Yusuf al-Sa'dun | |
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Born | 1888 Jisr al-Hadid, Ottoman Empire |
Died | 1980 Salqin, Syria |
Nationality | Syrian |
Occupation | Rebel commander |
Known for | Commander of Antioch rebels during Hananu Revolt |
Yusuf al-Sa'dun (1888-1980) was a Syrian rebel commander in the Hananu Revolt based in the Jabal Qusayr area near Antioch in modern-day Turkey. His memoirs of the revolt is the only known rebel testimony available about the revolt that "does not slip into ideological discourse", according to historian Nadine Meouchy.
Al-Sa'dun was born to a Sunni Muslim family in Jisr al-Hadid in the Sanjak of Alexandretta (modern-day Hatay Province) during Ottoman rule. Although he did not receive a military education, al-Sa'dun was known for his shooting skills and equestrianism. In 1914, during World War I, he volunteered to serve in the Ottoman Army's Hamidiye cavalry in Iraq against British forces.
Al-Sa'dun returned to his homeland after the war and in 1919 formed a rebel band to counter the French occupation of northern Syria. His revolt became part of the wider Hananu Revolt and he was responsible for the Jabal Qusayr military zone, with his headquarters in Babatorun. The revolt largely petered out in the summer of 1921 with the flight of its overall leader Ibrahim Hananu. However, al-Sa'dun continued the armed struggle by first fleeing to Turkey, which he used as a base for raids against the French in Syria. He lived there in the city of Gaziantep with his family. In 1922, he launched a punitive expedition against Jabal Zawiya with the apparent target being defectors from the revolt, and later on 26 August, his rebel band, consisting of about 100 fighters, attacked a postal convoy traveling between Antioch and Darkush. He continued his guerrilla campaign against the French between December 1925 and August 1926, during the countrywide Great Syrian Revolt. The last major clashes with the French were at Tell 'Amar in April 1926 and in Jabal Qusayr in August 1926.