Tawfiq Zayyad

توفيق زيّاد

Born: Nazareth, Mandatory Palestine

Domain: Literature & Poetry

Recognition: LOCAL

Biography

Tawfiq Zayyad was a Palestinian poet, political leader, and one of the central figures of the resistance poetry movement among Palestinians who remained inside Israel after 1948. Born in Nazareth in 1929, he was active from a young age in the Communist Party and combined a lifelong career of political struggle with a body of poetry that became inseparable from the experience of his community living under military rule and discrimination. Zayyad's poetry is direct, defiant, and rooted in the soil and stubbornness of the Galilee. His best-known poems, such as "Here We Will Stay" ("Unadikum" and related works), proclaim an unshakeable attachment to the land and a refusal to be uprooted, and they became rallying cries for Palestinians inside Israel. His plain, forceful idiom made his verse easy to memorize and to chant, giving it a powerful popular afterlife. He was a leading organizer of the first Land Day on 30 March 1976, the mass protest against land confiscation that became a defining moment in the political awakening of Palestinian citizens of Israel and is commemorated annually. As a poet of steadfastness, Zayyad gave that movement much of its language. In 1975 Zayyad was elected mayor of Nazareth, the largest Arab city in Israel, and he also served as a member of the Knesset for the Communist front, becoming one of the most prominent political voices of the Palestinian minority. His dual role as poet and politician made him an emblem of the fusion of culture and struggle. Zayyad died in a car accident in 1994 while returning from welcoming Yasser Arafat to the newly autonomous Jericho. He is remembered as a poet whose verses of rootedness and defiance entered the everyday speech of his people, and as a leader who helped shape the political identity of the Palestinians inside Israel. His work remains a touchstone of the literature of steadfastness.

Why This Person Matters

Zayyad fused poetry and politics as the bard of Palestinian steadfastness inside Israel, giving Land Day and a whole community their defiant language.