Publics, Politics and Participation

(Wang) #1

380 Resisting Publics


18.bdal Aziz Jawish (1872–1929), the editor of A al-Liwa’, was sentenced to
three months’ imprisonment for the articles on Dhingra and for an earlier
article on the anniversary of Dinshaway, the site of a British atrocity four
years earlier, in which he had excoriated not just the Occupation but the
Egyptians who had been complicit in it, most particularly Boutros Ghali.
For examples of the authorities’ concerns, see PRO: FO 371/660, letter no.
98, 20 August 1909.
19.RO: FO 371/660, letter no. 98, 20 August 1909. A P h.ashāsh is someone
addicted to hashish.



  1. Egyptian Gazette, 21 February 1910, 3.
    21.alak Badrawi, M Political Violence in Egypt 1910–1925: Secret Societies, Plots,
    and Assassinations (London: Curzon, 2000), 65.

  2. Bhikaji Rustom Cama (1861–1936) was posthumously named the “mother
    of the Indian revolution.” Born to a wealthy Parsi family, she spent most of
    her life in European capitals working on behalf of Indian independence.
    She is perhaps best remembered for unfurling a flag designed for a “free
    India” at the International Socialist Conference in Stuttgart in 1907. In
    addition to her financial support of Indian nationalist papers, she trav-
    eled extensively to lecture about India. Forced by Switzerland to curtail
    her activism during the War, she remained an eloquent, if disappointed,
    spokesperson for Indian independence until her death.
    23.uhammad Farid, M Awraq Muhammad Farid: Mudhakkirati ba‘d al-Hijra
    1904 – 1914 (Cairo: al-Haya al-Misriyya al-‘Amma li-l-Kitab, 1978), 210–212.
    24.ean Longuet (1876–1938) was a leading French Socialist. A grandson J
    of Karl Marx, he headed the SFIO (French Section of the International
    Socialist Bureau) and edited the Party’s paper, L’Humanité.
    25.hyamaji Krishnavarma (1857–1930) was a major figure in the “extrem- S
    ist” Indian movement. He established a boarding house called the India
    House which became a nationalist organizing center and where the assassin
    Dhingra lived. He also started a monthly journal, Indian Sociologist, to be
    the organ of the Indian Home Rule Society. The Sociologist continued even
    when Krishnavarma relocated to Paris. He lost his influence in the decade
    before World War I, not least because of the closing of India House after the
    Curzon-Wylie assassination.
    26.ames Keir Hardie (1856–1915) was instrumental in the founding of J
    the first British independent labor party in 1882. In 1892 he was elected

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