Subhi Bey Barakat

Subhi Bey Barakat al-Khalidi or Suphi Bereket (Arabic: صبحي بك بركات الخالدي; Turkish: Suphi Bereket; 1889–1939) was a Turkish[3] politician from Antakya.

[4] Also, between 1938 and 1939, he served as the Antakya deputy of the Republic of Hatay[7] and was elected to the Internal Affairs Committee.

[8] Part of the reason the French supported his candidacy as president of the Syrian Federation was because as neither a native of Damascus nor a very strong Arabic speaker (Turkish was his mother tongue), he did not seem to pose a nationalist threat to French rule.

He played a major role in merging the States of Aleppo and Damascus into one state,[citation needed] and he quit the presidency of Syria in 1925 in protest to the French position regarding the fate of the Alawite and Druze States,[citation needed] which France refused to add to Syria because it feared that might endanger the independence of the newly created Lebanon.

Barakat was married to Halide; They had three sons (named Rıfat, Halit, and Selahattin) and three daughters (Süheyla Mukbile, Zehra, and Saniye).

French mandate
French mandate
First Syrian Republic
First Syrian Republic
Second Syrian Republic
Second Syrian Republic
United Arab Republic
United Arab Republic
Second Syrian Republic
Second Syrian Republic
Ba'athist Syria
Ba'athist Syria
Transitional period
Transitional period
Arab Kingdom of Syria
Arab Kingdom of Syria
French mandate
French mandate
First Syrian Republic
First Syrian Republic
Second Syrian Republic
Second Syrian Republic
United Arab Republic
United Arab Republic
Second Syrian Republic
Second Syrian Republic
Ba'athist Syria
Ba'athist Syria
Transitional period
Transitional period