Early life and Studies Michel Chiha was born in 1891 in a Christian family of
Bmakine, in the
Aley District, in the
Mount Lebanon Governorate. He hailed from a
Chaldo-Assyrian family which migrated from modern day
Iraq. His father, Antoine, was a banker who founded in 1876 the
Pharaon and Chiha Bank in
Beirut, Lebanon. His mother belonged to a rich
Greek Catholic family of Beirut, the Pharaons. After completing his studies in the
Université Saint-Joseph, he joined in 1907 the family business, the
Banque Pharaon & Chiha in Beirut. With the outbreak of the
First World War and the
Ottoman occupation of the autonomous
Mount Lebanon, Chiha left Beirut to settle in
Cairo, Egypt, in 1915. In addition to pursuing Law studies, he started there with a group of friends his political career and developed his political view about the future of Lebanon. At the end of the war, he returned to Lebanon to lead the family bank. But soon afterwards, the
French Mandate of Lebanon gave him the opportunity to put into practice his vision for Lebanon. In 1919 he contributed to
La Revue Phénicienne which was established by
Charles Corm in Beirut.{{cite book|author=Fawwaz Traboulsi|title=A History of Modern Lebanon|year=2012|publisher=
Pluto Press Political life On 1 September 1920, the
Greater Lebanon was proclaimed by the French High Commissioner. Michel Chiha played an important role in this proclamation, especially concerning the setting up of its borders and the establishment of its first institutions. In 1925, Chiha was elected as the representative of Beirut in the Lebanese parliament. During his mandate that ended in 1929, he was very instrumental in the establishment of the Lebanese Constitution and the Monetary and
fiscal systems. In 1926, he married his cousin Marguerite Pharaon, the sister of
Henri Pharaon. They had three daughters, Micheline (d. 1940), Madeleine and Marie-Claire. In 1929, Michel Chiha left all his political responsibilities without, however, stopping the promotion of his vision of Lebanon. In 1937, he acquired with a group of friends the French language newspaper
Le Jour. Until his death in 1954, Michel Chiha delivered daily his
editorial du Jour, exposing his political views and vision.{{cite journal In 1943, his brother-in-law,
Bechara El Khoury, became the president of the newly independent Lebanese Republic. Chiha served as an advisor during Khoury's Mandate (1943–1952). One important cause interested him until his death, the Palestinian cause especially after
1948 Arab-Israeli War. He took an active role in defending this cause. He died in Beirut, Lebanon, on 29 December 1954. ==Political views==