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Tajir.  Al-Bakir was elected the Movement’s General Secretary.  The new Movement

                   was named the Higher Executive Committee (HEC).     232    Belgrave mocked it: ‘Higher


                   than what?’ he said. 233   To him the name might have seemed intimidating, giving it a


                   higher authority to that of the Administration and of the Ruler.

                          A new gathering at the Mu’min Mosque in Manama on 18 October finally


                   caught British attention.  The date chosen for the gathering marked a Shi’ite

                   occasion celebrating forty days since the passing of the anniversary of Hussein’s


                   martyrdom, thus guaranteeing a large audience of mourners.  Wall posted an

                   account of the meeting’s proceedings to the Residency.  The message declared that


                   the dynamo behind the Movement’s creation was Sunni journalists from Al-Qafilah

                   and Sawut Al-Bahrain.  Wall highlighted his surprise about the success the group


                   had achieved ‘in rallying the two communities to adopt a common political

                   programme’.  234   News of the gathering reached Belgrave, as he noted in his diary


                   and he reported rumours he had heard that the HEC was out to set political

                   demands that involved the formation of committees to oversee governmental


                   departments, a matter he strongly opposed, as it directly threatened his status. 235

                          Al-Qafilah covered the proceedings of the day.  It stated that an oath read by


                   Mahmood Al-Mardi was recited.  The oath pronounced:

                          I swear by God Almighty to be faithful to the Arab nations’ cause and
                          to  march  in  solidarity  united  with  the  sons  of  my  country.    No
                          sectarianism, no division and God is my witness.  236

                   232  Al-Bakir, From Bahrain to Exile, 56-62.
                   233  Belgrave, Personal Column, 204.
                   234  TNA, FO 1016/309, Wall to Burrows on Public Sentiment for Representational Government, 25
                   October 1954.
                   235  Sir Charles Dalrymple Belgrave’s Personal Diaries, 17 October 1954.
                   236  ‘Al-Intifada Al-Kubra fi Tarikh Al-Bahrain’ [The Great Uprising in Bahrain’s History], Al-Qafilah, 26
                   October 1954, 1.



                   © Hamad E. Abdulla                        76
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