Paul Ajlouny
Paul A. Ajlouny (born 1933) is a Palestinian-American publisher and businessman known for launching the now-defunct Palestinian newspaper Al Fajr in 1972 in Jerusalem.
Biography
Ajlouny was born in Ramallah, British Mandate Palestine in 1933, but immigrated to the United States in 1946. He earned a degree in engineering from the University of Kentucky in 1963.[citation needed]
In the 1950s, Aljouny help found the American Federation of Ramallah, Palestine, an organization for Palestinian-Americans from the Ramallah region living in the United States, with chapters across the country.
While studying in Kentucky in the 1960s, Ajlouny and his brother-in-law Yusuf Nasr decided to launch an Arabic-language newspaper back home in Palestine. After graduating, Aljouny and Nasr returned to Palestine to establish Al-fajr. However, Nasr was soon kidnapped from his apartment in East Jerusalem under suspicious circumstances, and was never found. Aljouny subsequently took over as publisher of the paper, and oversaw its official launch as the first edition hit newsstands in Jerusalem and Israel in 1972. (Distribution of Al-fajr in the Israeli occupied territories of the West Bank and Gaza Strip was forbidden by the Israeli authorities.)
In 1978, Ajlouny founded the United Palestinian Appeal in order to help needy Palestinians and facilitate cultural and economic growth in Palestine. The organization has provided emergency relief and launched long-term development projects in the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon.[1]
In the 1970s, while living in New York, Ajlouny claimed to be an advisor to the PLO.
References
External links
- Profile of Paul Ajlouny at the Institute for Middle East Understanding Archived 2014-04-19 at the Wayback Machine.
- Personality: Paul A. Ajloluny, The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, 24 February 1986
- Justia.com