Faisal of Saudi Arabia

Faisal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (Arabic: فيصل بن عبدالعزيز آل سعود Fayṣal ibn ‘Abd al-‘Azīz Āl Su‘ūd; 14 April 1906 – 25 March 1975) was King of Saudi Arabia from 1964 to 1975.

Faisal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
King of Saudi Arabia
Reign2 November 1964 – 25 March 1975
Bay'ah2 November 1964
PredecessorSaud
SuccessorKhalid
Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia[1]
In office
31 October 1962  25 March 1975
MonarchSaud
Himself
Preceded bySaud
Succeeded byKhalid
In office
16 August 1954  21 December 1960
MonarchSaud
Preceded bySaud
Succeeded bySaud
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
19 December 1930  22 December 1960
MonarchAbdulaziz
Saud
Preceded byOffice created
Succeeded byIbrahim bin Abdullah Al Suwaiyel
In office
16 March 1962  25 March 1975
MonarchSaud
Himself
Preceded byIbrahim bin Abdullah Al Suwaiyel
Succeeded bySaud bin Faisal Al Saud
Born14 April 1906
Riyadh, Emirate of Nejd and Hasa
Died25 March 1975(1975-03-25) (aged 68)
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia[2]
Burial26 March 1975
Al-Oud cemetery, Riyadh
SpouseSultana bint Ahmed Al Sudairi
Iffat Al-Thunayan
Al Jawhara bint Saud Al Kabir
Haya bint Turki Al Turki
Issue
Detail
Numerous
Full name
Faisal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
HouseHouse of Saud
FatherKing Abdulaziz
MotherTarfa bint Abdullah bin Abdullatif Al Sheikh
ReligionHanbali Sunni Islam

Faisal was the third son of King Abdulaziz.[note 1] His mother, Tarfa, was a member of the Al ash-Sheikh family which has produced many prominent Saudi religious leaders. Faisal emerged as an influential royal politician under his father and brother King Saud, serving as foreign minister of the Saudi domains for all but two years from 1930 until his death. He was crown prince after Saud's accession in 1953, and in that position he outlawed slavery in Saudi Arabia. He persuaded King Saud to abdicate in his favour in 1964 with the help of other members of the royal family and his relative, Grand Mufti Muhammad ibn Ibrahim Al ash-Sheikh.

Faisal implemented a policy of modernization and reform. His main foreign policy themes were pan-Islamism, anti-communism,[note 2] and pro-Palestinian nationalism.[4] He attempted to limit the power of Islamic religious officials. Protesting against support that Israel received from the West, he led the oil embargo which caused the 1973 oil crisis.

Faisal successfully stabilized the kingdom's bureaucracy, and his reign had significant popularity among Saudi Arabians[5] despite his reforms facing some controversy. In 1975, he was assassinated by his nephew Faisal bin Musaid.

Early life and education

Faisal bin Abdulaziz was born in Riyadh on 14 April 1906.[6][7][8] He was the third son of Saudi Arabia's former king, King Abdulaziz.[9] His mother was Tarfa bint Abdullah bin Abdullatif Al Sheikh,[10] whom Abdulaziz had married in 1902 after capturing Riyadh. She was from the Al ash-Sheikh family, descendants of Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab.[11][12] Faisal's maternal grandfather, Abdullah bin Abdullatif, was one of Abdulaziz's principal religious teachers and advisers.[13][14] Faisal's mother died in 1912 when he was quite young.[13]

Faisal had only one full sister, Nurah. She was married to her cousin, Khalid bin Muhammad bin Abdul Rahman, son of Muhammad bin Abdul Rahman.[15] According to Helen Chapin Metz, Faisal, and most of his generation, was raised in an atmosphere in which courage was extremely valued and reinforced, and he was motivated by his mother to develop the values of tribal leadership.[16]

In 1919 the British government invited King Abdulaziz to visit London. He could not go, but sent Prince Faisal, making him the first ever Saudi Arabian royal to visit England. His visit lasted for five months, and he met with British officials.[17] During the same period, he also visited France, again being the first Saudi Arabian royal to pay an official visit there.[18]

