Exploring the emergence and influence of the Arab New Left movement in the 1950s, particularly focusing on its roots in various Arab regions, its critique of colonialism and support for Palestinian refugees, and its evolving perspective on key regional figures like Nasser. Highlighting the movement's spread across Beirut, Palestine, Jordan, Syria, Iraq, and Kuwait as a dominant progressive force advocating for boycotts and solidarity initiatives.
Featuring Abdel Razzaq Takriti, this is the EIGHTH episode of Thawra (Revolution), our rolling mini-series on Arab radicalism in the 20th century. A compact introduction to the Movement of Arab Nationalists, which in the 1950s built a presence that stretched across the region, from Beirut and Jordan to Cairo and the Gulf—becoming a truly powerful force in Kuwait. Led in significant part by Palestinians, its early history offers a ground-level look at the organizational and theoretical currents shaping radical Arab politics. It is also the backstory for key Marxist groups that later grew out of the Movement: the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, South Yemen’s National Liberation Front, and the Dhofar Liberation Front.
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