Arabs on Titanic: Arabs share the pain but not the glory in ship's tragic tale
An article from the archives I thought you might enjoy about the Arabs on the Titanic who were marginalized in the Hollywood blockbuster by filmmaker James Cameron.
By Ray Hanania
FREE/Titanic Arabs Hollywood movie bias/Wednesday Jan. 1, 2025
The story of the Titanic has never been fully told. Among the passengers were several hundred Arabs from Middle East countries including Lebanon, Syria and Palestine. In James Cameron's film"Titanic," he portrayed in the film an Irish party but. the reality is that there was a Lebanese pre-marital celebration on the Titanic. Despite the presence of Arabs on the Titanic, they received only one mention with the word "Yalla" during the film. No real research besides this compilation of information has ever been written about them. (Originally published by Ray Hanania in 1998)
With just one word, “Yalla,” in a scene that lasted less than 3 seconds in a 3 hour and 15 minutes, audiences around the world watching the James Cameron Movie Titanic (1997-1998) received their first hint that aboard the ill-fated voyage of the Titanic were passengers of Arab heritage.
Although the brief words survived the editor’s cut, the three-and-one-half-hour theatrical blockbuster movie skipped past the tragedy of its Arab passengers, whom witnesses said had the liveliest "haflis "(or 'parties" in English) and who celebrated three on-board weddings.
All told, there were only 706 survivors of the 2,223 passengers and crew who sailed on the maiden voyage of the Titanic. There were 79 passengers whose sur-names are of obvious Arab heritage. Also lost in what is one of the greatest tragedies of the 20th Century was a priceless copy of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam which had been purchased by a Jewish investor in New York City. The book had 1,051 semi-precious stones set in 18-carat gold, 5,000 separate pieces of colored leather and 100 square feet of 22-carat gold leaf in the tooling.
Although one Arab survivor and several other sources contend there were more than 165 Arabs on board, I searched and reviewed every name on the passenger, crew, and business concessionaire list and only could identify 79 names that were obviously of Arab heritage or later identified through other sources. Geller, in her marvelous account of the Titanic tragedy, Titanic: Women and Children First, writes there “officially were 154 Syrians on board the Titanic, and 29 were saved: four men, five children, and 20 women.” She also cited newspaper accounts that suggest that the small Roman Orthodox Village of Kfar Mishki in the lower Bekaa Valley of Eastern Lebanon was “devastated by the loss of at least 13 of its inhabitants.”
All the Arab passengers were ticketed “Third Class,” except four who traveled “Second Class,” distinctions that related to accommodations and the price of the boarding pass. Only 38 Arabs survived. Rescued by the Carpathia, they lived to share their personal tales of horror, having witnessed whole families drown as the ship slowly sank into the deep, dark seas of the Atlantic Ocean. (The ocean’s name Atlantic comes from an Arabic derivative that means “Dark Sea” or “Sea of Darkness.”)
Like many events in history, Arabs experience the pain but receive little glory. They are often marginalized because of racism in American society.
Director James Cameron drew on the ethnicity of other passengers in making the movie which won 11 Academy Awards. He also included a scene that spotlighted a lively Irish “party,” and included references to many other ethnic groups featuring characters of Swedish, Italian, Irish, and English heritage.
It’s not easy to read through the lengthy list of passengers, let alone decipher who is or isn’t of Arab heritage. We can only guess in some instances, and my instinct tells me the number, 79, is slightly low. Some of the Arab Survivors, though, were quoted extensively in local newspaper articles, usually during remembrances of the disaster. The stories of a few others are included in published works.
Titanic sailed from Southampton, England on April 10, 1912. The largest ship ever built, it made stops at Cherbourg, France, where some of the Arab passengers boarded, and Queenstown, Ireland, before heading out to the high seas and its intended destination, New York City.
There were not enough lifeboats to carry all the passengers to safety. Those in the Third Class galleys, in the lower decks, found themselves cast aside by a frantic ship’s crew desperate to escort the First Class passengers to safety.
The barriers that divided the Third Class passengers from the rest of the ship were broken only after the passengers realized that the ship was sinking.
Two hours and forty minutes after the Titanic struck the iceberg, the ship disappeared into the sea, spilling survivors overboard who could not fit into lifeboats, leaving them to splash futilely in the sub-zero waters.
Most of those who died, including 41 Arab passengers, died because of the arctic-like cold waters, not because of drowning. Among the survivors was the ship’s parent company representative, Joseph Bruce Ismay, who survived to testify before lengthy US Senate Hearings several days later in New York City. His cowardice, taking a seat on a lifeboat before other passengers, was well documented.
