Auda Abu Tayi
Template:Short descriptionTemplate:Infobox military person Auda Abu Tayeh or Awda Abu Tayih (Template:Langx 11 January 1874 – 27 December 1924), nicknamed the Commander of the People or the Desert Falcon, was the Sheikh of a section of the Howeitat or Huwaytat tribe of Bedouin Arabs at the time of the Great Arab Revolt during the First World War. The Howeitat lived in what is now Saudi Arabia/Jordan.
Auda led the Arab forces in several battles, the most significant ones being the battle of Aqaba, where he managed to capture the city, seizing the entire Ottoman garrison, and the siege of Damascus, when he took the city alongside Faisal.
He died in 1924 and was buried in Amman. He is considered a national hero in Jordan.
In the Arab world, he is seen as a generous and honorable man. However, outside of the Arab world, he is mainly known through his portrayal in British Col. T. E. Lawrence's account Seven Pillars of Wisdom and from the fictionalised depiction of him in David Lean's film Lawrence of Arabia. Those accounts, which presented him as a greedy and slick man, were criticized by historians.
Biography
Early life
Auda was the son of Harb Abu Tayi (? – 1904).<ref name="peake">Peake, F. A History of Jordan and its Tribes, University of Miami Press, 1958, p. 212</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> He was the fourth<ref name=":11">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> among five brothers and one sister and had a rough youth.<ref name=":8" />
When he was young, he learned the Bedouin way of life, grazing herds along the farms first, and later elsewhere as he grew.<ref name=":13">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> His mother was particularly tough; during a confrontation with another tribe, Auda, still a child, pursued attackers and killed several.<ref name=":13" /> Upon returning to the camp, he found his mother, holding a knife, telling him that if he hadn't been brave, she would have cut off the breast that nursed him.<ref name=":13" /> As a result of this upbringing, he remained illiterate throughout his life, not knowing how to read or write.<ref name=":13" /> However, he had a perfect understanding of Bedouin customary traditions and became a competent Bedouin judge in cases requiring tribal judgments.<ref name=":13" />
He married relatively late, around the age of twenty, which was uncommon in Bedouin society at that time.<ref name=":13" /> This is likely due to the fact that he was in love with another woman in his youth, and Harb Abu Tayi, his father, refused to let him marry her because her father was reputed to be a coward.<ref name=":13" /> Later, she married another man. Auda married another woman but throughout his life, he sent gifts to this woman.<ref name=":13" /> However, he refused to accept her offer of divorcing her husband to marry him when she proposed it later on.<ref name=":13" />
Lawrence recorded that the Jazi Howeitat had formerly been under the leadership of the House of Rashid, the amirs of Ha'il, but had since fragmented and that Auda had come to control the Eastern Howeitat, known as the abu Tayi.<ref name="lawrencereport">Lawrence, T. E. The Howeitat and their Chiefs Template:Webarchive, Arab Bulletin report of 24 July 1917, from telawrence.net</ref> Auda had taken up the claims of his father, Harb abu Tayi (? – 1904), who had contested the tribe's chieftainship with Arar ibn Jazi.<ref name="peake" />
Auda and his ibn Jazi rival, Arar's half-brother Abtan, diverted the energies of the Howeitat—previously settled farmers and camel herders—into raiding, greatly increasing the tribe's wealth but introducing a mainly nomadic lifestyle.<ref name="alonp34">Alon, Y. and Eilon, J. The Making of Jordan: Tribes, Colonialism and the Modern State, Tauris, 2007, Template:ISBN, p. 34. Lawrence (in his report above) stated that the Howeitat were "altogether Bedu", but they had in fact only recently abandoned farming for nomadism.</ref> Tensions between them and the Ottoman administration had increased after an incident in 1908, when two soldiers were killed who had been sent to demand payment of a tax that Auda claimed to have already paid.<ref name="fischbachp48">Fischbach, M. State, Society, and Land in Jordan, Brill, 2000, Template:ISBN, p. 48. Auda claimed that the troops were shot when they opened fire on him.</ref>
According to historian Mahmoud Obeidat, Auda was the "only person among the tribal leaders whom the Turkish authorities were pursuing, the only person who rejected the decisions of the Turkish administration, and the only person who saw himself as far superior to the Ottoman governor".<ref name=":9">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
According to Suleiman al-Mousa and Mahmoud Krishan, after killing these two Turkish soldiers, Auda was sought by the police. While secretly heading to Ma'an to visit a friend, the police received information about his presence and surrounded the house where he was hiding.<ref name=":13" /> Unconcerned, he got up, had his breakfast—despite the owner's invitations to leave through a back door quickly—and decided to exit through the main door, greeting the Ottoman troops who had come to arrest him. In this way, he managed to evade the Turkish police, who let him pass.<ref name=":13" />
He had three sons,<ref name=":13" /> the only surviving one, Muhammad, died in 1987, and it is said that he provided him with a good education in the tribal lifestyle.<ref name=":10">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He had thirteen grandchildren, all of whom live in Jordan.
