Revolutionary leaders who maintain absolute moral integrity and trust their allies completely may be betrayed by those who prioritize survival over shared ideals, as demonstrated by Ahmed Urabi's 1881 Egyptian revolution where his principled stance against British control led to his destruction when fellow officers secretly negotiated with the enemy.
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The Revolutionary Who Trusted Too Much - Ahmed Urabi's Betrayal本站添加:
The most principled revolutionary was destroyed by his own principles. It's 1881, Cairo, Egypt. Colonel Ahmed Urabi unites the Egyptian army against British control, demanding Egypt for Egyptians.
He rallies officers and peasants alike.
His speech is electrifying crowds across the Nile Delta. Foreign banks tremble as he refuses their deals. His moral authority makes him untouchable, and for months revolution seems unstoppable. But fellow officers grow nervous as British warships gather offshore. Secret meetings begin in military headquarters.
They choose survival over revolution, cutting deals with the enemy while Urabi trusts completely. British forces land, his allies vanish, and exile awaits. The incorruptible patriot was Ahmed Urabi.
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