Not told at these hearings were the remorseful tales of tragedy that accompanied the Arab passengers, some of whom departed on the voyage with visions of new futures in new worlds. We know of their stories thanks in large part to people like Philip Hind and Michael A. Findlay, who authored an informative memorial to the Titanic that is on the World Wide Web. Findlay wrote the introduction to Geller’s book.
Here are some of the brief stories and profiles, followed by a complete list of the Arab passengers I was able to identify based on surnames who survived and who perished on April 12, 1912.
Miss Banoura Ayoub (Listed often as Ayout Banoura):
A young child in her early teens, Ayoub traveled from Lebanon to Detroit, Michigan where she was to be reunited with her family. She traveled with her cousins, Shawnee George Wahbee, Thomas Tannous, Gerious Youseff and Tannous Doharr, who were to continue through Detroit to Youngstown, Ohio, where today a large Arab American community flourishes.
Shawnee (profiled below) and Ayoub survived. All three men, traveling to find jobs at the steel mills in Youngstown, died. Banoura Ayoub eventually moved to Windsor, Ontario, Canada, another center of Arab growth.
Thomas Tannous is reportedly related to the family of Danny Thomas (Jacobs).
Mrs. George Joseph Whabee, known as Shawnee Abi Saab:
The better-known of the Arabs who traveled on the Titanic was born in Thoum, Lebanon on Palm Sunday, 1874. (In Arabic, the name Shawnee means Palm Sunday). She was the youngest of seven children, the daughter of Thomas George Abi-Saab and Katoole Deeb Abi-Saab. She married George Joseph Wahbee and came to America in 1906, hoping to make enough money to return to Lebanon and buy land for her family. But, when her husband died in 1908, she remained in Youngstown, Ohio, where she raised her children, Joseph, Thomas, Albert, Rose and Mary, who had stayed behind in Lebanon.
Around 1910, her son Thomas became seriously ill. Doctors told her to send him back to Lebanon where the fresh mountain air was expected to help nurse him back to good health. She later learned that her son’s illness had worsened, and, fearing his death, she returned to Lebanon, arriving 10 days after he had died. She had left her daughters, Rose and Mary, in the care of the Christ Mission Society.
It was in April 1912 that Shawnee traveled to Cherbourg, France where she purchased her ticket (#2688) aboard the Titanic. It cost her 4 pounds 4 shillings. She boarded with three other cousins, named above.
A survivor, she witnessed the sinking of the ship and saw her male cousins remain on board. Members of the crew, using guns, fired into the air to prevent some of the men from rushing the few lifeboats. She sat with other passengers in the lifeboat, dressed only in a nightgown and life jacket, shivering in the cold. Several passengers in the boat died from the cold during the six-hour wait.
Part of her story was told to the Sharon Herald on April 14, 1937, commemorating the sinking 25 years later:
“Banoura and I were placed into the next to the last lifeboat to be lowered from the ship. A scared young man leaped over the side of the liner and landed in the bottom of the lifeboat. Women shielded him with their nightgowns so the sailors wouldn’t see him. They would have shot him,” she recalled. “After being pulled about a half-mile away, the sailors stopped rowing. We watched the lights of the big boat with our hearts in our throats. Then we saw it sink.”
Shawnee was cared for by the Hebrew Sheltering Society when she arrived in New York. She later boarded a train for Youngstown after being paid $150 by the Titanic company for her lost belongings.
Witnesses and relatives reported that when she left for Lebanon to see her dying son, her hair was jet black. A year after the Titanic tragedy, her hair was completely white.
Gerious Youseff:
From Lebanon, traveling with the passengers named above, died, although his body was later recovered in the aftermath of the Titanic sinking (Body label #312). He was buried at Mt. Olivet Cemetery, in Halifax, N.S., on May 10, 1912.
The story of Catherine, Michael and Mary Peter (Joseph):
Peter and Catherine Joseph had immigrated to Detroit, Michigan after the turn of the Century from Lebanon. Peter had begun typically pushing a peddlar’s cart, collecting scrap iron and junk. The Joseph’s had two children, Michael and Mary. In 1911, Peter Joseph sent his wife and two children back to Lebanon for a visit, possibly to let them escape from the hardships of their struggle in America. They returned on the Titanic, traveling by freighter from Beirut to Marseilles and then on to Cherbourg where they boarded the ship with other Lebanese voyagers. She listed herself, according to Geller, by her husband’s name, Peter, rather than by her real sur-name, Joseph, because it was custom.
