In January 1905, soon after the Ligue issued its manifestos, Azoury published ''Le Réveil de la nation arabe dans l'Asie turque
—or, more commonly, Le Réveil de la nation arabe
(The Awakening of the Arab Nation
). Le Réveil de la nation arabe'', Azoury's most significant work, has been termed "a minor classic in Arab nationalist literature".
Key ideas and influences Le Réveil included a comprehensive discussion of the relationships between the
Ottoman Empire and the world powers. Most significantly, Azoury openly urged the Arab provinces to sever their ties with the Ottoman Empire. In addition to the text's nationalistic nature,
Le Réveil exhibited anti-Zionist sentiment and decried
Zionist aspirations in
Palestine. Azoury envisaged “that Zionist and Arab nationalist aspirations were likely to come seriously into conflict,” writing that "two important phenomena are emerging at this moment in Asiatic Turkey. They are the awakening of the Arab Nation and the latent effort by Jews to reconstitute on a very large scale the ancient
Kingdom of Israel... They are destined to fight each other continually until one of them wins." He also criticized what he viewed as French anti-clerical actions in Jerusalem and Lebanon. Some assert that the text was likely heavily influenced by Azoury's career in the service of the Ottoman Empire. Azoury had firsthand experience of corrupt administrators as well as the flawed system that could not stem the arrival of Jewish
immigrants or their acquisition of land.
Reception and criticism Azoury largely wrote
Le réveil for French readers; in fact, the book was written in French. The book apparently was not initially influential among Arabs, but it did spark dialogue in Europe and especially in France. European officials considered
Le réveil an important text for gaining insight to the region, and the book is credited with encouraging European aspirations regarding the Ottoman Empire by “[claiming] that the Arab provinces were ripe for revolt, and that a movement already existed that needed only the assent of Europe to bring about the final confrontation.” Yet, Azoury admitted later “that the book sought not to describe Arab discontent so much as to create it.” The work is criticized as being a falsely nationalistic text, intended to pander to Europe rather than to rouse Arab nationalistic sentiment. One year after
Le réveil’s publication, Farid Kassab—an Arab from
Beirut who was attending school in Paris—criticized Azoury’s work, writing a pamphlet that supported the Ottoman Empire and
Jewish settlement in Palestine while rejecting Azoury’s idea of an Arab nation. ==Later life==