Early political experience

As one of King Abdulaziz's eldest sons, Prince Faisal was given numerous responsibilities to consolidate control over Arabia. After the capture of Hail and initial control over Asir in 1922, he was sent to these provinces with nearly six thousand fighters. He achieved complete control over Asir at the end of the year.[19] Prince Faisal was appointed viceroy of Hejaz in 1926[20] following his father's takeover of the region.[21] He often consulted with local leaders during his tenure.[22]

In 1930 he became his father's minister of foreign affairs. He would continue to oversee Saudi foreign policy until his death—even as king, with only a two-year break[23] between 1960 and 1962.[21] Faisal visited Europe several times in this period, including Poland in 1932 and Russia (as part of the USSR) in 1933.[24][25] He commanded a campaign during the Saudi–Yemeni War in 1934, resulting in a Saudi victory.[21]

Crown prince and prime minister

Upon the accession of Prince Faisal's elder brother, King Saud, to the throne in 1953, Prince Faisal was appointed crown prince. King Saud embarked on a spending program that included the construction of a massive royal residence on the outskirts of the capital, Riyadh. He also faced pressure from neighboring Egypt, where Gamal Abdel Nasser had overthrown the monarchy in 1952. Nasser was able to cultivate a group of dissident princes led by Prince Talal, who defected to Egypt (see Free Princes). Fearing that King Saud's financial policies were bringing the state to the brink of collapse, and that his handling of foreign affairs was inept, senior members of the royal family and the ulema (religious leadership) pressured Saud into appointing Faisal to the position of prime minister in 1958, giving Faisal wide executive powers.[26]

A power struggle ensued between King Saud and Crown Prince Faisal, and on 18 December 1960, Prince Faisal resigned as prime minister in protest, arguing that King Saud was frustrating his financial reforms. King Saud took back his executive powers and, having induced Prince Talal to return from Egypt, appointed him as minister of finance in July 1958.[27][28] In 1962, however, Prince Faisal rallied enough support within the royal family to install himself as prime minister for a second time.[26]

In 1963 Prince Faisal established the country's first television station, though actual broadcasts would not begin for another two years.[29] Crown Prince Faisal helped establish the Islamic University of Madinah in 1961. In 1962 Prince Faisal helped found the Muslim World League, a worldwide charity to which the Saudi royal family has reportedly since donated more than a billion dollars.[30]

Struggle with King Saud

The struggle with King Saud continued in the background during this time. Taking advantage of the king's absence from the country for medical reasons in early 1963, Faisal began amassing more power for himself. He removed many of Saud's loyalists from their posts and appointed like-minded princes in key military and security positions,[31][32] such as his brother Prince Abdullah, to whom he gave command of the National Guard in 1962. Upon King Saud's return, Prince Faisal demanded that he be made regent and that King Saud be reduced to a purely ceremonial role. In this, he had the crucial backing of the ulema (elite Islamic scholars), including a fatwā (edict) issued by the grand mufti of Saudi Arabia, a relative of Prince Faisal on his mother's side, calling on King Saud to accede to his brother's demands.[33]

King Saud refused, however, and made a last-ditch attempt to retake executive powers, leading Prince Faisal to order the National Guard to surround King Saud's palace. His loyalists outnumbered and outgunned, King Saud relented, and on 4 March 1964, Prince Faisal was appointed regent. A meeting of the elders of the royal family and the ulema was convened later that year, and a second fatwā was decreed by the grand mufti, calling on King Saud to abdicate the throne in favor of his brother. The royal family supported the fatwā and immediately informed King Saud of their decision. King Saud, by now shorn of all his powers, agreed, and Prince Faisal was proclaimed king on 2 November 1964.[26][32] Saud then went into exile, finding refuge in Egypt before eventually settling in Greece.[34]

King of Saudi Arabia

In a speech shortly after he came to power on 2 November 1964, Faisal said:

I beg of you, brothers, to look upon me as both brother and servant. 'Majesty' is reserved to God alone and 'the throne' is the throne of the Heavens and Earth.[35]

In 1967 King Faisal established the post of second prime minister and appointed his half-brother Prince Fahd to this post.[36]

