the Algerian authorities asked the Emir’s descendants for permission to repatriate his remains. The family agreed on condition that the Emir’s great-grandson, Abder Razak Abdelkader, who was being held by the Algerian government, be released. Following his release and deportation to France, the Emir’s remains were transferred from Damascus to the El Alia Cemetery on the outskirts of Algiers
Legacy
From the beginning of his career, Abdelkader inspired admiration not only from within Algeria, but from Europeans as well.. According to C.H. Churchill, "the generous care, the tender sympathy" he showed to his prisoners-of-war was "almost unparalleled in the annals of warfare".
In 1843, French Marshal General Soult declared that of all the men of his time whom he had known or heard of, Abdelkader was one of the three greatest; the two others, Imam Shamil and Muhammad Ali of Egypt are also Muslims, he pointed out.
The French General Bugeaud considers that:
<blockquote>Abdelkader was a man of genius… certainly one of the greatest figures of our time… he is an active, intelligent and swift enemy, who exerts influence over the Arab populations through the prestige conferred upon him by his genius and the nobility of the cause he defends; he is much more than an ordinary pretender; he is a kind of prophet; he is the hope of all devout Muslims.</blockquote>
According to French Captain de Saint-Hyppolite:
<blockquote>The Emir is a remarkable man. He occupies a moral position unknown to civilised Europe. He is a man detached from worldly matters, who believes himself to be inspired and to whom God has entrusted the mission of protecting his fellow believers… His ambition is not to conquer; glory is not the motive for his actions; personal interest does not guide him; the love of riches is unknown to him; he is attached to the earth only insofar as it relates to the fulfilment of the will of the Almighty, of whom he is the instrument.</blockquote>
Abdelkader was involved in research that went into the Bulaq Press's 1911 third edition of Ibn Arabi's Meccan Revelations. This edition was based on the Konya Manuscript, Ibn Arabi's revised version of the text, and it subsequently became standard.
The Abd el-Kader Fellowship is a US postdoctoral fellowship of The Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture at the University of Virginia.
Iconography
A medal bearing the portrait of Abdelkader was engraved by the Franco-Swiss medalist Antoine Bovy in 1862. A copy of this medal is on display at the Musée Carnavalet in Paris. The obverse portrait was inspired by Ange Tissier's 1852 painting. It is bordered by the following inscription (in French):
- El-Hadji Abd-el-Kader ould-Mahiddin / born in 1807 / near Mascara
The reverse bears the following inscription around the edge:
- Emir of North Africa · Defender of the Arab nationality · Protector of oppressed Christians · 1862
and in the field:
- The modern Jugurtha / He held one of the most powerful nations on Earth at bay / For 14 years, his story is one of our setbacks and our successes in Africa / He submits on 23 December 1847 / A magnanimous decree by Napoleon III restores his freedom on 2 December 1852 / In 1860, he pays off his moral debt to the Emperor by becoming Providence for the Christians of Syria / France, which he had fought against, loves and admires him
In Mexico, a statue of Emir Abdelkader was created by architect Luis Aguilar in May 2008.
A bust of Abdelkader was unveiled at the Red Cross headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, in 2013.
A sculpture of the Emir by Michel Audiard was installed in the gardens of the Château d'Amboise, France, in 2022.
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Names of places and institutions
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In Algeria, the name of Emir Abdelkader has been given to:
- the municipality of El Emir Abdelkader in Aïn Témouchent Province,
- the municipality of Emir Abdelkader in Jijel Province,
- the municipality of Bordj El Emir Abdelkader in Tissemsilt Province,
- the municipality of Zmalet El Emir Abdelkader in Tiaret Province,
- a mosque in Constantine, where the Emir Abdelkader University of Islamic Sciences is located,
- a mosque in Oran,
- a secondary school in Algiers,
- a primary school in Batna,
- his zawiya in El Guetna,
- a square in Algiers and Mascara,
- numerous streets and avenues.
In Morocco, his name has been given to the Meknes railway station, a street in Casablanca and an avenue in Rabat.
In Tunisia, to a street in Sfax.
In France, to:
- an ocean liner of the Compagnie Générale Transatlantique, launched in 1880 and dismantled in 1992,
- a square in Paris (5th arrondissement) and Lyon (7th arrondissement),
- a street in Toulon and Amboise,
- a Masonic lodge of the Grande Loge de France.
In the United States, his name was used to name the town of Elkader, Iowa. The town's founders, Timothy Davis, John Thompson, and Chester Sage, were impressed by his fight against French colonial power and decided to pick his name as the name for their new settlement in 1846.
In Russia, his name has been given to a square in Moscow.
Relatives
Emir Abdelkader had ten sons and six daughters. At the beginning of the 20th century, nine sons were living in Syria, as well as five daughters, married to cousins.
His son Hachem returned to Algeria in 1892 and died in Bou Saâda in 1900, leaving two sons, one of whom, Khaled, would play an important political role in Algeria. He began his career in the French military and later entered politics in Algeria, where he actively campaigned for the country's independence. He is considered the founder of Algerian nationalism.
In popular media
In 2013, the US film director Oliver Stone announced the pending production of a filmed biopic called The Emir Abd el-Kader, to be directed by Charles Burnett. To date the film has not been made.
Documentary films in French:
- Abd el-Kader, fondateur de l’État algérien, by Salem Brahimi (96 min, 2014).
- L'Émir Abd el-Kader à Amboise, le prisonnier tant aimé, by Adyl Abdelhafidi (52 min, 2013).
- Abd el-Kader, l’exil et le divin, by Florida Sadki which recounts the captivity at the Château de Pau (52 min, 2009).
- À la recherche de l'Émir Abd El-Kader, by Mohamed Latrèche (52 min, 2004).
Images
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See also
- French North Africa
- Reghaïa attack (1837)
- Raid on Reghaïa (1837) (1837)
- First Battle of Boudouaou (1837)
- Mokrani Revolt
- French Algeria
- Emir Abdelkader, Jijel
- Emir Abdelkader Mosque
- Emir Abdelkader University
Notes
Citations
Bibliography and further reading
External links
- Abd Al-Kadir's Struggle for Truth
- Science sacrée, Revue d'études traditionnelles
- When Americans Honored an Icon of Jihad – John Kiser's video on Emir Abdelkader al-Jazairi
- Famous Quotes by Abd al-Qadir
