In 1900, he graduated from the Royal Academy, and worked as a schoolteacher in
Ioannina in
Epirus, then part of the
European territories of the
Ottoman Empire. During this period, he began to show an interest in questions of nationality and was exposed to the competing strands of European nationalism. After five years in Yanina, he took up a high-ranking administrative position in
Macedonia, where the officers who would later form the
Committee for Union and Progress (CUP) had a strong presence. After the
Young Turk Revolution of 1908, he was appointed in May 1909 director of the Teachers' Institute,
Darülmuallimin in Constantinople, where he initiated major reforms in
pedagogy and the public education system. In this period he became editor of two important educational reviews ("
Tedrisat-ı İbtidaiye Mecmuası", "
Muallim"). From 1910 to 1912, he visited European countries to examine modern educational methods. Initially a supporter of
Ottomanism and the
Young Turks, from 1916 on he moved towards
Arabism. In 1941 nationalist army officers, from the first generation to have come under the influence of al-Husri's ideas, carried out a coup d'état against the pro-British monarchy and government, briefly installing a pro-Axis regime under
Rashid Ali al-Gailani. When British forces restored the monarchy, al-Husri was deported as were over a hundred of the Syrian and Palestinian teachers he had induced to come to Iraq. Al-Husri's next major enterprise was the reform of the educational system in Syria. In 1943 the newly elected Syrian president
Shukri al-Kuwatli invited him to Damascus, then still under the French mandate, to draw up a new curriculum along Arab nationalist lines for the country's secondary education system. Al-Husri established a curriculum informed by his nationalist ideas which considerably reduced the French cultural element and broke away from the French educational model. Against the bitter opposition of the French, and the reservations of various political figures, the new curriculum was introduced in December 1944, but the sudden change caused confusion and shortages of the new schoolbooks did nothing to improve its reception. A year later, the former curriculum was restored. In 1947, al-Husri moved to
Cairo, taking up a position in the Cultural Directorate of the
League of Arab States. He would remain there for 18 years, during which he produced most of his works. He returned to
Baghdad in 1965, and died there in December 1968. ==Ideological views==