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(FILES) Photo taken on September 24, 2008 shows Palestinian poet Samih al-Qasim reading a poem during a literary evening in Tunis. Samih al-Qasim, a Palestinian Druze poet known across the Arab world for his nationalist writing, died on Auigust 19, 2014 after a long battle with cancer, a family friend said. He was 75. AFP PHOTO/FETHI BELAID Image Credit: AFP

Occupied Jerusalem: Samih Al Qasim, a Palestinian Druze poet known across the Arab world for his nationalist writing, died on Tuesday after a long battle with cancer, a family friend said. He was 75.

Al Qasim died in Safed Hospital in the 1948 areas after suffering from cancer of the liver for the past three years, Essam Khoury, a novelist and close family friend, told AFP.

He was best known for his nationalist poetry in which he passionately defended the rights and identity of Palestinians living in 1948 areas.

Known as a “resistance poet”, Al Qasim’s poems were widely embraced across the Arab world as a symbol of steadfastness in the struggle against foreign occupation, with many translated into English and other languages.

“I have no love for you, death, nor do I fear you. But you are making a bed of a body and a blanket of my soul,” he wrote last week as he was dying.

He was a contemporary of the late Mahmoud Darwish, who was also born in a Palestinian village in the 1948 areas, and was widely considered one of the Arab world’s greatest poets.

A long-time member of the communist party and resident of the northern village of Rameh near Safed, Al Qasim was arrested many times for his political beliefs.

He also worked as a journalist and was editor-in-chief of the Palestinian weekly, Kul Al Arab.