
The Palestinian diplomat and negotiator Hanan Ashrawi, b. 1946, a
university professor and mother of two young daughters , she was chosen in
1991 to represent the Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) in the
Middle East peace talks convened in Madrid in October. Her masterly use of
spoken English and her cool, pragmatic, Western-style negotiating skills
won the admiration even of her Israeli adversaries in the talks that led in
December 1993 to an agreement for the phased withdrawal of Israeli forces
from the Palestinian West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Ashrawi was born in Ramallah, Palestine, the youngest of five daughters of
a Palestinian physician and political leader. A Christian, she studied in
Christian schools and at the American University in Beirut, Lebanon, before
earning a doctorate at the University of Virginia in the United States. She
and her husband, a professional photographer and musician, chose to live in
the Occupied West Bank, where she became a professor of medieval and
comparative literature at Bir Zeit University.
In the ferment of the Palestinian liberation movement, Ashrawi joined the
PLO Fatah faction, which, together with her eloquence and lucidity,
recommended her to all sides in the Middle East negotiations. She attended
the peace talks throughout the opening session in Madrid until their
successful conclusion in December 1993, when she resigned to head the PLO's
mission in Washington, D.C. As the Israeli withdrawals began, she returned
to her teaching responsibilities in Bir Zeit, where she headed the
Palestinian Independent Commission on Civil Rights, concerned among other
things with preventing reprisals against Palestinians who had cooperated
with the Israelis during the occupation. In January 1996 she was elected to
a seat on the Palestinian Council, representing East Jerusalem.