Great Arab revolt
At the beginning of the Great Arab Revolt, he joined the Sharif of Mecca, Hussein bin Ali alongside the Howeitat tribe.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
According to several researchers, his and his tribe's mobility and knowledge of the desert were significant factors contributing to the success of the Arab Revolt and stood out as one of their assets.<ref name=":3">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref> He and his tribesmen were lead forces in the fall of Aqaba (July 1917)<ref name=":3" /><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> and Damascus (October 1918).<ref name=":4">Template:Cite journal</ref>
Auda abu Tayi is considered a hero of the Arab revolt.<ref name=":1">Lawrence, Seven Pillars, p. 169</ref> In reward for his services rendered, he received a sword from the hands of Hussein as a token of friendship.<ref name=":7">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
About his role in the Great Arab Revolt, he declared:<ref name=":9" />
In my body, there are twenty-two wounds, the most cherished of which are the last wounds, which were for the glory of the Arabs. I will not hesitate to offer what remains of my intact body to my nation and people, and I swear to Allah, what I say is a sacrifice.
He managed to take Aleppo, in the last days of World War I.<ref name=":11" />
Post-war years
He continued raiding, for example, in 1921, he tried to do a raid in Iraq, engaging in a march of more than 600km in the desert.<ref name=":5">Template:Cite book</ref> However, the expedition resulted in a disaster after their enemies spotted them near their arrival point and started depleting all water supplies, destroying the whole expedition except a small dozen of tribesmen, including Auda and his son Muhammad.<ref name=":5" />
He was very shocked by the Franco-British occupation of Arab lands.<ref name=":7" /> He then helped the ephemeral army of Hashemite Syria, led by Faisal.<ref name=":7" /> After the collapse of the Arab government in Damascus, which was invaded by France, Auda retired to the desert, building a modern fort at Al-Jafr east of Ma'an with Turkish prisoners of war.<ref name=":6">Template:Citation</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Before it was completed, however, he died in 1924<ref name=":6" /> of natural causes. He was buried in Ras al-Ain, Amman, Jordan.<ref name=":7" />
Nowadays, only ruins remain of his building due to it being in the desert and not receiving heritage care and restoration.<ref name=":6" /><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Name
His full genealogy was, in Template:Langx.<ref name=":11" />
He received the nicknames of "Commander of the People"<ref name=":11" /> and of "Desert Falcon".<ref name=":12">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Legacy
Historical legacy
He was presented by some people, on the account of the movie, and to a lesser extent on the book of Lawrence of Arabia as being a sly and greedy individual.<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":2">Template:Cite journal</ref> Much of this modern-day presentation seems rooted in his sensationalised depiction by Lowell Thomas as a figure of anarchic, primitive masculine energy deliberately set against the idea of British 'civilisation' (see also Orientalism).<ref name=":2" /><ref name="dawson184">Dawson, Soldier Heroes: British Adventure, Empire, and the Imagining of Masculinities, Routledge, 1997, Template:ISBN, p. 184</ref>
However, historians have criticized these accounts of Auda as misrepresenting Arabs and Auda.<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":2" />
Political legacy
He is considered a national figure by the Jordanian people.<ref name=":8">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=":10" /><ref name=":7" />
Artistical legacy
Literature
He is an important figure in Lawrence's semi-fictionalized account of the Arab Revolt, "Seven Pillars of Wisdom", which misrepresents him and the Arab people as romanticized figures.<ref name=":2" /> T. E. Lawrence portrayed him as someone who epitomized everything noble, powerful, and proud about the Bedouin, "the greatest fighting man in northern Arabia," with an impressive lineage spanning many generations of great desert Howeitat warriors of the Arabian Peninsula.<ref name=":4" />
He was described as a generous man by Khayr al-Din al-Zirikli in one of his books and by Abdal Fattah al-Yaffi.in his Memories.<ref name=":12" /><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Cinema
He was portrayed in the David Lean film Lawrence of Arabia by Anthony Quinn,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> which included various stereotypes against Arabs and his figure.<ref name=":2" /> Auda's descendants were so incensed by the portrayal of their ancestor that they sued Columbia Studios, the film's producers; the case was eventually dropped.<ref>Turner, Adrian, Robert Bolt: Scenes From Two Lives, pp. 201–206</ref>
Auda was also featured as a supporting character in Terence Rattigan's Lawrence-themed play Ross.
He is also portrayed in 2009 Qatari film Auda abu Tayeh, which talks about his life in Arabia to Arab Revolt, and his death. In 2008, there was also a series about him produced and filmed in Jordan.<ref name=":8" /><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Family
His granddaughter, Evon Abu Tayeh, is a doctor and professor of the University of Jordan in Amman. She was present in a 2016 documentary, The Great Arab Revolt.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>https://jordantimes.com/news/local/jordan-television-broadcast-documentary-great-arab-revolt</ref>