Abd al-Sattar Qasim

Abd al-Sattar Tawfiq Qasim al-Khader (September 21, 1948 - February 1, 2021) is a Palestinian writer, thinker, political analyst, and academic. He was born in the town of Deir Al-Ghusoun in Tulkarm Governorate and died in Nablus. He is a professor of political science and Palestinian studies at An-Najah National University in Nablus. He is known for his positions rejecting the settlement with Israel and critical of the Palestinian Self-Government Authority.

Abd al-Sattar Qasim

His life

He received a bachelor's degree in political science from the American University in Cairo, then a master's degree in political science from the American Kansas State University, then a master's degree in economics from the University of Missouri, USA, then a doctorate in political philosophy from the University of Missouri also in 1977.

Qasim worked at the University of Jordan with the rank of assistant professor in 1978 and his services were terminated after a year and a half (in 1979) for political reasons, following the Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon. He worked as a professor of political science at An-Najah National University in Nablus since 1980, and he worked as a part-time professor at each university.[1] Birzeit and Al-Quds University. He retired from teaching from An-Najah National University in 2013.

awards

In 1984, he won the Abdul Hameed Shoman Prize in the field of political science.

His writings

Books and Research

He has published 25 books, and has written about 130 scientific papers and thousands of articles. Of which:[2]

  1. Traditional political philosophy
  2. Fall of the King of Kings (On the Iranian Revolution)
  3. The martyr Ezz El-Din Al-Qassam
  4. The Golan Heights
  5. The detention experiment
  6. Days in the Naqab detention camp
  7. Individual and group freedom in Islam
  8. Women in Islamic Thought
  9. Prophet Abraham and the covenant with the children of Israel
  10. The road to defeat
  11. The summary on the Palestinian issue.
  12. The graves of Arab intellectuals

He has written many research papers on various topics in politics, such as the Americanization of the Arabs, the Palestinian resistance, Islamic political thought and globalization.[3]

His death

He died on February 1, 2021, in An-Najah University Hospital, after being infected with the Covid 19 virus.[4]

References

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