Fedayeen (,
fidā'ī, plural
fidā'īyūn, or in certain contexts
fidā'īyīn: meaning "self-sacrificer(s)", referring only to the 1950s' groups) is a term used to describe several distinct, militant groups and individuals in the
Arab world at different times in history. It is sometimes used colloquially to refer to suicide squads, especially those who are not bombers.
Overview
Fedayeen are any of various groups of people known to be volunteers, not connected to an organized government or military, in the Arab and Muslim world. They are usually deployed for a cause where the government has been viewed as failed or non-existent. They are associated with the role of resistance against occupation or tyranny. The name "fedayeen" is used to refer to armed struggle against any form of enslavement with actions based on resistance.
The word "fedayeen" is the Arabic plural to "feda'iy", which comes from the verb "fada" (infinitive: "fidaa'", which means "redemption"; thus the literal translation of "fedayeen" is those who redeem themselves by sacrificing themselves. It is widely understood in the Arabic world to mean those willing to sacrifice themselves for God.
==Palestinians==
Armed militias known as the fedayeen, grew from militant elements within the Arab Palestinians. The Fedayeen made efforts to infiltrate territory in Israel in order to strike military targets in the aftermath of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. Members of these groups were largely based within the refugee communities living in the Gaza Strip (then controlled by Egypt), and the West Bank (then controlled by Jordan), or in neighboring Lebanon, and Syria.
During this time (1948-c.1980), the word entered international usage and was frequently used in the Arab media as a synonym for great militancy. In the Israeli Hebrew press of this time the term ("פַדַאיוּן" with soft פ) had highly negative connotations and was associated with terrorism. Since the mid-1960s and the rise of more organized and specific militant groups, such as the PLO, the word has fallen out of usage, but not in the historical context.
Egypt
During the 1940s, a group of civilians volunteered to fight the British control of Egyptian land around the Suez Canal. The British had deployed military bases along the coast of the Suez Canal under the claim of protection. Many Egyptians viewed this as an invasion against their sovereign power over their country. While the Egyptian government didn't refuse the action, the people's leaders organized groups of Fedayeen who were trained to combat and kill British soldiers everywhere in Egypt, including the military bases. Those groups were viewed very highly among the Egyptian population.
Iran
Two very different groups used the name Fedayeen in recent Iranian history.
Fadayan-e Islam has been described as "one of the first real
Islamic fundamentalist organizations in the
Muslim world". It was founded by
Navab Safavi in 1946 for the purpose of demanding strict application of the sharia and assassinating those it believed to be
apostates and enemies of Islam. After several successful assassinations it was suppressed in 1956 and several leading members were executed. It continued on under the leadership of Ayatollah
Khomeini and helped bring about the
Islamic Revolution of Iran
A Marxist-leaning activist group known as the Fedayeen (Fedayân in Persian language) was founded in 1971 and based in Tehran. Operating between 1971 and 1983, the Fedayeen carried out a number of political assassinations in the course of the struggle against the Shah, after which the group was suppressed. That struggle continued however and eventually culminated in the Iranian Revolution of 1979.
In 1979 the Iranian People's Fedâi Guerrillas split from the Organization of Iranian People's Fedaian (Majority).
Iraq
Beginning in 1995,
Iraq established a paramilitary group known as the
Fedayeen Saddam, loyal to President
Saddam Hussein and the
Ba'athist government. The name was chosen to imply a connection with the Palestinian Fedayeen. In July 2003, the personnel records of the entire Fedayeen organization in Iraq was discovered in the basement of the former Fedayeen headquarters in east
Baghdad near the Al-Rashid Airfield. At the time of the discovery, an Iraqi political party occupied the building. After an extensive cataloging process, dossiers of key Fedayeen members were made by
US 1st Armored Division troops and resulted in a sweeping operation in Baghdad that led to the arrest of several Fedayeen generals.
Armenia
In the 19th century, the similar name "
Fedayee" (meaning freedom fighter), with the same
etymology, was used by Armenians who formed guerrilla organizations and armed bands in reaction to the oppression and unchecked murder of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. In the early 1990s, when the dispute with
Azerbaijan over
Nagorno-Karabakh erupted into the
Nagorno-Karabakh war, the term was used by Armenians to describe Armenian irregular units operating in the region. The term was widely used and is still used to describe the volunteers, and can be found in literature and
Armenian Revolutionary songs.
Eritrea
Known by the same name, they operated inside the capital city,
Asmara, during the last 15-20 years of the armed struggle in
Eritrea. They operated secretly and eliminated people who were dangerous to the struggle to free Eritrea. Most of them include traitors, and influential
Ethiopian military officials.
In popular culture
In the popular science fiction novel Dune, the elite Fremen soldiers are known as the "Fedaykin", an allusion to the word "fedayeen."
In the novel Prayers for the Assassin, the main character Rakkim Epps is an ex-fedayeen soldier.
Altaïr, the main character in the popular video game Assassin's Creed is a fedayeen, named as an assassin.
Fedayeen is the name of an American punk rock band.
See also
Mujahideen
Palestinian political violence
Arab-Israeli Conflict
Notes
External links
Armenian Fedayeen: Armenian History
Category:Arab groups
Category:Nagorno-Karabakh
Category:Arabic words and phrases