Mounira Solh

Mounira Solh (19 September 1911 – 27 November 2010) was a pioneer advocate for the rights of women and people with disabilities in Lebanon. She was one of the first women in Lebanon and the Middle East to run for parliament. She ran for a seat in the Parliament of Lebanon in 1960, 1964 and 1968.[1] She was also a humanitarian with decades of volunteer and charity work.

Mounira Solh
Solh in Beirut, 1974
Born(1911-09-19)19 September 1911
Died27 November 2010(2010-11-27) (aged 99)
NationalityLebanese
Alma materLebanese American University
Occupation(s)Founder, Al Amal Institute for the Disabled
SpouseWaheed el Solh
ChildrenSana Solh

Mounira Solh founded Al Amal Institute for the Disabled in 1959, the first center of its kind in Lebanon and the Arab world.[2] She also founded in 1984 the Association of the Parents of Mentally Disabled Children in Lebanon, the first of its kind in Lebanon.

Life and work

Mounira Solh was one of the most prominent female leaders of the demonstrations that led to Lebanon's independence in 1943. An advocate of women's rights, she was the first Muslim woman to run for parliamentary elections in Lebanon and probably the Arab world when she ran for a Beirut seat in 1960.[3] She was a candidate to the legislative elections in Lebanon twice after that, in 1964 and 1968. She never won an election.[4]

One of the earliest women to attend university in Lebanon and the Arab world, Mounira Solh graduated in 1933 from the American Junior College for Women (the Lebanese American University today). Soon after, she travelled to Baghdad, Iraq, where she worked as a teacher for two years, contributing to the national school curriculum revamp. On her return to Lebanon in 1935, she married her first cousin, Wahid Solh despite her father's disapproval. She eloped with her new husband to Palestine for a few months before returning home after receiving word that her father had accepted her marriage.[5]

Along with other pioneering women, Mounira Solh worked relentlessly for the advancement of laws pertaining to women and people with disabilities. In 1951, she became a member of the Lebanese Council of Women.[6] She was also active in humanitarian and charity work, and led the national team of relief volunteers to help victims of the Beirut Great Fire in 1956.

A year after her husband's assassination during the 1958 civil war, Mounira Solh established the Al Amal Institute for the Disabled.[7] She was inspired by her desire to help her son Salim and other children with disability. In 1968, she became a member of Rehabilitation International, the world's leading organization for disability rights. That same year, she was elected vice-president of the Lebanese Council of Women and in 1970 she became a life member of the International Council of Women. She earned a special distinction from U.S. President Richard Nixon after attending three annual conferences between 1970 and 1972 of the U.S. President's Committee on Employment of People with Disabilities, Washington D.C. In her struggle to advance the rights of women and people with disability, Mounira Solh has officially represented Lebanon at various international conferences around the world including in Lisbon, Tokyo, Sydney and Mexico.

Al Amal Institute for the Disabled in Broumana, Lebanon

Mounira Solh celebrated in 2009 the 50th anniversary of Al Amal Institute for the Disabled in a Golden Jubilee Ceremony during which a special film[8] on her lifetime achievements and pioneering humanitarian work was screened.[9]

Mounira Solh died on 27 November 2010. She was 99 years old.[10] Her daughter Sana and son Nassib continue to run Al Amal Institute for the Disabled in Broumana, Lebanon.[11]

Family

Mounira Solh hails from a prominent family which gave Lebanon four prime ministers, Riad Solh, Sami Solh, Takieddine Solh and Rachid Solh. The Solh family is originally from the ancient port city of Sidon in southern Lebanon. Her father, Abdel Rahim Solh, is a Sunni Muslim, and her mother, Mahiba Ashkar, a Maronite Catholic Christian from Broumana, a resort town in the Metn mountains east of Beirut. Mounira Solh had five children: Samir (had severe disabilities, deceased at a young age), Najla (died from illness at a young age), Salim (had mental disabilities, 1942–2002), Sana and Nassib. She had nine grandchildren: Assaad, Nadim and Nayla Razzouk, Nael and Hala Raad, and Wahid, Mounira, Omar and Maria Solh.[12]

Education

Mounira Solh completed her schooling at the American School in the city of Tripoli, northern Lebanon, in 1929. She later went on to attend the American Junior College for Women (the Lebanese American University today) from where she graduated in 1933.[13]

In 1950, she received a Nursing Certificate from the Lebanese Red Cross.

In 1975, she was awarded a Diploma for a Study Workshop on Disablement and Rehabilitation from the Selly Oak Colleges in Birmingham, U.K.

Mrs. Mounira Solh receives congratulations from Mrs. Mary Robinson for the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Mothers' Leadership Award 2000–2005 in Seattle, WA, in 2000.
Mrs. Mounira Solh's Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Mothers' Leadership Award 2000-2005

Awards and distinctions

  • Mounira Solh is the recipient of numerous awards, including the National Order of the Cedar, granted by the President of the Republic in 2000.[14]
  • She is the recipient of the prestigious Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Mothers' Leadership Award 2000-2005 which celebrates a mother of a child with intellectual disability "who has demonstrated outstanding leadership and long standing commitment to the development and improvement of services, advocacy, or public policy on behalf of her son or daughter or others with mental retardation."

She also received the following awards:

References

  1. Lamia Rustum Shehadeh, ed. (1999). Women and War in Lebanon. University Press of Florida. p. 32. ISBN 9780813017075.
  2. El-Ghoul, Adnan (25 October 2004). "Charity helps clothe and feed the needy". The Daily Star. Lebanon.
  3. Moghaizel, Laure (1985). Women in the Lebanese Legislation. Naufal, Beirut, Lebanon: Beirut University College. p. 36.
  4. Joseph, Suad (2000). Gender and Citizenship in the Middle East. Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press. p. 127. emily fares Ibrahim elections.
  5. "Passing Away of Mounira Solh" (PDF). Lebanon: Al Akhbar. 30 November 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 April 2013. Retrieved 20 August 2012.
  6. Chaarani, Aman Kabbara (November 2010). "LCW President Eulogy for Mounira Solh" (in Arabic). Beirut: Lebanese Council of Women website. Archived from the original on 15 April 2013. (Engl. tr.)
  7. "Al- Amal Institute for the Disabled" Archived 26 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine. United Nations Development Program. UNDP.org.
  8. "Ceremony for Al Amal's Golden Jubilee". Lebanon: National News Agency. 28 October 2009.
  9. "Passing Away of Mounira Solh, Founder of Al Amal Institute for the Disabled at Age 99". Al Mustaqbal. Lebanon. 29 November 2010. Archived from the original on 17 January 2013.
  10. "Lebanon Bids Farewell to Pioneer Mounira Solh". As Safir. Lebanon. 30 November 2010.
  11. "Haigazian University Online Collaborative Sponsoring the Welfare Wheat Race". Beirut, Lebanon: Haigazian University. 2 April 2012.
  12. "Lebanon Bids Farewell to Pioneer Mounira Solh". As Safir. Lebanon. 30 November 2010.
  13. "Achievements of LAU Women Graduates Throughout its History" (PDF). Beirut, Lebanon: Lebanese American University (LAU) Magazine and Alumni Bulletin. Winter 2012. p. 31. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2012.
  14. "Activist Mounira Solh Passes Away" (in Arabic). Lebanon: National News Agency. 28 November 2010.
  15. "Haigazian University Honors Distinguished Women" (PDF). Beirut, Lebanon: Haigazian University (HU) Newsletter. 2004–2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 June 2015. Retrieved 20 August 2012.
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