⁨⁨Al-Sirat (Originally: As-Sirat)⁩ - ⁨الصراط⁩⁩

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⁨1⁩ Friday, 1 March 1929
⁨2⁩ Saturday, 2 March 1929
⁨3⁩ Sunday, 3 March 1929
⁨4⁩ Monday, 4 March 1929
⁨5⁩ Tuesday, 5 March 1929
⁨6⁩ Wednesday, 6 March 1929
⁨7⁩ Thursday, 7 March 1929
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⁨9⁩ Saturday, 9 March 1929
⁨10⁩ Sunday, 10 March 1929
⁨11⁩ Monday, 11 March 1929
⁨12⁩ Tuesday, 12 March 1929
⁨13⁩ Wednesday, 13 March 1929
⁨14⁩ Thursday, 14 March 1929
⁨15⁩ Friday, 15 March 1929
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⁨18⁩ Monday, 18 March 1929
⁨19⁩ Tuesday, 19 March 1929
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⁨26⁩ Tuesday, 26 March 1929
⁨27⁩ Wednesday, 27 March 1929
⁨1⁩ issue
⁨28⁩ Thursday, 28 March 1929
⁨29⁩ Friday, 29 March 1929
⁨30⁩ Saturday, 30 March 1929
⁨31⁩ Sunday, 31 March 1929
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About this newspaper

Title: ⁨⁨Al-Sirat (Originally: As-Sirat)⁩ - ⁨الصراط⁩⁩
Available online: 4 November 1928 - 3 September 1947 (1,830 issues; 7,044 pages)
Language: ⁨Arabic⁩
Region: ⁨The Middle East⁩
Country: ⁨Mandatory Palestine⁩
City: ⁨Jaffa⁩
Collection: ⁨Jrayed - Arabic Newspaper Archive of Ottoman and Mandatory Palestine⁩
Frequency: ⁨Daily⁩
Description:
Al-Sirat (The Path) was a daily political newspaper that had a religious orientation in the first decade of its publication. The owner and publisher, 'Abdallah al-Qalqili (Qalqilya 1899-1969), held a degree in Islamic religious studies from of Al-Azhar University in Cairo; he also studied Arabic language and literature at Cairo University. While living in Cairo he was active in underground political movements. He returned to Palestine in 1919 and became a schoolteacher in Jerusalem and Jaffa. In 1925 he founded the newspaper Al-Sirat that covered a mix of Muslim-religious issues and current events with an emphasis on government and politics and took a clear stance against the Mandate and the Zionist project. In 1929, the newspaper became a daily, but appeared irregularly due to a lack of resources, and only a few hundred copies of each edition were published at a time. The newspaper’s editor opposed the local political parties but supported Prince 'Abdallah of Jordan. In 1943, the newspaper was purchased by Al-Difa' newspaper. Al-Qalqili bought it back in 1946 and turned it into a propaganda platform for the King of Jordan. In 1948 al-Qalqili settled in Syria, where he continued his journalism and teaching. A few years later he moved to Jordan, and in 1955 was appointed mufti of the Kingdom of Jordan. While living in Jordan he published a religious journal called Huda al-Islam (The Guidance of Islam). In the 1940s, in contrast to the first years of its publication, al-Qalqili’s religiousness was not noticeably emphasized. In this period overall, the newspaper seemed to all intents a political newspaper with articles on both local and world politics. One thing that remained constant in the newspaper’s policy was its opposition to the Mandate government and the Zionist project.
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