Liberation Rally
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Liberation Rally هيئة التحرير | |
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Chairman | Gamal Abdel Nasser |
Supreme Council | Fathi Radwan Salah Salem Kamal al-Din Hussein Anwar al-Sadat Nur al-Din Tarraf Ahmad Hassan al-Baqori Ahmad al-Sherbasi Ahmad Abd Allah Tuaima Hussein al-Sayyid Abd al-Qadir |
Founded | 23 January 1953[1] (announced) 10 February 1953 (launched) |
Dissolved | 1957[citation needed] |
Preceded by | Free Officers Movement (as military faction) |
Succeeded by | National Union |
Headquarters | Cairo, Egypt |
Ideology | Majority: Factions: |
Political position | Catch-all |
Slogan | "Union, order and action" (الاتحاد والنظام والعمل) |
The Liberation Rally (Arabic: هيئة التحرير, romanized: Hayʾa at-Taḥrīr) was a short-lived political organization created after the Egyptian revolution of 1952 to organize popular support for the government. Formed around a month after all other parties were outlawed, it supported pan-Arabism, Arab socialism, and British withdrawal from the Suez Canal. The Rally was dissolved later in the 1950s and replaced by the National Union.
References
[edit]- ^ T. R. L. “Egypt since the Coup d’Etat of 1952.” The World Today 10, no. 4 (1954): 140–49. http://www.jstor.org/stable/40392721.
- Helen Chapin Metz, ed. Egypt: A Country Study. Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1990.
- "Liberation Rally". Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa. Encyclopedia.com.