
Messali Hadj
Acting
Biography
Messali Hadj (Arabic: مصالي الحاج), whose real name was Ahmed Ali Messali Hadj, was born in Tlemcen, Algeria, on May 16, 1898, and died in Gouvieux, France, on June 3, 1974. He was an Algerian politician who played a pioneering role in the process leading to Algerian independence, which he began demanding in 1927. Born into a modest family—his father was a shoemaker—he became aware at a young age of the inequalities imposed on Algerians under the colonial system. After primary school, he worked various jobs before being mobilized into the French army during the First World War, an experience that fueled his political awareness and his rejection of colonial domination. In the 1920s, he settled in Paris, where he frequented immigrant working-class circles and anti-colonial movements. He quickly became one of the leading figures of Algerian nationalism. In 1926, he participated in the creation of the North African Star, the first organization to openly demand Algerian independence. His discourse was based on national dignity, social justice, and the right of peoples to self-determination. Charismatic and an excellent orator, he mobilized thousands of Algerian workers in France and Algeria. After the dissolution of the North African Star by the French authorities, he founded the Algerian People's Party (PPA) in 1937, and then the Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties after the Second World War. Throughout his life, he endured arrests, surveillance, and exile. Despite the repression, he remained a symbol of the national struggle. His ideology championed an independent Algeria, committed to its Arab and Muslim identity, but also to popular sovereignty. He believed in mass political organization and the awakening of the people as the primary driving force of liberation. His wife, Émilie Busquant, played a significant role in his life. A committed French activist at his side, she actively supported the Algerian independence movement. She participated in spreading nationalist ideas and designed the first modern Algerian flag, conceived by Messali Hadj, which became a symbol of the nation. Their union also represented a shared political commitment against colonialism. The couple had children, notably Djanina Messali-Benkelfat, who remained closely connected to the family history and collective memory of the national movement. When the war of independence began in 1954, tensions between Messali Hadj's supporters and the National Liberation Front (FLN) caused a deep division within the nationalist movement. The Algerian National Movement (MNA), which he led, entered into a bitter rivalry with the FLN. This opposition weakened his political influence during the war, even though his historical role in the awakening of Algerian nationalism remained fundamental. After Algeria's independence in 1962, Messali Hadj was gradually marginalized by the FLN-backed government. He spent the last years of his life in France and died on June 3, 1974, in Paris. His body was then repatriated to Algeria, where he was buried in Tlemcen. In Algerian history, Messali Hadj remains considered the “father of modern Algerian nationalism.” Even before the armed uprising, he gave a political structure to the independence movement and trained several generations of activists.
Known For

North Africa, 1954. The Algerian war of independence begins, a traumatic and extremely violent catastrophe that for eight long years will shake and finally overthrow the foundations of the colonial regime established by France in 1830.
At War for Algeria

No description available.
War 2 War

The life and political activism of Messali Hadj (1898-1974), an Algerian internationalist politician who played a pioneering role in the process leading to Algerian independence, which he demanded as early as 1927. He was initially secretary of the North African Star (ENA), then in 1937 he founded the Algerian People's Party (PPA), in 1946 he founded the Movement for the Triumph of Democratic Liberties (MTLD), and finally in 1954, the Algerian National Movement (MNA). In 1937, the leadership of the North African Star (ENA) created its flag, green with a white star and crescent. Messali Hadj's wife, Emilie Busquant-Messali, simply sewed this ENA flag by machine; it would later become the flag of the PPA. In 1943, Messali Hadj, in conjunction with the party leadership, created the ENA-PPA flag, green and white with a red star and crescent, which would later become the current flag of the People's Democratic Republic of Algeria.
Messali Hadj - A Life In Service To The Algerian People

Emilie Busquant, a woman with an exceptional destiny, was born on March 3, 1901, in Neuves-Maisons, Lorraine. In 1923, she moved to Paris to find work and met Messali Hadj, who had also come seeking employment. A beautiful love story began; she fell in love with both a man and a cause: the independence of Algeria. Together, in 1926, they founded the first Algerian independence party, the North African Star (Étoile Nord-Africaine). She would support the Algerian people's struggle throughout her life.