Modernization

Early in his rule, he issued an edict that all Saudi princes had to school their children inside the country, rather than sending them abroad; this had the effect of making it popular for upper-class families to bring their sons back to study in the Kingdom.[37] King Faisal also introduced the country's current system of administrative regions, and laid the foundations for a modern welfare system. In 1970 he established the Ministry of Justice and inaugurated the country's first "five-year plan" for economic development.[38]

Television broadcasts officially began in 1965. In 1966 a nephew of Faisal attacked the newly established headquarters of Saudi television but was killed by security personnel. The attacker was the brother of Faisal's future assassin, and the incident is the most widely accepted motive for the murder.[39]

Steps against coups d'état

King Faisal with Muammar Gaddafi in the early 1970s

The 1950s and 1960s saw numerous coups d'état in the region. Muammar al-Gaddafi's coup that overthrew the monarchy in oil-rich Libya in 1969 was especially threatening for Saudi Arabia due to the similarity between the two sparsely-populated desert countries.[40] As a result, King Faisal undertook to build a sophisticated security apparatus and cracked down firmly on dissent. As in all affairs, King Faisal justified these policies in Islamic terms. Early in his reign, when faced with demands for a written constitution for the country, King Faisal responded that "our constitution is the Quran".[41] In the summer of 1969 King Faisal ordered the arrest of hundreds of military officers, including some generals,[42] alleging that a military coup d'état was being planned. The coup was planned primarily by air force officers and aimed at overthrowing the monarchy and founding a Nasserist regime in the country.[43] The arrests were possibly based on a tip from American intelligence.[40]

Religious inclusiveness

King Faisal seemed to hold the pluralist view, favouring limited, cautious accommodation of popular demands for inclusive reform, and made repeated attempts to broaden political representation, harking back to his temporarily successful national integration policy from 1965 to 1975. King Faisal acknowledged his country's religious and cultural diversity, which includes the predominantly Shia al-Ahsa in the east; the Asir in the southwest, with tribal affinities to Yemen, especially among the Ismaili tribes of Najran and Jizan; and the Kingdom of the Hejaz, with its capital Mecca. He included non-Wahhabi, cosmopolitan Sunni Hejazis from Mecca and Jeddah in the Saudi government. However, after his reign, discrimination based on sect, tribe, region, and gender became the order of the day and has remained as such until today.[44]

The role and authority of the ulema declined after the rise of King Faisal even though they had helped bring him to the throne in 1964. Despite his piety and biological relationship through his mother to the Al as Shaykh family, and his support for the pan-Islamic movement in his struggle against pan-Arabism, he decreased the ulema's power and influence.[45] Unlike his successor King Khalid, King Faisal attempted to prevent radical clerics from controlling religious institutions such as the Council of Senior Ulema, the highest religious institution in Saudi Arabia, or taking religious offices such as Grand Mufti, responsible for preserving Islamic law. But his advisers warned that, once religious zealots had been motivated, disastrous effects would result.[30] King Faisal rejected the ulema's opposition to aspects of his accelerated modernization attempts, sometimes even in matters considered by them to be major issues[45] such as education for women.[46]

Corruption in the royal family was taken very seriously by religious figures in the Islamic theological colleges. They challenged some of the accepted theological interpretations adopted by the Saudi regime. One such influential figure was Shaykh bin Baz, then rector of the Al Medina college of theology. King Faisal would not tolerate his criticism and had him removed from his position. However, his teachings had already radicalized some of his students. One of them was Juhayman al-Otaybi.[47]

Abolition of slavery

Egypt's President Nasser with Yasser Arafat and King Faisal at an Arab summit, September 1970

Slavery did not vanish in Saudi Arabia until King Faisal issued a decree for its total abolition in 1962. BBC presenter Peter Hobday stated that about 1,682 slaves were freed at that time, at a cost to the government of $2,000 each.[47] The political analyst Bruce Riedel argued that the US began to raise the issue of slavery after the meeting between King Abdulaziz and US president Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1945 and that John F. Kennedy finally persuaded the House of Saud to abolish slavery in 1962.[48]

