Muhammad Hasan Abi al-Mahasin

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Muhammad-Hasan Abu al-Mahasin
محمد حسن أبي المحاسن
Personal
Born1875 (1875)
Died1923 (aged 47–48)
ReligionIslam
Children
  • Kamil
  • Muhammad-Husayn
  • FadhilMuhammad-Sharif
  • Abd al-Razzaq
  • Mu'in
ParentsHamadi al-Maliki (father)
JurisprudenceTwelver Shia Islam
RelativesNouri al-Maliki (grandson)
Muslim leader
TeacherMirza Taqi al-Shirazi

Sheikh Muhammad-Hasan Abi al-Mahasin al-Janaji al-Ha'eri (Arabic: الشيخ محمد حسن أبي المحاسن الجناجي الحائري; 1875–1923) was an Iraqi poet and politician.[1] He was most famous for his participation in the Iraqi revolt of 1920.[2]

Early life and family[]

Abi al-Mahasin, was born in Karbala in 1874. His grandfather, Muhsin al-Maliki, was the first of the family to migrate from Janaja, Hilla to Karbala, residing in Janaja, al-Hindiya in the end of the 19th century. They also gained stature in the city, after marrying into the Nasrallah family.[1] He is of the Albu Muhsin family of Al-Ghati offshoot of Al-Ali tribe, a branch of Bani Malik tribe. Abi al-Mahasin is the grandfather of Nouri al-Maliki, the prime minister of Iraq from 2006 until 2014.

Biography[]

Abi al-Mahasin was one of the leaders of the Iraqi revolution against the British occupation during and after the First World War. He became Mirza Taqi al-Shirazi's representative, by leading the Revolutionary Council (known as al-Majlis al-Milli; Arabic: المجلس الملي) in 1920.

He later became the Minister of Education in the first national government of the royal reign of King Faisal I after Iraq's independence in 1922.

Works[]

Abi al-Mahasin was a renowned poet, and his student Sheikh Muhammad-Ali al-Yaqubi published his diwan for him in 1966, under the name Diwan Abi al-Mahasin al-Karbalaei.

Abi al-Mahasin wrote a lot of poetry on pan-Arabism, and the glory of the Arabs, and one of his famous lines includes:[2]

فمتى تؤلف وحدة عربية
وطنيه الإصدار والإيراد
ليس العراق بموطني هو وحده
فبلاد قومي كلهن بلادي

When will there be Arab unity,
A patriotic notion of giving and taking.
Iraq is not my country alone,
For the Arab nations are all my country

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Ṭuʻmah, Salmān Hādī (1998). Asha'er Karbala Wa 'Usariha [Tribes and Families of Karbala] (in Arabic). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar al-Mahaja al-Baydha'. pp. 542–3.
  2. ^ a b al-Grety, Alaa'; al-Ta'ei, Salih (2010-06-10). "Lamha 'An Abi al-Mahasin al-Karbalaei Wa Dawrahu Fi Thawrat al-Iraq al-Kubra 1920 AD". Ahl al-Bayt (as) (in Arabic). 1 (10): 184–193.
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