Prince Mustafa Al-Shihabi (Arabic: الأمير مصطفى الشهابي; 1893 – 1968) was a Syrianagronomist, politician, writer and the third elected director of Arab Academy of Damascus (1959–1968).
In January 1943, al-Shihabi was appointed as the head of the Syrian Ministry of Finance by Prime Minister Jamil al-Ulshi, though he stepped down that March due to what he perceived as al-Ulshi's pro-French views.[1] When al-Ayyubi took the position of Prime Minister for a second term, al-Shihabi retook his position in the Ministry of Finance. He was appointed as the governor of Latakia by President Shukri al-Quwatli, and was instrumental in the defeat of Sulayman al-Murshid's Alawite uprising. Al-Shihabi was promoted to the rank of secretary-general of the Syrian Council of Ministers in addition to second terms as the governor of both Aleppo and Latakia. Unlike other Quwalti-era officials, al-Shihabi remained in favor with Husni al-Za'im after the latter's CIA-supported coup d'état. After the subsequent coup of Adib Shishakli, al-Shihabi was designated as Syria's ambassador to Egypt.
Al-Shihabi was a critic of Turkification under the Ottoman Empire, viewing the 1908 Ottoman constitution as a blow to the status of Arabic.[4]
Citations
^ abcdSami Moubayed, Steel and Silk: Men and Women who Shaped Syria 1900-2000, pg. 120. Part of the Bridge between the cultures series. Cune Press, 2006. ISBN9781885942418
^Amine Rweiha (2016). التداوي بالاعشاب (in Arabic). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Al Kalam.
^"مصطفى الشهابي". Syrian Modern History (in Arabic). 15 September 2017.
^Sami Ayad Hanna, Arab Socialism. [al-Ishtirakīyah Al-ʻArabīyah]: A Documentary Survey, pg. 88. Leiden: Brill Publishers, 1969.