Nayif Hawātmeh

Palestinian politician
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Also known as: Naif Hawātmeh, Nayif Ḥawātimah
Quick Facts
Also spelled:
Nayif Ḥawātimah
Nayif also spelled:
Naif
Born:
1935, Al-Salṭ, Jordan (age 89)
Also Known As:
Naif Hawātmeh
Nayif Ḥawātimah

Nayif Hawātmeh (born 1935, Al-Salṭ, Jordan) is a Palestinian politician who founded the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (DFLP) and was its secretary-general from 1969.

Born into a Christian family in Jordan, Hawātmeh attended the Arab University of Beirut in Lebanon, where he became a militant in the Arab Nationalist Movement, which at its 1967 congress adopted Hawātmeh’s Marxist “scientific socialism” as its platform. Hawātmeh joined the Marxist-Leninist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) in 1969 but later that year split with the PFLP to form the Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine; the name was shortened to Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine in 1974.

Politically, Hawātmeh’s position eventually came close to that of Yāsir ʿArafāt, the leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). He favoured the creation of a Palestinian state in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, although he criticized ʿArafāt’s conciliatory position toward Jordan’s King Ḥussein, whose 1970 repression of Palestinian commandos resulted in many DFLP casualties. Hawātmeh favoured armed attacks, but he opposed violence (such as hijackings) against targets outside Israel. He was the first Palestinian guerrilla leader to make contact with Israeli Marxists. He led a DFLP delegation to Moscow and was highly regarded by the Soviets as a solid Marxist, without the middle-class orientation of ʿArafāt’s Fatah movement. Hawātmeh opposed the peace process with Israel in the early 1990s, and after the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993 his party joined with other rejectionist groups to form the Alliance of Palestinian Forces (APF) in Damascus; the DFLP left the alliance in 1996.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.