Draft:Sayyid Arabi
| Sayyid Arabi | |
|---|---|
| Personal Details | |
| Birth Place | Egypt |
| Death Place | Egypt |
| Religion | Islam |
Hajj Al-Sayyid Al-Arabi was born on 23 May 1957 AD, in Kafr Abd al-Aziz, affiliated with Razaneh Hurriyat in Zagazig, one of the cities of Egypt. He obtained a teaching diploma and worked as the principal of Wifaq Milli School in the Hasan Saleh neighborhood of Zagazig. In 1977 AD, he became acquainted with the call of the Muslim Brotherhood and was one of the founders of legal practice in Zagazig and its surroundings, and in 1977 AD, he was arrested six times.
Biography
When Anwar Sadat signed the order for the arrest of many opponents of his policy towards Israel, known as the September 1981 arrests, he was arrested among a number of the Brothers in Zagazig and went to prison for 12 months. Until after the death of Anwar Sadat, he was released with the rest of the Brothers.
Multiple Arrests
In the 1987 elections, when the Brothers allied with the Labor and Liberal parties, a number of Muslim Brotherhood members were arrested across the governorates, including him, who remained in detention for 3 months before release. In the events of 1995 AD, after which several Brotherhood leaders were brought to court, protests took place there condemning these trials, a number of Brotherhood leaders were arrested and he remained there for 3 months, which also happened in 2007 AD, where he remained in detention for 5 months. When the Brothers attempted to participate in the Shura Council elections in 2008 AD, security forces arrested many Brothers in various governorates.
Death
He passed away on Friday, 3 September 2010 AD. Thousands of Muslim Brothers participated in his funeral after Friday prayer from the Abd al-Aziz Hijazi Mosque in Zagazig. Mohamed Morsi, one of the members of the Guidance Office, led the mourners in the funeral prayer. At the head of the mourners were Muhi Hamed, a member of the Guidance Office, Hajj Abd al-Aziz Abd al-Qadir, Deputy of the Administrative Office of the Muslim Brotherhood, and Muhammad Abd al-Ghani, Umar Abd al-Ghani, and Yasser Rushdi, Ahmad Shahata and a large number of Muslim Brotherhood leaders in Sharqia.
References
- See: Entry Al-Sayyid Al-Arabi in IkhwanWiki; ikhwanwiki.com..