Battle of Douar Souadek

Summary

Battle of Douar Sadek
Part of the Algerian war
Date18 January 1955
Location
Result

French victory

  • Mourad Didouche executed
  • Zone II weakened
Belligerents
 France Front de Libération Nationale
Commanders and leaders
Paul Ducournau [fr]
Lt. Madherbe
Col. Terrasson
Cpt. Billand
Mourad Didouche [1]
Units involved

National Gendarmerie

National Police

Airborne units

Armée de Libération Nationale

  • Zone II
Strength
Initial:
20 gendarmes
Relief:
3 gendarme platoons
(about 90 men)
2 CRS Companies
(280 men)
Heavy weaponry
Total:
390 men
Heavy weaponry
10 Fellaghas
Casualties and losses
1 dead
2 wounded
(initial fighting)
Unknown total casualties
7 dead
2 captured
1 wounded

The Battle of Douar Souadek, or Battle of Boukerker, was a military engagement between the French Army, and the ALN.

Background edit

In the early morning hours of 1 November 1954, FLN maquisards (guerrillas) attacked military and civilian targets throughout Algeria in what became known as the Toussaint Rouge (Red All-Saints' Day).[2] The country was divided into several Zones, later Wilayas , and each had a leader. The leader of Zone II, was Mourad Didouche,[3][4] who was one of the six founders of the FLN.[5] He regularly used hit and run tactics to weaken local French elements, and he was also well known to visit individual maquis, to inspect, or train them.

Battle edit

On 18 January 1955, Mourad Didouche, was at the head of a group of nine Fellaghas, in a local maquis called Douar Souadek located 12 km from the town of Condé-Smendou. He was most likely training them. They were armed with 6 rifles, and 6 pistols. According to the details reported by the La Dépêche de Constantine newspaper, about twenty French gendarmes led by Lieutenant Malherbe had taken the direction of Douar Souadek in the dawn of 18 January 1955. On the spot, near the Boukerker wadi, they were ambushed by the aforementioned maquis.

According to La Dépêche de Constantine, the battle began around 8:30 am. After only a few shots fired, a French gendarme was killed, and two others wounded, while the Algerians suffered no casualties. Seeing the scale of the engagement, Lieutenant Malherbe asked for reinforcements. At the end of the morning, three gendarmerie platoons arrived from Constantine, Azzaba and El Harrouch, followed by two CRS companies, and reportedly a paratrooper one under the command of Paul Ducournau.[6]

Despite their initial successes, the ten Fellaghas got cornered by the numerically superior, and far better armed French units. Despite this, they resisted until about 5:15 pm. By the end of the battle 7 fellaghas died, two were wounded, and one was able to escape, albeit wounded.[7] One of the killed was Mourad Didouche himself.[8][9][10]

Identification of bodies edit

Ever since the beginning of the Organisation spéciale, all officers and leaders had Pseudonyms, as to avoid identification. As such, the French army never realized that one of the killed resistance fighters was Mourad,[11] as they thought that it was instead somebody called Abdelkader.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ admin (2015-07-13). "Cela s'est passé un 13 juillet 1927, naissance de Didouche Mourad". Babzman (in French). Retrieved 2020-12-27.
  2. ^ Solidarity, Permanent Organization for Afro-Asian Peoples' (1962). The Algerian Revolution: (1st November 1954-31 December 1961). Organisation for Afro-Asian Peoples' Solidarity.
  3. ^ Tarvin, William. The Mysterious Plus. William L Tarvin.
  4. ^ Vince, Natalya (2020-11-07). The Algerian War, The Algerian Revolution. Springer Nature. ISBN 978-3-030-54264-1.
  5. ^ Adamson, Kay (1998-01-01). Algeria: A Study in Competing Ideologies. A&C Black. ISBN 978-0-304-70012-7.
  6. ^ Horne, Alistair (2012-08-09). A Savage War of Peace: Algeria 1954-1962. Pan Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-4472-3343-5.
  7. ^ "18 janvier 1955 - bataille du douar Souadek à Constantine : Défendre la mémoire de Didouche Mourad | El Watan". www.elwatan.com. Retrieved 2020-12-27.
  8. ^ Simon, Georges (1988). 1954-1962, l'autre guerre d'Algérie: car assuré d'une vie éternelle (in French). Pensée universelle. ISBN 978-2-214-07572-2.
  9. ^ "Cela s'est passé un 18 janvier 1955: Mort de Didouche Mourad à la bataille du douar Souadek - Algerie360". www.algerie360.com (in French). 2017-01-18. Retrieved 2020-12-27.
  10. ^ "Constantine : Commémoration du 65 ème Anniversaire du décès du Chahid Didouche Mourad | Radio Algérienne". www.radioalgerie.dz (in French). Retrieved 2020-12-27.
  11. ^ Image, Mémoire, Histoire.: Les représentations iconographiques en Algérie et au Maghreb (in French). Crasc. 2006-12-01. ISBN 978-9961-813-31-7.