Publics, Politics and Participation

(Wang) #1
Campos 261

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26.ee Ami Ayalon, “Political Journalism and Its Audience in Egypt, 1875– S
1914,” Culture and History 16 (1995): 116.



  1. Ha-Zvi, 17 November 1908.
    28.a’akov Yehoshu’a, Y Tarikh al-Sihafa al-‘Arabiyya fi Falastin fi al-‘Ahd al-
    ‘Uthmani, 1908–1918 (Jerusalem: Matb’at al-ma’arif, 1978), 18–19.

  2. Nissim Malul, “ha-‘Itonut ha-‘Aravit,” ha-Shiloach 31 (1913).
    30.l-Quds A 1, no. 1, 18 September 1908, quoted in Yehoshu’a, Tarikh al-
    Sihafa al-‘Arabiyya fi Falastin, 10. The newspaper’s masthead illustrated
    its embrace of the revolutionary principles of “liberty, equality, fraternity”
    (h.urriyya, musāwā, ikhā`).

  3. Ya’akov Yehoshu‘a, “Sahifat al-Taraqqi wa- Falastin,” al-Sharq 3, no. 8 (1973).

  4. Al-Quds, 11 May 1909.

  5. Ha-Herut, 19 July 1909.

  6. Al-Quds, 23 July 1909.
    35.e sessions of Th al-majlis al-‘umūmῑ were published in the newspaper al-
    Quds al-Sharif.
    36.ee S al-Munadi for numerous examples, namely: “To the Mutasarrıf,” 9
    Tammuz 1912; “Open Letter to the Mutasarrıf,” 1, no. 28; “To the Next
    Mutasarrıf,” 14 January 1913; “To the New Mutasarrıf,” 13 Adar 1913. Al-
    Munadi also published open letters to the general prosecutors in Hebron and
    Gaza, to the police chief and to the Jeursalem representatives to parliament.
    37.ee S al-Munadi, “To the People of Jerusalem,” 2 Tammuz 1912; “To the
    Palestinians,” 24 Nissan 1913.
    38.or similar political functions of the press, see Ayalon, “Political Journalism F
    and Its Audience in Egypt”; and Brummett, Image and Imperialism in the
    Ottoman Revolutionary Press.
    39.ee Ya’akov Yehoshu’a, S Yerushalayim Tmol Shilshom, vol. 3 (Jerusalem:
    Reuven Mass, 1981); and Ya’akov Yehoshu’a, Yerushalayim tmol shilshom,
    vol. 2 (Jerusalem: Reuven Mass, 1979).
    40.l-Munadi A attacked the city council’s corruption and ineffectiveness on a
    regular basis.

  7. Ha-Hashkafah, 7 August 1908.

  8. The Red Note referred to the pink slip given to European Jews when enter-
    ing Palestine in exchange for their passport. This was essentially a three-
    month visa that sought to ensure the Jews would not illegally settle in
    Palestine; however, many (1,000–2,000 Jewish immigrants per month)

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