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The
Dajani family is deeply rooted in the history of Palestine, and
especially in the Holy City of Jerusalem, wherein it was entrusted
by the “Supreme Gate” of the Ottoman Empire as the Custodian of
Prophet David’s Mausoleum at the Mount of Prophet David-- corrupted
by impartial historians as Mount Zion.
The
family has a very close-knit fabric with the families of Jerusalem
and Palestine. Originally from the heartland of the Arabian
Peninsula, the Dajanis have their origins in Arabia, and a large
number of the family, under the leadership of Sufist Sheikh Ahmed
Dajani, joined the Islamic armies which conquered Spain in the 15th
century. Later Sheikh Ahmed Dajani established himself in Morocco
and Mauritania where his followers belonged to the Tejani tribes who
are widely spread in North Africa. The kinsmanship still exists and
is recognized by both branches of the family in Jerusalem and North
Africa.
Sheikh Ahmed Dajani led pilgrims to Jerusalem where he was
recognized as a reputed religious leader. As a reward for his
services to the people of Jerusalem, the Ottoman Empire appointed
him as the custodian of Prophet David’s Mausoleum, which included a
large hall recognized as the Last Supper of Jesus Christ and his
Disciples. The place remains as a site for annual visits by the
followers of the Catholic Christian denomination.
The
family lived in a conglomeration of apartments around the Mausoleum.
When Ibrahim Pasha, son of Mohammed Ali Pasha the Great, of Egypt,
visited Jerusalem in 1831, the Dajani family built a special hall
close to the Mausoleum for his residence. This hall is still known
as the Ibrahimiyya. When Sultan Abdel Majid of the Ottoman
Empire visited Jerusalem towards the end of the 19th
century, a special hall was built for his residence which is still
known as the Majidiyya.
Members of the Dajani family maintained the tradition of offering a
free dinner to pilgrims passing through Jerusalem to and from
Mecca-- until the end of the British Mandate and the occupation of
the site by Israel-- as the family was granted large areas of land
held in trust. A tythe of the produce was paid to the family to
spend it on charitable services. The tythe was collected by Ottoman
administrators and continued to be collected under the British
Mandate, and later by the Jordanian administration until the June
1967 Arab-Israeli war.
Many
members of the Dajani family held important functional, political
and economic roles in the city. They mainly concentrated on
professional services. The first surgeon to obtain an F.R.C.S.
diploma from London was Dr. Fuad Dajani, who built the first private
hospital in Jaffa known as the Dajani Hospital.
Sheikh Raghed Abu Saud Dajani was the first Palestinian to form
Christian Arab Societies in the different cities of Palestine in
1918 to speak on behalf of Palestinians against the Balfour
Declaration of November 2, 1917.
The
Christian Arab societies later developed into the first Political
National Conference of Palestine under the leadership of Musa Kazem
Pasha Al-Husseini, grandfather of Faisal Al-Husseini, currently in
charge of the Jerusalem file within the Palestine National Authority
(PNA). Aref Pasha Dajani, a former mayor of Jerusalem was the deputy
leader.
The
Dajani family established a cultural and educational center as well
as a football team, which included in its membership Christian and
resident Greek sportsmen, among others.
The
football team won the Palestine Arab Cup in 1944.
Among
the outstanding members of the family is Subhi Taher Dajani, who was
the first blind person to learn and introduce the Braille system of
writing. He gained the Oxford and Cambridge School Certificate from
the English College in Jerusalem and was the first blind student to
be accepted by the American University of Beirut, where he graduated
from.
In
1934, he established the first school for the blind in Palestine and
was the first to publish the Holy Koran in the Braille system for
the benefit of the blind. He also established a library for the
blind in Jerusalem.
Kamel
Dajani was the first to issue a newspaper in Jaffa called Al-Sabah
(The Morning) dealing with the then current political issues.
Dr.
Mahmud Dajani established the Red Cross and Crescent Association in
Jerusalem in 1947 with the support and cooperation of the veteran
Jerusalem physician Dr. Tewfiq Canaan. Under the Jordanian
government four members of the Dajani family occupied ministerial
positions while two others occupied seats in the Senate and the
Chamber of Deputies.
According to the Bible, there is a site in Palestine called “Dagoon”,
which distributed the sweet-smelling Tamer-Hennah (a small
flower). This possibly indicates an ancient origin of the
family in Palestine, especially as the site “Dagoon” seems to have
developed into “Beit Dajan”, a village still existing in Palestine
in the neighborhood of the port city of Jaffa. Apparently members of
the Dajani family moved to the Arabian Peninsula with time, where
they established new roots for the family.
Considered a middle class family, its members excelled in many
professions and in trade activities and chambers of commerce and
industry. Numbering about 4,000 individuals, they are spread in many
parts of Arab and foreign countries as well as in Jerusalem.
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