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Lyès Deriche

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Lyès Deriche
Template:IPA-ar
Tifinagh: Lⵢèⵙ ⴹⴻⵔⵉⵛⵀⴻ
Lyès Deriche
Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action Member
In office
1954–1954
Qaid of Khachna
In office
1919–1938
Personal details
Born1932
Souk El-Had, Algiers department, Kabylie, Algeria.
Died1982
El Madania, Sidi M'Hamed District, Algiers Province, Kabylie, Algeria.

Lyès Deriche (Template:IPA-ar, Tifinagh: Lⵢèⵙ ⴹⴻⵔⵉⵛⵀⴻ), (born 1932 in Souk El-Had, Boumerdès Province, Kabylie, Algeria; died 1982 in El Madania, Algeria) was an Algerian Berber politician after the French conquest of Algeria.[1]

Algerian War

Lyès Deriche, the grandson of Mohamed Deriche, housed in his villa in the Algerian commune of Clos-Salembier the meeting of the Group of 22 baptized Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action (RCUA).[2]

On July 25, 1954, in the modest villa belonging to Lyès Deriche, twenty-two Algerians spoke for the unlimited revolution until total independence. They were all elders of the Special Organization who were summoned in the second half of June 1954.[3]

Many of them were from families where there were qaids and bachaghas who had studied in the schools of the Association Of Algerian Muslim scholars[4] · .[5]

Lyès Deriche, a friend of Zoubir Bouadjadj, was a former militant of the Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties who exploited the notoriety of his family to weave a clandestine revolutionary network in Lower Kabylia. He welcomed Mohamed Boudiaf who was the revolutionary leader of Algiers, and had prepared the meal for the participants in the historic meeting.[6]

About noon the owner of the house, Deriche, invited the presents to a couscous, and after a short pause they returned to work.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ "fete150eme-anniversaire-de-la-revolution-2".
  2. ^ "24 juin 1954 : Tenue de la réunion du Groupe des « 22 » historiques".
  3. ^ "Juillet 1954: La réunion du Clos-Salembier".
  4. ^ "Hommage à Lyes Derriche".
  5. ^ "Nos 22 héros - 22 héros, 22 bourses".
  6. ^ Stora, Benjamin (1 January 1985). "Dictionnaire biographique de militants nationalistes algériens: E.N.A, P.P.A., M.T.L.D., 1926-1954". L'Harmattan – via Google Books.
  7. ^ "La réunion des 22 : quand le sort de l'Algérie bascule !".