Muhammad Tariq Abd al-Qadir al-Afriqi
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Muhammad Tariq Abd al-Qadir al-Afriqi | |
|---|---|
| Native name | محمد طارق عبد القادر الإفريقي |
| Nickname | Al-Namir al-Aswad (The Black Tiger) |
| Born | 1886 |
| Died | October 15, 1963 (aged 76–77) Damascus, Syria |
| Buried | |
| Allegiance | |
| Conflicts | |
Muhammad Tariq Abd al-Qadir al-Tarabulsi al-Afriqi (Arabic: محمد طارق عبد القادر الطرابلسي الإفريقي) was a Libyan military officer who served as a commander in the Ottoman Army and later he became the first Chief of War Staff of King Abd al-Aziz al-Saud's army, with the rank of brigadier general, and in addition he participated in the Arab-Israeli War.[1][2] Tariq al-Afriqi possessed extensive military culture and experience and was fluent in Arabic, Turkish, German, French and Hausa. Known for his commitment to Arab nationalism, he was nicknamed Al-Namir al-Aswad (The Black Tiger) because of his ethnic origin.[1]
Muhammad Tariq was born in 1886 in the western city of Tripoli, the son of an Arab man from Fezzan named Abd al-Qadir[1] and an ethnic Hausa Nigerian woman. From an early age he displayed prodigious intelligence and great tact and understanding, this brilliance caught the attention of the people which led him to be adopted and raised by an Ottoman official who gave him the nickname Al-Afriqi (The African). Convinced of his talent and great potential, his adoptive father enrolled the young Tariq al-Afriqi in a military school in Tripoli from which he graduated with honors, which will allow him to continue his studies in Turkey.[3] He graduated from the Turkish military school with the rank of second lieutenant[1] and decided to join a training course in Germany, learning the language easily and standing out among his peers. When he was 25 years old and in Germany, he was called to serve his native Libya against the invading Italians.[1]