Long before the Arab League came into existence in the mid-1940s, the Arabs convened their first congress in Paris back in 1913, with the aim of uniting their ranks and articulating their political demands to the Ottomans.
It was an ambitious convention, coming just three years before the outbreak of the Great Arab Revolt. It was held at the premises of the French Geographical Society on St. German Boulevard between 18-23 June 1913 — not far from the French National Assembly.
The congress came out with a series of resolutions for the expansion of Arab authority in the Ottoman Empire, strengthening Arab representation in the Ottoman government, while protecting the Arab language and making it second to Ottoman Turkish both at schools and in the Ottoman parliament.
After much criticism of the congress and its organisers, Ottoman authorities took the bold decision of agreeing to all their demands but later backed out on them — one after the other — in the months prior to the outbreak of World War I.
All the Arab Congress resolutions were scrapped and its architects were arrested, exiled, or executed.
The organising committee
Organising the event was a group of Arab students in Paris —some of whom had worked towards the establishment of the secret al-Fatat Society in 1911. They were worried by increased repression since the 1908 coup against Sultan Abdulhamid II, carried out by a group of young hardline Ottoman officers in the Committee for Union and Progress (CUP).
Read more: The coup that brought down the Ottoman Empire
The 1908 coup was supposed to have introduced a policy of openness, greater co-existence, and parliamentary democracy. Press censorship was lifted and the Ottoman constitution was restored by Sultan Abdulhamid before he was ultimately dethroned in April 1909.
He had also restored the Ottoman parliament that he had personally convened, then abolished, back in the 1870s. But as the CUP cemented its grip on the state, arrests became common, and so did severe curtailing of free speech.