Foreign relations

King Faisal, US President Richard Nixon and his wife Pat Nixon (27 May 1971)

As king, Faisal continued the close alliance with the United States begun by his father, and relied on the US heavily for arming and training his armed forces. King Faisal was anti-communist. He refused any political ties with the Soviet Union and other Communist bloc countries, professing to see a complete incompatibility between communism and Islam.[49]

Between 23 and 25 September 1969, King Faisal convened a conference in Rabat, Morocco, to discuss the arson attack on the Al Aqsa Mosque that had occurred a month earlier. The leaders of 25 Muslim states attended and the conference called for Israel to give up territory conquered in 1967. The conference also set up the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation and pledged its support for the Palestinians.[50]

Following the death of Nasser in 1970, King Faisal drew closer to Egypt's new president, Anwar Sadat, who himself was planning a break with the Soviet Union and a move towards the pro-American camp. During the 1973 Arab–Israeli War, launched by Sadat, King Faisal withdrew Saudi oil from world markets, in protest over Western support for Israel during the conflict. This action increased the price of oil and was the primary force behind the 1973 oil crisis. It was to be the defining act of King Faisal's career, and gained him lasting prestige among many Arabs and Muslims worldwide. In 1974 he was named Time magazine's Man of the Year, and the financial windfall generated by the crisis fueled the economic boom that occurred in Saudi Arabia after his death. The new oil revenue also allowed Faisal to greatly increase the aid and subsidies begun following the 1967 Six-Day War[4] to Egypt, Syria, and the Palestine Liberation Organization.[51] It is a commonly-held belief in Saudi Arabia, and the wider Arab world, that King Faisal's oil embargo was the real cause of his assassination, via a Western conspiracy.[52][53]

Personal life

King Faisal was married four times concurrently.[54] His spouses were from powerful families: Al Kabir, Al Sudairi, Al Jiluwi and Al Thunayan.[55] His wives were:

  • Sultana bint Ahmed Al Sudairi, the mother of his eldest son Prince Abdullah, whom Faisal fathered when he was only fifteen. Sultana was from the Sudairi family and the younger sister of Hassa bint Ahmed, the mother of the Sudairi brothers.[54][56]
  • Iffat Al-Thunayan (1916–2000), who was born and raised in Turkey. Her ancestors of the Al Thunayan branch of the Al Saud family[57] were taken to Istanbul or Cairo by Egyptian forces in 1818. They first met in Istanbul around 1932 while he was in Turkey for an official visit.[17] Prince Faisal took Iffat to Jeddah where they were married in 1932.[17][58] They had nine children,[57] including Prince Mohammed, Prince Saud, and Prince Turki.[59] Iffat was credited with being the influence behind many of her husband's reforms, particularly with regard to women.[60][61]
  • Al Jawhara bint Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Saud Al Kabir, the daughter of his aunt Nuora bint Abdul Rahman. They married in October 1935. With Al Jawhara, Faisal had a daughter, Munira.[54][62]
  • Haya bint Turki bin Abdulaziz Al Turki, the mother of Prince Khalid.[54] She was a member of the Al Jiluwi clan.[10][63]

Faisal's sons received a higher level of education compared to other princes born to Saudi monarchs. Prince Turki received formal education at prestigious schools in New Jersey, and he later attended Georgetown University,[64] while Prince Saud was an alumnus of Princeton University. King Faisal's sons have held, and continue to hold, important positions in the Saudi government. His eldest son Prince Abdullah was born in 1922 and held governmental positions for a while. Prince Khalid was the governor of Asir Province in southwestern Saudi Arabia for more than three decades before becoming governor of Makkah Province in 2007. Prince Saud was the Saudi foreign minister between 1975 and 2015. Prince Turki served as head of Saudi Intelligence, ambassador to the United Kingdom, and later ambassador to the United States.[65]

