1955 Madaba riot

The 1955 Madaba riot, sometimes also referred as the Madaba massacre took place in the predominantly Christians Jordanian town of Madaba, when a number of Christians were killed by Islamist rioters.[1]

The riot seems to have begun in a dispute of Christian and Muslim taxi drivers, after which the Salt monastery was attacked by members of the Tahrir Party, eventually transforming in into an all-out sectarian riot.[1] It is claimed, that the event was instigated by the Muslim Brotherhood and the Tahrir Party.[1] It was also claimed that a Jordanian Parliament Member Muhammad Salim Abu al-Ghanam was behind the eruption of the riot.[1]

Wide-scale anti-Hashmite riots took place the same year in December, lasting for five days. Those came as a result of an attempt to bring Jordan into the Baghdad Pact. The riots were severe - foreign consulates were attacked and many people were killed and wounded throughout the country.[2] The riots were quelled only with the military intervention of the Arab Legion and imposition of a curfew.[3] As a result of the riots, the Majali government fell and the introduction of Jordan into the pact was cancelled.[2]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Massad, J. Colonial Effects: The Making of National Identity in Jordan. 2012. P324.
  2. 1 2 Haim, S. and Kadourie, E. Palestine and Israel in the 19th and 20th Centuries. p265.
  3. George, A. Jordan: Living in the Crossfire. 2005. p29.
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