The Story of Nicola Yarred, and Jamila and Elias Nicola (Yarred):
Originally from Hakoor, Lebanon, a moutain village, Jamilia Yarred, her father Nicola, and her younger brother Elias, were fleeing persecution when they began their trip to board the Titanic and to reunite with relatives that had settled in Jacksonville, Florida. They made the 130 km trip from their village to Beirut and boarded the boat to Marseilles. Nicola Yarred, the father, was prevented from boarding because he had an eye infection. Tight restrictions on diseases at Ellis Island in New York forced the Titanic shipping line to assume the cost of returning any passenger turned away there, so he could not board. The children registered, again as was custom at the time, by assuming their father’s name, Nicola, as their last name, and they boarded with what little money their father had left and his blessings for a safe trip.
As the story goes, the two children were fleeing the rising waters of the sinking ship, shivering in the cold as they tried to board one of the few lifeboats. John Jacob Astor, who had just put his own wife on a boat and was preparing to die onboard the Titanic, saw the children in the crowd and lifted them one at a time to help place them in the life boat.
Nicola, shocked by the ordeal, rejoiced that his children had survived and he joined them three months later in the United States. The Yarreds changed their name, according to Geller, to Garretts. Jamilia became Amelia and Elias became Louis. Amelia later married Isaac Isaac, a grocer, four years later.
The Story of Celiney Alexander Yasbeck:
Celiney Alexander Yasbeck and her husband Antoni Fraza Yasbeck had been married only a few weeks before. They traveled with Celiney’s younger sister, Amenia Alexander Moubarek and her two children George and William. A Hanna Moubarek is also listed and we assume he was Amenia’s husband.
Celiney was separated from her husband during the commotion, and Antoni Fraza Yasbeck is listed as one of those who died, along with Hanna Moubarek. Celiney, her sister and her sister’s two children survived.
Little else is known about the lives of the other Arabs who perished on that dreadful evening. Not all of the names of the Arab passengers were ever fully identified.
Imagine: The event of a couple’s death on board the Titanic held great significance in tragedy in 1912 and throughout the years that followed.
Each couple that died ended a lifeline of future generations that might have averaged six children. In three generations, the descendants could have increased to an extended family of 268 people. These unborn people, so to speak, also died on the night of April 12, 1912.
What follows is the list of Arab sur-named passengers, based on common recognition, of the 79 who were reportedly among 165 Arabs whose tragedies are a part of the immortal tale of the sinking of the Titanic. (Survivors are identified following their listing with an “S”.) But we know that there were more than 160 Arabs but not all could be identified easily.
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Second Class Passengers
Marie Thuillard Jerwan (S)
Adele Nasrallah Nasser (S)
Nicholas Nasrallah Nasser
Ellen Toomey (S)
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Third Class Passengers
Ali Ahmed
Gerios Assaf Mariana Assaf (S)
Solomon Attalah Banoura Ayoub (S)
Akar Boulos (S)
Joseph Sultana Boulos (S)
Joseph Kareem Caram
Nassef Belmenly Cassem (S)
Elias Dibo
Elias Elias
Joseph Elias
M. Houssein Hassan
Saad Khalil Neshan Krekorian
Len Lam Fahim Leeni (S)
Hanna Mansour
Hanna Moubarek (S)
George Moubarek (S)
Maria Nackid (S)
Mary Mowad Nackid (S)
Mustafa Nasr Saade Jean Nassr
Elias Nicola (Yarred) (S)
Catherine Peter (Joseph) (S)
Razi Raibid Khalil Saad (S)
Hanna Samaan Yousef Samaan
Thomas Tannous
Assad Alexander Thomas (Toumas)(S)
John Thomas (Toumas)
Assad Torfa
George Touma (S)
Anna Sofia Turja (S)
Celiney Alexander Yasbeck (S)
Tamini Zabour
William Ali
Ali Assam Makala Attalah
Tannous Betros (S)
Hanna Boulos (S)
Laura Boulos (S)
Maria Elias Kareem Caram
Emir Farres Chebab (S)
Tannous Doharr
John Elias
Shawnee George Joseph Whabee (S)
Betros Khalil Zahie Khalil
Sarkis Lahowd Ali Lam (S)
Hanna Mamee (S)
Fatima Masselmany (S)
Amenia Moubarek (S)
William George Moubarek (S)
Said Nackid (S)
Toufik Nahill Adele Kiamie Najib (S)
Jamilia Nicola (Yarred) (S)
Mary Peter (Joseph) (S)
Michael Peter (Joseph) (S)
Amin Saad Elias Samaan
Arsun Sirayanian
Thelma Thomas (Toumas) (S)
Charles Thomas (Toumas)
John Thomas (Toumas) Jr.