King Faisal's daughter Haifa is married to Bandar bin Sultan. By giving Haifa's hand in marriage to Prince Bandar, King Faisal forced Bandar's father Prince Sultan to recognize Bandar as a legitimate prince. Another daughter, Lolowah, is a prominent activist for women's education in Saudi Arabia. In 1962 his daughter Princess Sara founded one of the first charitable organizations, Al Nahda, which won the first Chaillot prize for human rights organisations in the Gulf in 2009.[66] One of his daughters, Prince Khalid's full sister Princess Mishail, died at the age of 72 in October 2011.[67] His granddaughter, Princess Reem Al Faisal, is a photographer and gallery owner based in Jeddah.[68]

King Faisal spoke fluent English and French,[69] as does his daughter Princess Lolowah.[70]

Assassination

On 25 March 1975 King Faisal was shot point-blank and killed by his half-brother's son, Faisal bin Musaid, who had just come back from the United States. The murder occurred at a majlis (literally 'a place for sitting'), an event where the king or leader opens up his residence to the citizens to enter and petition the king.[71]

In the waiting room, Prince Faisal talked to Kuwaiti representatives who were also waiting to meet King Faisal. When the Prince went to embrace him, King Faisal leaned to kiss his nephew in accordance with Saudi custom. At that instant, Prince Faisal took out a pistol and shot him. The first shot hit King Faisal's chin and the second one went through his ear. A bodyguard hit Prince Faisal with a sheathed sword. Oil minister Zaki Yamani yelled repeatedly not to kill the prince.[72]

King Faisal was quickly taken to a hospital. He was still alive as doctors massaged his heart and gave him a blood transfusion. Their efforts were unsuccessful, and King Faisal died shortly afterward. Both before and after the attack the prince was reported to be calm. Following the killing, Riyadh had three days of mourning during which all government activities were suspended.[72]

One theory for the murder was avenging the death of Prince Khalid bin Musaid, the brother of Prince Faisal bin Musaid. King Faisal instituted modern and secular reforms that led to the installation of television, which provoked violent protests, one of which was led by Prince Khalid, who, during the course of an attack on a television station in 1966, was shot dead by a policeman.[73]

Prince Faisal, who was captured directly after the attack, was at first officially declared insane, but following the trial a panel of Saudi medical experts decided that he was sane when he shot the king. The nation's high religious court convicted him of regicide and sentenced him to execution. He was beheaded in the public square in Riyadh.[72]

King Faisal's body was buried in Al Oud cemetery in Riyadh on 26 March 1975.[74][75] His successor, King Khalid, wept over his body at his funeral.[76]

Memorials and legacy

Map of Faisalabad, Pakistan, renamed after King Faisal

After his death, the King Faisal Foundation, a philanthropic organisation, was established in King Faisal's honour.[77] King Faisal was eulogized by lyricist Robert Hunter in the title track of the Grateful Dead's 1975 album Blues for Allah.[78] In 2013 Russian Arabist Alexei Vassiliev published a biography, King Faisal of Saudi Arabia: Personality, Faith and Times.[3]

Lyallpur, the third largest city of Pakistan, was renamed Faisalabad (literally, "City of Faisal") in 1979 in his honor.[79] One of the two major Pakistan Air Force bases in Pakistan's Sindh province's largest city, Karachi, is named "PAF Base Faisal" in honour of King Faisal.[80]

Ancestry

Notes

  1. The eldest son, Prince Turki of Nejd, and the second son, the eventual King Saud of Saudi Arabia, were both children of Wadhah bint Muhammad bin 'Aqab.
  2. Faisal associated communism with Zionism.[3]

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Faisal of Saudi Arabia
Born: 1906 Died: 1975
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Saud
King of Saudi Arabia
2 November 1964 – 25 March 1975
Succeeded by
Khalid
Saudi Arabian royalty
Preceded by
Saud
Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia
9 November 1953 – 2 November 1964
Succeeded by
Muhammad
Political offices
New title Minister for Foreign Affairs of Saudi Arabia
1930–1960
Succeeded by
Ibrahim bin Abdullah Al Suwaiyel
Preceded by
Ibrahim bin Abdullah Al Suwaiyel
Minister for Foreign Affairs of Saudi Arabia
1962–1975
Succeeded by
Saud bin Faisal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
Preceded by
Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia
1954–1960
Succeeded by
Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia
1962–1975
Succeeded by
Khalid bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
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