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Part I: The Search for a ‘Hero’: the Rise of the Nationalist Movement





                                                       Chapter One


                                      Background to Bahrain’s Sectarian Tensions,

                                   Trade Unions, and the Sunni-Shi’ite Clash of 1953


                                              January 1953 to February 1954




                          With nationalistic fever on the march in the Middle East, the search for

                   Bahrain’s version of a nationalist ‘hero’, as in Tawfiq Al-Hakim’s novel The Return of


                   the Spirit, was on.  As soon as Al-Bakir returned to Bahrain he began to involve

                   himself in political activity aimed at the establishment of trade unions.  A perfect


                   opportunity presented itself in September 1953 when the Sunni-Shi’ite sectarian

                   clash erupted.  This part of the thesis will explore how the conflict offered the


                   prospect of establishing a détente between the two opposing sides, utilising the void


                   the crisis had created and the need for a saviour, while at the same time turning the

                   Movement into a political entity.  The conflict that had unfolded surprised British

                   officials in Bahrain who tried to seek an explanation for the events.


                          Evidence of disunity and a lack of trust between Bahrain’s Sunnis and Shi’ites


                   were clear from an earlier stage.  The clash of 1953 was not the product of a sudden

                   spur of the moment, but rather a result of a long-held deep distrust between the two

                   communities that eventually manifested itself.  In order to understand the nature of


                   the tensions of 1953, it is important briefly to examine the background and anxieties







                   © Hamad E. Abdulla                        31
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