Anna Razi Touma (S)
Hannah Touma (S)
Yousif Wazli Antoni Yasbeck
Gerious Youseff
Hileni Zabour
(Ray Hanania is a Palestinian Arab American author and journalist. An excellent source for some of the above information is listed at Philip Hind’s Web Site at: www.rmplc.co.uk/eduweb/sites/phind/).
These are many emails and letters I received from relatives of passengers ont’t he Titanic after this column was originally published in 1998:
Dec. 19, 2009
Dear Sir,
Thank you for your efforts regarding Arab passengers on Titanic, I was told by my grandmother that her brother Ibrahim Amin Al-Sabbagh, fFrom south of Lebanon (Bint Jubail) died on the titanic, while she was traveling to Michigan. But his name is not listed with the others arab passengers list.
This is for your information
Respectfully
Kamal Eter
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March 6, 2005
Dear Sir,
My grandmother was Adele Nassar, Titanic survivor. She later remarried Albert Shamaley and one of their 4 kids is my mother. My son is researching the Titanic for school, and I had almost forgotten the story of my grandmother. She would never discuss the event or give interviews. as she was still full of grief from losing a husband and later their first child. I want to thank you for your article and giving new perspective on Arabs on the Titanic.
Respectfully,
Lisa Adele
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July 2008
I was able to identify 110 on the list of 3rd class passengers.
E. Rouhana
Canada
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May 24, 2009
Mr. Hanania:
Re: In Search of Great Great Uncle’s name
I was told by my Aunt Helen that her great uncle died on the Titanic. Aunt Helen told me that her Grandmother, Etta Brown’s (Etta Brohein, from Lebanon) lost her brother on the Titanic. Etta Brown (unknown maiden name) was from Batron, Lebanon.
I would assume that Etta Brown’s brother was in rout to Dallas, Texas, to join her. However; I do not known this for sure. Etta Brown’s brother spoke no English, and was starting out his new life fresh for the first time in America. I was told that Etta Brown’s brother died on the Titanic (3rd Class Passanger).
Mr. Hanania, I am half Lebanese, and a very proud Texan. I’ve been employed for Dallas County as a Deputy Sheriff for the past 20 years. However; it would be an honor to trace down and find the name of my great great uncle that perished on the Titanic.
Thank you ever so much for your assistance.
Respectfully submitted,
Don George
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WRITTEN BY EVELYN KARAM SMALL, APRIL 11, 2010
Hanna Mamee, a survivor, lived in Philadelphia, Pa., married a Lebanese woman and opened a bar just a stone’s throw from St. Maron Church. He named the bar, “Titanic”. Such a fitting name!! In later years, he moved to Washington, D.C.
WRITTEN BY MICHAEL MACARY, APRIL 08, 2010
The other man known as Tannous Betros was probably from the Kaawi family as he was travelling with my great-grandfather on the trip to New York.
Without further research, the names at that time were known as their given name and their father’s name. Original passenger list shows Sarkis Lahoud and omits the Ishaq Moawad family name. Same is possibly true for the passenger Tannous Betros.
WRITTEN BY MICHAEL MACARY, APRIL 08, 2010
My mother’s paternal grandfather was Sarkis Lahoud Ishaq Mouawad. My mother and her brothers gave one of your sources all the information about their grandfather. He left a widow, Jamila Macary, four children Wadad, Lahoud, Boutros, Mantoura, 1 brother Mehrez and 2 sisters, Marsha and Labibe. Mr & Mrs Nackid and their infant daughter settled in Waterbury, Connecticut but their infant daughter was the first survivor of the Titanic to die and she is interred in Waterbury.
Email RayHanania at RGHANANIA@GMAIL.COM if you have questions or stories of your ancestry to share regarding the Titanic.
(Ray Hanania is an award-winning former Chicago City Hall reporter. A political analyst and CEO of Urban Strategies Group, Hanania's opinion columns on mainstream issues are published in the Southwest News Newspaper Group in the Des Plaines Valley News, Southwest News-Herald, The Regional News, The Reporter Newspapers. His Middle East columns are published in the Arab News. To read more of Ray Hanania's columns visit www.Hanania.com, or email him at rghanania@gmail.com.)
An entire book has been written about the Arab and other Middle Eastern passengers on Titanic: https://www.abebooks.com/9789933908614/Dream-Nightmare-Syrians-who-Boarded-9933908618/plp